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Israel launched airstrikes on Iran, in a major escalation in the standoff over Tehran’s atomic program that risks sparking a new war in the Middle East.
Israel launched airstrikes on Iran, in a major escalation in the standoff over Tehran’s atomic program that risks sparking a new war in the Middle East.
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Explosions were heard in Tehran, according to local media. Iran had previously vowed to respond to any attack.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a statement he’s declaring a special state of emergency due to Israel’s “preemptive strike against Iran.” Israel is anticipating a retaliatory drone and missile attack, Katz said in a statement.
The attack came amid renewed questions about diplomatic efforts to resolve tensions over Iran’s atomic work. US and Iranian negotiators are scheduled to hold a sixth round of talks in Oman on Sunday, but President Donald Trump said this week he’s less confident about the chances of a deal.
Oil surged following reports of the strike. Brent rose as much as 5.7%, jumping above $73 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate also rallied.
Israel is already involved in a major military operation in Gaza where it’s been bombarding and blockading the civilian population for the past 20 months as it tries to destroy Hamas following the group’s deadly attack on the Jewish state on Oct. 7, 2023.
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Futures and yields are tumbling, and gold and oil are surging following reports of successive explosions in Iran as a result of what Al Arabiya and Axios report are Israeli airstrikes.
Separately Axios reports that the Israeli Air Force conducted a strike in Iran, citing two unidentified people with knowledge of the operation. It was not immediately clear who Israel is targeting.
In kneejerk response, stock futures are tumbling...

... as are bond yields...

... while Oil (where we recently warned that the record shorts will be badly burned)...

... and gold are soaring.
The Trump administration is developing a plan to use Cold War-era powers to prioritize and fund rare earth projects it deems critical to national security, people familiar with the matter said.
Officials are discussing using the Defense Production Act to tap financing, loans and other means for rare earths element-related projects, including mining, processing and other downstream technologies to bolster the US’s capability to build a domestic supply chain, the people said. A specific course of action or a timeline have yet to be finalized, the people said.
MP Materials Corp., the sole domestic producer of rare earths, would be a prime beneficiary. Deputy Defense Secretary Steve Feinberg is working to line up funding for the company, people familiar with that matter said. The Nevada-based mineral processor has received millions in funding from the Defense Department.
A spokesman for MP Materials declined to comment. Representatives for the White House and the Pentagon didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in a congressional hearing this week said that MP Materials “is a great example of a place where we can partner with industry” and that Feinberg is focused on sourcing rare earths supply.
The US currently lacks the so-called mine-to-magnet capability at scale, and invoking the emergency authority will give the Defense Department and other agencies tools to speed up sourcing that severely lags China’s dominance in the industry. The urgency has only increased since Beijing flexed its rare earths capacity as leverage in trade talks with Washington over the past month.
Beijing’s decision to block exports of rare earths focused Trump administration attention on China’s dominance in processing the materials used in semiconductors, jet engines and other technology, and it’s stoked a surge of interest in rapidly developing US supply chains.
An existing US stockpile is “massively insufficient” Burgum said, adding that billions of dollars could be needed to build a bigger mineral reserve.
The latest discussions come more than two months after President Donald Trump signed an executive order to boost production of critical minerals that encouraged faster permitting for mining and processing projects.
While that order encompassed rare earths, one of the people familiar with the matter said issuing a new directive is essentially a chance for Trump to publicly message that he’s countering Beijing on a US vulnerability that’s inflamed trade tensions between the world’s largest economies.
At the National Energy Dominance Council, David Copley is leading work on the rare-earths issue and has been tasked with coordinating most efforts related to critical minerals, people familiar with the matter said.
Copley, a former executive with the mining company Newmont Corp., has been receiving proposals for how the US can quickly build out its own critical minerals supply chains and lists of potential shovel-ready projects the government can quickly invest in through DPA and other funding avenues.
Copley’s role has taken on new prominence as a result of Elon Musk’s efforts to downsize the federal bureaucracy that have led to a wave of buyouts, resignations and retirements at key federal offices working on supply chain issues.
The Trump administration revived Biden-era efforts to create a domestic supply chain for rare-earth magnets after China in April clamped down on exports of the materials, Bloomberg News reported last week.
As part of the effort, officials solicited proposals to bolster domestic supplies of the magnets within the next six to 12 months.

A range of imported household appliances including dishwashers, washing machines, refrigerators and more will be subject to President Donald Trump's expanded steel tariffs starting later this month, according to a notice posted on Thursday.
The tariffs, which are currently at 50% for most countries, would take effect on an additional range of "steel derivative products" on June 23, the Commerce Department said in the notice.
It is the second time since Trump initially ratcheted up tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, first to 25% starting in March and then to 50% this month, that his administration has expanded the list of derivative products affected by the import levies. Just before the first round of duties was set to take effect in March, they added nearly 300 product categories covering everything from horseshoes to bulldozer blades to the tariffs list.
This time eight product lines were added: combined refrigerator-freezers; small and large dryers; washing machines; dishwashers; chest and upright freezers; cooking stoves, ranges and ovens; food waste disposals; and welded wire racks.
"The tariff imposed ... will be assessed on these derivative products for the value of the steel content in each product," the Federal Register posting said.
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