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Philadelphia Fed President Henry Paulson delivers a speech
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President Donald Trump said the US had presented Iran with a proposal over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions and that the country’s negotiators needed to move soon on the offer as talks intensify.
President Donald Trump said the US had presented Iran with a proposal over Tehran’s nuclear ambitions and that the country’s negotiators needed to move soon on the offer as talks intensify.
“They have a proposal, more importantly they know they have to move quickly or something bad — something bad’s going to happen,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned to Washington from a visit to the Middle East.
The president did not provide details on the proposal that follows talks being led by his special envoy, Steve Witkoff, and mediated by Oman. The most recent session was Sunday.
A major sticking point has been whether the US would accept Iran keeping some kind of civil nuclear program as part of the deal, and US officials have given conflicting messages on the levels of uranium enrichment they would accept.
Trump has repeatedly threatened military action against Iran if Tehran does not reach a deal to limit its atomic work in exchange for relief from crippling US sanctions. Iran says its program is peaceful but it’s long faced suspicion that it could be weaponized.
Iran’s lead negotiator, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, repeated his insistence that Iran retain some enrichment capacity in comments late Thursday, while citing “contradictory” negotiating positions from the US.
“What the parties to the negotiations say in the media is not the same as what they say behind closed doors,” he said.
Tehran also sent negotiators to Istanbul on Friday to discuss nuclear issues and sanctions with the European signatories of the 2015 nuclear deal that Trump withdrew from in his first term.
“We will meet again if necessary to continue talks,” Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi said on X, adding that Iran, the UK, France and Germany were “determined to sustain and make the best use of diplomacy.”
During his Mideast visit, Trump suggested that the US is moving closer to an agreement to curb Iran’s nuclear activities even as he has sought to ramp up pressure on the country, warning that his offer will not remain on the table indefinitely.
Amid the doom and gloom of falling crude prices and weakening demand growth, oil bulls could find one nugget of cheer in the latest report from the International Energy Agency: a modest upward revision to historical consumption.
That may not seem terribly exciting, but it wiped out three years’ worth of apparent global oil stockbuilds and drained an ocean of “missing barrels.”
The world used about 330,000 barrels a day more in 2023 than was previously reported, according to the IEA. Africa accounted for three-quarters of that revision, with higher consumption in Egypt and Nigeria.
Because of the way forecasts are generated, that historical increase gets rolled forward into subsequent years, raising the level of demand for this year and next even if it does nothing for year-on-year growth.
Rather than predicting actual oil consumption for 195 countries, analysts tend to forecast incremental demand by region using assumptions about population and economic growth, and then applying those numbers to “known” historical consumption levels.
Raise the starting point and everything else rises, even as annual growth is unaltered.
At a stroke, the IEA’s revision wiped out all the stockbuilds it saw in 2022, 2023 and 2024.
Rather than adding 220 million barrels of oil to global inventories during those three years, the IEA now says we have drawn them down by nearly 75 million barrels. That swing is equivalent to almost three-quarters of the US strategic reserve.
Before we get too excited, though, the IEA still sees supply running ahead of demand in 2025 and 2026.
Even if OPEC+ pauses its output increases after the big hikes planned for this month and next, supply will still exceed demand by more than 1 million barrels a day in the third quarter, the agency says. And that’s before any possible return of Iranian barrels.
The spare oil will head for storage tanks that are a lot less full than previously believed.
While it’s not a recipe for rising prices, erasure of the missing barrels might help put a floor under them, at least for a little while.
Exports of US crude are tumbling as OPEC+ restores production into a market grappling with weakening demand because of the trade war and reduced refinery capacity. Average US oil exports dropped 10% to 3.76 million barrels a day in the four weeks through May 9, according to Energy Information Administration data. That’s the slowest pace since January and well below seasonal levels from the past two years.
US Treasury officials met with Hong Kong banks in April to warn them against facilitating Iranian oil shipments to China, just a month before sanctioning nine non-bank entities allegedly involved in such trades, people familiar with the matter said.
Canadian oil tycoon Adam Waterous’ Strathcona Resources Ltd. announced plans to make a takeover bid for MEG Energy Corp. that values the oil-sands company at about C$6 billion ($4 billion).
Vistra Corp. agreed to buy seven gas-fired power plants for $1.9 billion, the latest big US generator betting on the fossil fuel to feed the voracious appetite of artificial intelligence.
Taiwan is shutting its last nuclear reactor this weekend, putting pressure on the island’s energy-guzzling chipmakers in the face of soaring demand for their products.
Ice-cream cones will likely cost more this summer as the price of coconut oil, a key ingredient, keeps setting records, Bloomberg Opinion’s Javier Blas writes.
China’s liquefied natural gas demand may see limited benefit from the recent slash in US tariffs, according to BloombergNEF. The existing levies, domestic economic malaise and elevated LNG prices are set to curb Chinese buying interest. Imports may reach 68 million metric tons — 1.1 million tons more than forecast last month during the peak of the trade war. Yet that’s still 8.2 million tons, or 11%, lower year-on-year.
Join us in Doha for the Qatar Economic Forum on May 20-22. Since 2021, the forum powered by Bloomberg has convened more than 6,500 influential leaders to explore bold ideas and tackle the challenges shaping the global economy. Request an invitation today.
President Trump has departed Abu Dhabi aboard Air Force One, concluding a historic week in the Middle East that saw the signing of more than a trillion dollars in deals aimed at advancing his 'America First' agenda.
Ahead of his departure from the Middle East, President Trump addressed business leaders in Abu Dhabi, stating that his administration will unilaterally set tariff rates for U.S. trading partners within the next two to three weeks.
"We just reached a fantastic trade deal with the United Kingdom. And we have another big one that we reached with China," the president said.
He continued, "At the same time, we have 150 countries that want to make a deal—but you're not able to see that many countries." He added that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick "will be sending letters out essentially telling people what "they'll be paying to do business in the United States."
"I think we're going to be very fair. But it's not possible to meet the number of people that want to see us," Trump said.
The president did not specify which countries want to make deals, nor the ones that will receive letters.
Talks remain ongoing with top trading partners, including Japan, South Korea, India, the EU, and China, with recent progress...
However, the administration appears to have abandoned comprehensive negotiations in favor of setting terms directly for many countries due to what Bloomberg says "the lack of manpower and capacity makes it impossible to hold concurrent negotiations with all the countries caught up in the president's so-called reciprocal tariffs plan."
Earlier this week, the U.S. and China announced a breakthrough trade agreement that temporarily lowered tariffs on each other's products for 90 days. The U.S. dropped its 145% on Chinese goods to 30%, while China lowered levies from 125% to 10%.
Goldman illustrates the rollercoaster ride of the tit-for-tat trade war between the U.S. and China in recent months, as well as the temporary cooling period aimed at de-escalating tensions.

On Wednesday morning, Goldman analyst Jerry Shen told clients, "We Now Expect the Effective Tariff Rate to increase by 13pp."

Last week, Trump stated, "We have four or five other deals coming immediately. We have many deals coming down the line. Ultimately, we're just signing the rest of them in."
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