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World waits for Iran’s response to peace proposal
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Welcome to Balance of Power, bringing you the latest in global politics. If you haven’t yet, sign up here. Whether Iran accepts the latest US peace proposal or not, Donald Trump is intent on winding down a conflict that’s proving increasingly problematic for him. His memorandum of understanding, which Iranian leaders are expected to respond to any day now, calls for Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for Washington ending a blockade of Iranian ports. The US would also lift some sanctions, while Iran would agree to a moratorium on enriching uranium. The sides would then negotiate a broader nuclear deal, finalizing how long that moratorium lasts and what happens to Iran’s stockpile of highly-enriched uranium. Trump can claim plenty of tactical successes in the war, which began with joint US-Israeli strikes in February.
Bloomberg’s Joumanna Bercetche reports on the potential deal.
The Iranian military has suffered huge losses and many senior politicians and commanders have been killed, among them Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Israel meanwhile continues to hammer Hezbollah in Lebanon, ceasefire or not. But any US strategic gains are harder to discern. Iran responded to the strikes by shutting the strait to virtually all shipping — an event essentially without precedent — and firing missiles and drones at Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and other US Gulf allies. The surge in energy costs is a major headache for Trump, with US gasoline pump prices now at their highest since 2022. American voters are increasingly against the war, while European, African and Asian nations are aghast at the unprovoked damage to their economies. Iran was in any case already subject to nuclear monitoring under a deal that Trump ripped up in his first term. Crucially for the president, he’s set to meet Xi Jinping in China next week and wants an agreement to reopen the strait by then to avoid distractions. Beijing may have given him a hand when it hosted Iran’s foreign minister this week and called for the waterway to be opened. Whether it’s enough should soon be clear. — Paul Wallace
Iranian security forces stand guard under a large portrait of new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei.
Photographer: Majid Saeedi/Getty Images
Global Must ReadsRussia told foreign governments and organizations to evacuate diplomatic staff and citizens from Kyiv, warning of a retaliatory strike if Ukraine tried to attack Moscow during May 9 World War II Victory Day celebrations. Meanwhile, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is looking beyond the coming summer and asking Western allies to speed up deliveries of air-defense systems and missiles to prepare for another winter of intense bombing by Moscow, while Ukraine’s chief negotiator prepares to travel to Miami to meet with US special envoy Steve Witkoff.
Russian servicemen during the 2025 Victory Day parade in Moscow.
Source: AFP/Getty Images
The Pentagon added Alibaba and Baidu to a list of companies that aid the Chinese military, but then declared the list “unpublished.” The episode highlights the Trump administration’s incoherence toward China, swinging between tough talk and offers of concessions, and leaving US officials to tread carefully to preserve a delicate truce with Beijing. The European Union failed to finalize a long-delayed US trade deal during overnight talks despite warnings from Trump that he would soon impose fresh tariffs on EU cars if the bloc delays ratifying the pact. The Trump administration has meanwhile begun paying out refunds for the $166 billion in global tariffs that the US Supreme Court declared unlawful earlier this year. The factors that make Taiwan an economic powerhouse — its world-leading tech industry and chipmaking exemplified by TSMC — are also hugely power hungry, making it vulnerable. As this deep dive explains, Taiwan currently imports around 96% of its energy, and with just an 11-day reserve of LNG, analysts estimate that any potential maritime blockade by China could exhaust the island’s energy supply within weeks. Over the course of his 16-year rule, Viktor Orbán rewired Hungary’s economy, turning it into a giant patronage machine. Read how a revolving cast of purported alien influences, from supermarket chains and utilities to the country’s biggest benefactor, the EU, were all cast as threats — a system which the new government now needs to unwind.
Trash piled outside a Hungarian state-owned tobacco shop.
Photographer: Getty Images
The tension between Trump and Chancellor Friedrich Merz was a misunderstanding, German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said in an interview, adding that the government in Berlin supports the US aim to ensure Iran can’t obtain a nuclear weapon. Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. is facing the country’s worst economic crisis since the pandemic as the energy shock unleashed by the Iran war hollows out consumer spending and fans inflation. Argentine President Javier Milei’s senior ally in Congress urged the cabinet chief to disclose his finances and real estate assets, the first public sign of friction within the ruling coalition over a growing corruption scandal. Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi said he’s willing to run for a third term, which is currently unconstitutional, if the Congolese people ask him to through a referendum.
On this week’s Trumponomics, host Stephanie Flanders is joined by Jennifer Welch, chief geoeconomics analyst for Bloomberg Economics, and executive editor Dan Ten Kate to unpack whether the high-stakes Trump-Xi talks will happen — and what’s at stake for the global economy if they do. Listen on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Sign up for the Washington Edition newsletter for news from the US capital and watch Balance of Power at 1 and 5 p.m. ET weekdays on Bloomberg Television. Chart of the Day
Britons head to the polls today for one of the most consequential rounds of local elections in memory, with control of the Scottish and Welsh parliaments and more than half of England’s councils at stake. The unusually broad vote will provide a verdict on Keir Starmer’s performance after less than two years as prime minister and with Labour’s popularity falling in the wake of policy missteps and questions about his judgment in appointing Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US. And FinallyA solar-energy boom in a narrow stretch of the Andes is marred by a wave of sophisticated theft as panels and associated copper cables disappear into black markets. Many in the industry in Chile privately confirm they’ve been hit, yet few are willing to say so publicly. While it follows a pattern in other places like California and the UK, the trend in the South American nation is turbocharged by more remote expanses and entrenched organized crime, posing risks for critical infrastructure and foreign investment.
A security camera captures three introducers entering a solar farm at night in Til-Til, Chile.
Photographer: Cristóbal Olivares/Bloomberg
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🌴 Consensus Day 1 recap
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Day 1 at Consensus Miami: JPMorgan processed $1T onchain. Oil crashed 6% on Iran peace hopes. And OKX just let you bet on SpaceX before the IPO.
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