Trump Talks Up Iran Blockade as Israel-Lebanon Truce Extended
(…) “I have all the time in the World, but Iran doesn’t — The clock is ticking!” Trump said in a Truth Social post
Trump’s allies say the blockade will force Iran to start shutting down crude production — its main source of foreign-exchange earnings — within about two weeks. JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts have said it may take closer to a month for the US to achieve that goal.
The US naval operation has caused many Iran-linked vessels to turn around rather than go through the Hormuz strait. Still, at least some are making the crossing, according to ship-tracking firms, potentially giving Iran the ability to withstand the restrictions for longer. (…)
That’s increasing concerns that fuel prices will rise even further and lead to a global economic slowdown. (…)
“The US naval blockade of Iran looks less airtight than Washington claims,” Bloomberg Economics analysts Becca Wasser, Chris Kennedy and Dina Esfandiary said in a note. “That risks blunting its impact as a tool of economic pressure and undermining its core objective: forcing Tehran to concede control of the Strait of Hormuz and return to the negotiating table.” (…)
From Windward:
Maritime dynamics across the Strait of Hormuz and surrounding corridors continue to shift from constrained activity toward selective escalation, with enforcement, evasion, and direct engagement shaping vessel behavior.
Iranian crude exports from Kharg Island declined sharply during the week of April 13–19, with total volumes estimated at approximately 3 million barrels, significantly below the year-over-year weekly average of around 8 million barrels. Satellite imagery confirms a mid-week pause in loading activity, followed by a limited resumption, indicating disruption to primary export operations.
At the same time, activity is redistributing rather than stopping. Large tanker clusters have formed east of Hormuz near Chabahar, while congestion and dark activity remain elevated near Bandar Abbas. These patterns point to adaptation under pressure rather than a breakdown in flows.
The operating environment is defined by instability and adaptation, where enforcement continues to expand, evasion strategies evolve, and maritime flows persist under increasingly constrained and volatile conditions.
Trump does not have “all the time in the world”. The longer Hormuz is constrained, the more the world economy is impacted, not only by higher prices of just about everything, but increasingly by actual shortages of energy and other critical commodities that will eventually lead to production curtailments.
So far, the reverse may be happening, risking a manufacturing boom-bust scenario.
Business activity growth rebounded in April having broadly stalled in March. The headline flash S&P Global US PMI Composite Output Index rose from a two-and-a-half year low of 50.3 to a three-month high of 52.0 in April. The improved reading signaled faster economic growth at the start of the second quarter, albeit running well below levels typically seen last year.
Service sector activity remained especially subdued. Although recovering slightly from March’s dip, the rate of expansion was the second weakest in the past year due to a further cooling of demand growth. New business placed at service providers rose only marginally and at the slowest rate seen over the past two years, led by an ongoing decline in exports.
Lost sales were commonly linked by survey contributors to the uncertainty and disruption caused by the war in the Middle East alongside other government policies and affordability issues.
In contrast, the manufacturing sector saw output rise at the sharpest rate for four years, fueled by the largest influx of new orders since May 2022. However, both output and new orders growth were over supply availability and price hikes due to the ongoing war. The rise in orders was driven by domestic demand, as export sales of goods fell at an increased rate.
War-related issues led to increasingly widespread supply problems, adding to existing challenges related to tariffs. Factories reported the greatest lengthening of supplier delivery times since August 2022, extending a trend that now stretches to eight months. In addition to shipping-related disruptions due to the war, shortages were also linked to the additional purchasing of safety stocks. Purchasing activity rose at the second fastest rate seen for nearly four years, surpassed only by the jump in buying activity seen shortly after last spring’s tariff announcements.
Average prices charged for goods and services rose in April at the fastest rate since July 2022 amid increases in input prices and supply scarcities. While manufacturers reported an especially steep jump in goods prices, with the rate of inflation at a ten-month high, service sector selling price inflation also accelerated to reach a 45-month high.
Input price inflation meanwhile hit an 11-month high in April and was the second-highest in over three years. Manufacturing input costs increased especially sharply, with inflation a ten-month high and the second-fastest increase since July 2022. The rise in services costs was the largest since December and among the sharpest in the past three years. Alongside higher energy prices, companies reported increased charges for broad swathe of commodities and inputs. Rising staffing costs were also reported.
Employment rose only marginally in April after falling slightly in March. The overall flat picture represents the worst back-to-back months for employment since late 2024. Manufacturing headcounts fell for the first time in nine months and only a marginal return to jobs growth was reported in the service sector. While some of the weak employment picture reflected resignations and persistent labor supply shortages, companies also reported concerns over the need to reduce staffing costs in the face of the uncertain demand environment and high input prices.
Companies’ expectations for output in the year ahead improved in April but remained historically low. Concerns focused on the war’s impact on prices and supply availability, exacerbating existing worries over the cost of living and government policies. Sentiment remained especially low in the service sector, albeit ticking up since March. Manufacturers were their most optimistic since February 2025, and thereby confidence was amongst the highest seen since the pandemic. This was largely reflective of the recent upturn in orders, additional investment in marketing and hopes of tariff-led reshoring.
Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence:
“The April PMI is broadly consistent with the economy struggling to manage annualized growth in excess of 1%, with the vast service sector acting as the principal drag. Orders for services ranging from travel and tourism to financial products barely rose as the war caused hesitancy for spending among both household and business customers, with surging prices and the prospect of higher borrowing costs acting as a further deterrent.
“There was better news from manufacturing, but here an expansion of output and orders could be partly traced to the building of safety stocks, with survey respondents reporting “panic” and “emergency” buying ahead of price hikes and supply shortages in echoes of the problems seen during the pandemic. Not surprisingly, prices are already spiking higher in this environment, and not just for energy but for a wide variety of goods and services.The overall inflation picture is now the most worrying for almost four years.
“Balancing the risks of inflation lifting sharply higher against the underlying weakness of economic growth presents policymakers at the Fed with a growing dilemma.However, it will likely be increasingly hard to make a case for rate cuts if inflation follows the path signalled by the PMI while the economy continues to eke out only modest growth.”
The WSJ which rarely reports on flash PMIs added that war effects are global:
Factories in the U.S. and parts of Asia and Europe have reported a pickup in activity as they rushed to meet orders placed by customers anxious to avoid price hikes and shortages should the conflict in the Middle East prove long-lasting, according to business surveys released Thursday. (…)
Surveys of purchasing managers compiled by S&P Global during the early weeks of April showed some businesses are trying to get ahead of anticipated shortages by stockpiling goods, leading to a pickup in factory output in a number of large economies including the U.S., France, Japan, India and the U.K.
The rush to complete orders and build stocks echoes moves in early 2025 to get ahead of anticipated hikes in U.S. tariffs. As in that case, the boost is likely to prove short-lived, with output falling back sharply as stocks are drawn down later in the year. (…)
In Japan, manufacturers signaled the steepest rise in output for over 12 years in April. French manufacturing also recorded a surprise revival, with output rising at the fastest pace in 50 months, according to the surveys.
In the eurozone as a whole, manufacturing activity hit an eight-month high. The U.K. also saw a boost. (…)
Across the eurozone as a whole, the composite Purchasing Managers Index fell to 48.6 from 50.7, reaching its lowest level in 17 months. A reading below 50.0 points to a decline in activity.
“The hit from the Iran conflict may turn out to be larger than we had been anticipating,” said Andrew Kenningham, chief European economist at Capital Economics.
The surveys also recorded a surge in the costs faced by businesses as a result of the conflict, and evidence those businesses were charging their own customers more, a development that will concern central banks.
In the U.S., prices charged rose at the fastest pace in 11 months, while in Japan, prices rose at the fastest pace since the series began in 2007. Across the eurozone, prices rose at the fastest pace in more than three years.
Time is on neither side, quite the opposite.
The US president’s public messaging, according to the officials, is key to the impasse. There’s been little progress in the past day, according to a European diplomat in touch with Iranian negotiators. (…)
Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian on Wednesday said Iran welcomes talks with the US, but that the “blockade and threats are main obstacles to genuine negotiations.”
Some of Trump’s advisers want to milk the blockade longer, arguing that Iran is just weeks away from shut-ins because of its inability to export oil at normal volumes, said the US officials. That could inflict significant economic damage and lead to bigger concessions. For them, the president’s social media posts are serving the purpose of running out the clock.
Trump suggested Thursday that he agreed with that approach and he’s under no pressure to make a deal.
“You know who’s under time pressure? They are, because if they don’t get their oil moving, their whole oil infrastructure is going to explode,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “You know what that means — because they have no place to store it, and because they have no place to store it, if they have to stop it.”
Another camp of Trump allies has argued that the time to seek the off-ramp is now and that Trump risks deeper financial wounds at home — with repercussions for November’s mid-term elections — if the Hormuz disruption persists much longer, said the same American officials. For this group, the president’s rhetoric could unravel progress made by US and Iranian negotiators toward an agreement that would limit the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program and reopen the critical shipping route in return for sanctions relief.
While the president has said he’s in no rush and that the blockade is squeezing Iran’s economy by preventing it from exporting oil, he is under mounting pressure to bring down US fuel prices. They’ve surged because of Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, turning Americans against the conflict and leading to concern about a global economic slowdown.
The Iranians, said the Arab official, want an accord that resolves a host of long-standing issues such as the sanctions against the Islamic Republic and its nuclear and missile programs.
Tehran also wants guarantees it won’t be attacked again and some formal control over shipping traffic through Hormuz. The US and Israel have signaled they won’t accept those demands.
Still, it’s possible that Washington and Tehran agree to an interim deal that reopens the strait and ends the US blockade, while leaving most of the other sticking points to future negotiations. Some Gulf Arab and European leaders believe talks on the wider points would take at least six months to be agreed, Bloomberg reported last week.
“Trump’s style of messaging has undermined his own position of wanting diplomacy to work,” said Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow specializing in Iran at the Middle East Institute. “In the case of this Iranian regime, effective means quiet, silent, not loud, not in the media, not attacking Iranian leaders in social media posts.” (Bloomberg)
Why If the War Doesn’t End Soon, Everyone Will Pay Like the Ernest Hemingway quote, the energy crisis triggered by the US-Israel conflict with Iran will get worse gradually, then suddenly.
The Oil Futures Market Is Lying to Us
Roughly 15 million barrels a day of oil supply, 15% of global demand, are bottled up in the Strait of Hormuz. You can also think about that number as the total amount of oil that’s been drawn from global stockpiles to bridge the disruption: Roughly 500 million barrels so far, estimates Goldman Sachs Group Inc. At the current pace, that could hit a billion barrels by June, maybe even Memorial Day.
As Bob McNally, who heads consultancy Rapidan Energy Group, said this week at a conference hosted by Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy, these missing barrels are like a vacuum; a giant deficit that will move through the global oil system for some time, even if a peace deal opens the Strait. (…)
Prices for 2027 are up 17% compared with 43% for front-month contracts. On that, Kaes Van’t Hof, chief executive of Diamondback Energy Inc., one of the larger shale operators, said from the same stage as McNally: “The back end of the curve is lying to us.” (…)
The roughly 500 million barrels drawn over the past two months are equivalent to about 6% of global observed inventories (these are estimates since not all oil stocks are reported). To put that in perspective, consider the history of movements in OECD inventories, the most transparent subset of global stocks, where 6% would already represent the sharpest two-month decline in data going back to 1988. By June, we could be looking at more like a 10-12% drop in global inventories, way beyond the scope of prior declines. (…)
In the most optimistic scenario, where Hormuz opens immediately, it would still take months to first clear the backlog of blocked tankers, then clear local oil in storage and finally bring shut-in wells back into production — all while clearing mines laid by Iran, something that could take months to do. While the pace of inventory draws would ease, they would still be running down the tanks. (…)
US oil executives canvassed by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas in an unusual interim survey released Thursday concur. Four-fifths of them don’t expect traffic through the Strait to resume normal levels before August; 40% think it will be November or later. In addition, a majority implicitly concur with Van’t Hof’s comment about the lack of an adequate price signal to boost output, expecting relatively little growth in US oil production this year and next.
The bigger the vacuum becomes, the longer it will take to refill those inventories whenever whatever passes for normality finally arrives. Oil prices along the curve would need to rise accordingly to encourage excess production — or, conversely, achieve the same outcome by destroying demand. (…)
Looking back to a different kind of disruption, the outbreak of Covid-19, ClearView Energy Partners notes how the oil market still hadn’t internalized that looming catastrophe as late as February 2020, weeks before the Nymex price went negative as demand cratered. Realization didn’t so much dawn as go supernova. Almost exactly six years on from that day, the gap between physical flows and financial markets looks as wide as the Strait is narrow, and widens by the day.
The same Dallas Fed survey quotes an oilfield services executive saying: “The long-term consequences of this war were not fully considered. The disruption this will cause to energy markets and other macroeconomic measures will be significant. The unpredictable nature of the current administration makes business modeling near impossible.”
Scott Bessent at a Senate hearing Wednesday:
“Many of our Gulf allies have requested swap lines. Swap lines, whether it’s from the Federal Reserve or the Treasury, are to maintain order in the dollar-funding markets and to prevent the sale of the U.S. assets in a disorderly way.”
Axios explains:
The requests are a way for them to prepare for the possibility of a cash crunch, says Vishal Khanduja, head of broad markets fixed income at Morgan Stanley. Better to ask now before things actually get dire.
These asks could’ve been kept confidential, but they’re public because it sends a signal to the market, assuring investors that these countries are shoring up their reserves, he says.
The swap lines could backstop Gulf states’ ability to keep investing in the U.S., Evercore analysts wrote Thursday.
“In political terms, perhaps most importantly, swaps could at the margin at least reinforce the ability of the Gulf states to deliver on giant U.S. investment commitments which the White House has frequently touted.”
And the requests are a way for Gulf states to signal unhappiness with the war.
“This is to send a message to the administration that the Emirates is unhappy that they’re being asked to absorb significant economic costs as a byproduct of the administration’s decisions,” Brad Setser, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, tells Axios. “And they feel like they haven’t been adequately consulted or compensated.”
Dollars may get swapped, but there’s a lot more getting exchanged.
Oracle’s Deluge of AI Debt Pushes Wall Street to the Limit The AI boom has hit a funding snag, compounding power constraints and growing public backlash against data centers
Oracle’s $300 billion megadeal with OpenAI is testing the limits of Wall Street’s appetite for debt tied to America’s data-center boom.
Banks including JPMorgan Chase struggled for months to spread the risk of billions of dollars in loans they made to build data centers leased to Oracle in Texas and Wisconsin, people familiar with the matter said. Many financial institutions that would ordinarily buy those loans face restrictions on how much exposure they can have to a single counterparty, and the sheer size of these debt packages pushed them to the limit with Oracle. As a result, bank balance sheets got clogged, constraining the financing prospects of future projects tied to Oracle and OpenAI.
For example, lenders balked at financing the expansion of a data-center complex in Abilene, Texas, if Oracle were the tenant, according to people familiar with the matter. That led the developer, Crusoe, to lease it to Microsoft instead.
The challenges surrounding Oracle highlight a risk for the multitrillion-dollar data center boom, where limited access to capital compounds obstacles caused by a strained electric grid and a growing public backlash.
Any slowdown in data center construction and completion would stymie a build-out that artificial-intelligence players desperately need. Some top AI companies appear to be hitting the limit of what they can offer users as demand for computing firepower, which is provided by data centers, exceeds supply. (…)
Oracle still has additional cash funding needs of $100 billion or more for 2027 and the first half of 2028, according to Morgan Stanley credit analysts. “We’ve pondered how [Oracle’s] considerable funding needs over the next three years may test the depths of different fixed-income markets,” the analysts wrote in February. (…)
OpenAI is counting on Oracle to deliver the capacity it needs to scale ChatGPT’s growth ahead of a hoped-for public listing.
Silicon Valley needs access to debt to meet its goals for AI-related spending. Big tech companies are expected to generate enough cash to cover only about half of the $3 trillion they are projected to spend on AI through 2028, according to analysts at Morgan Stanley. The rest has to come from banks, corporate bonds, private credit and other forms of financing. (…)
Oracle, though, is in a comparatively weaker financial position than big tech rivals. It has a lower investment-grade credit rating, more debt and is burning cash. Much of its future revenue is tied to a money-losing startup that is facing growing competitive pressure. (…)
To manage risk, banks and institutional investors typically have rules capping their exposure to a single counterparty or tenant. Those concentration limits emerged as an obstacle when a group of banks were syndicating some of the loans in late 2025 and early 2026, the people said. (…)
SURVEYS SAY
Disapproval of Congress Ties Record High at 86% Republicans’ approval has plummeted since spring 2025
Americans’ approval of Congress has fallen to 10%, barely above its all-time low of 9%, while disapproval has climbed to 86%, tying the record high for the institution. Three of the five peaks in disapproval since 1974 coincided with a government shutdown or the threat of one.
Republicans have driven most of the recent decline, with a sharp drop in their latest approval rating of Congress after surging to 63% in March 2025. By contrast, Democrats have consistently rated the current Congress poorly, and independents’ views have been relatively stable at a low level.

Data: Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School. Chart: Danielle Alberti/Axios
38% of Americans approve of Donald Trump’s job handling in the most recent Economist / YouGov Poll, and 56% disapprove, for a net job approval of -18.
Asked to choose which words describe Trump from a list of 13, Americans are most likely to pick dangerous (52%), corrupt (47%), or bold (45%), and least likely to pick honest (22%), steady (16%), or inspiring (16%).
22% of Americans say Trump’s negotiating skill is excellent, while 16% say it’s good, 10% fair, and 43% poor.
35% say Trump is suffering significant cognitive decline, while 13% say he’s suffering modest cognitive decline and 32% say he isn’t suffering cognitive decline.
Only 24% of Americans strongly or somewhat approve of Trump’s signature being added to all U.S. paper currency, while 59% disapprove. Almost all Democrats (4% approve and 92% disapprove) and most Independents (13% vs. 65%) disapprove of putting Trump’s signature on currency. A majority of Republicans approves of this (55% vs. 20%), including approval from most MAGA Republicans (63% vs. 12%) but division among non-MAGA Republicans (35% vs. 40%).
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