Trump Says Planned Iran Attack On Hold After Gulf Leaders’ Request
President Trump said he would hold off on a planned U.S. attack on Iran at the request of Gulf leaders to make room for negotiations with Tehran over a prospective deal to end the war.
In a social-media post on Monday, Trump said he had directed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and other U.S. military officials not to proceed with the attack, which he said was scheduled to take place on Tuesday. But he warned that he had “further instructed them to be prepared to go forward with a full, large-scale assault of Iran, on a moment’s notice, in the event that an acceptable Deal is not reached.”
The president said the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates asked him to hold off on the attack because “serious negotiations are now taking place.” (…)
Several Gulf officials from some of the countries Trump mentioned said they were not aware of the imminent plan to attack Iran he described. (…)
Trump has argued that the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports, and the broader economic pressure campaign officials have called “Operation Economic Fury,” will leave Tehran with few options. “It’s just a question of time, we don’t have to rush anything,” he said last week. “We have a blockade, which gives them no money, allows them no money.”
Since the naval blockade began on April 13, the U.S. military has diverted at least 85 ships and disabled four others, according to U.S. Central Command.
From Windward:
Two developments across May 17 and May 18 define the phase change: Iran’s move to formalize a sovereign transit-toll regime under the Persian Gulf Strait Authority, and the first observed coordinated bilateral cluster transit, conducted by six India-flagged vessels under operational assurances from Tehran.
Together, they signal a strategic pivot. Iran is moving from kinetic disruption toward administrative control of the chokepoint, while simultaneously carving out bilateral lanes for non-Western tonnage. The result is a bifurcating Strait, with dark and gray fleets and BRICS-aligned vessels absorbing the premiums of the new toll regime, and Western-aligned tonnage either frozen out, escorted, or exposed to interdiction.
The chokepoint is now being governed administratively, with bilateral carve-outs for selected partners and coercive interdiction held in reserve for everyone else.
The bifurcation is operational, not theoretical. Dark and gray fleets and BRICS-aligned tonnage are positioned to absorb toll premiums and continue moving. Western-aligned tonnage faces a compounding compliance dilemma: payment exposes vessels to OFAC secondary-sanctions risk, while non-payment exposes them to IRGC interdiction. Continuous naval escort is the only remaining alternative, and the volume of qualifying tonnage that can realistically be escorted is limited.
It now seems that Trump learns of “serious negotiations” from some GCCs, not from the US “negotiators” (Witkoff and Kushner). Pakistan?
Bloomberg adds:
(…) The US delayed the strikes “for a little while, hopefully maybe forever,” because “we’ve had very big discussions with Iran, and we’ll see what they amount to,” Trump said at the White House on Monday evening. (…)
“In their opinion, as Great Leaders and Allies, a Deal will be made, which will be very acceptable to the United States of America, as well as all Countries in the Middle East,” Trump posted on Truth Social, referring to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, UAE President Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, and Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad. (…)
There was no immediate confirmation from Tehran of renewed talks. (…)
Pakistan has been the main mediator, but the two sides haven’t met for talks since discussions in Islamabad around five weeks ago that ended without a deal. (…)
Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency said earlier on Monday the US had offered to lift sanctions on the sale of Iranian oil until a final deal is reached, as part of a new proposal to end the deadlock. A US official who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter said the story was false, but didn’t elaborate.
The FT:
Speaking at an event later on Monday afternoon, Trump clarified that he had been asked by the three Gulf states “and some others” to delay military action “for two or three days, because they think that they are getting very close to making a deal”. (…)
The US president was expected to meet his senior national security advisers on Tuesday to discuss options for resuming the war, Axios reported.
The Globe & Mail at 6:15 this am citing Reuters::
Tehran’s latest peace proposal to the United States involves ending hostilities on all fronts including Lebanon, the exit of U.S. forces from areas close to Iran, and reparations for destruction caused by the U.S.-Israeli war, state media reported on Tuesday.
In Tehran’s first comments on the proposal, Deputy Foreign Minister Kazem Gharibabadi said Tehran also sought the lifting of sanctions, the release of frozen funds and an end to the U.S. marine blockade on the country, according to IRNA news agency.
The terms as described in the Iranian reports appeared little changed from Iran’s previous offer, which U.S. President Donald Trump rejected last week as “garbage.” (…)
A Pakistani source confirmed that Islamabad, which has conveyed messages between the sides since hosting the only round of peace talks last month, had shared the Iranian proposal with Washington.
The sides “keep changing their goalposts,” the Pakistani source said, adding: “We don’t have much time.”
Although neither side has publicly disclosed any concessions in negotiations that have been stalled for a month, a senior Iranian official suggested on Monday that Washington may be softening some of its demands.
If it were not so serious, it would be totally comical.
NY Fed’s HOUSEHOLD SPENDING SURVEY
- Year-ahead earnings growth expected at 2.7%.
- 1-year inflation expectations up from 3.0% in February to 3.4% in April and to 3.6% in May.
- Yet, expected household spending growth over the next twelve months was unchanged at 3.4% in April. Spending on essentials is seen up 5.1% vs non-essentials up 1.8% vs 1.4% in December.
- The expected response to income loss: 72.6% would reduce spending, up from 70.2% in December and 68.9% in August 2025.
Goldman Sachs has mapped out its expected trends in real income and cash flow (including income tax refunds). Even with a subdued inflation scenario, spending capacity is shrinking. “We expect monthly core CPI increases around 0.2% over the next couple of months, though risks are tilted to the upside if disruptions to oil markets and associated oil price increases prove more persistent than expected.” YoY inflation would thus stay below 3.0%. My own and Dateline’s Gundlach is closer to 4.0%.
Real income softness ahead for the US
Ten percent of Americans report using installment plans frequently when making purchases online, and another 17% use them occasionally. A total of 51% have used installment plans for online purchases, while 48% say they never have.
Lower-income Americans (those with annual household incomes under $48,000) are more likely to frequently or occasionally use installment payments (37%) than middle-income (between $48,000 and $89,999) and higher-income (at least $90,000) Americans are (29% and 21%, respectively).
Business Leaders Survey Covering service firms in New York, northern New Jersey, and southwestern Connecticut
AI CORNER
Powering Up Europe (Goldman Sachs)
Last week, National Grid – the Transmission Operator in the UK – stated it is preparing the Grid for up to 10 GW of datacenters demand that could be connected to the power grid by 2031; this scenario would boost UK consumption by up to +25%. As a reference, currently the UK market is c.3 GW and the European market c.15 GW. The UK alone could therefore boost Europe’s installed base by around +65%.
Europe could reach 60-75 GW of DC capacity by 2035, depending on the adoption rates of AI Agents, which are – presently – 50x more energy-intensive than AI Chatbots. We believe that, as of 2029, the roll-out of DCs could boost power consumption in Europe by at least 1%-1.5% per year.
Following a second energy crisis in less than five years, Europe is increasingly pivoting its energy policy towards energy security and electrification. Together with rising AI adoption rates and the continued datacenter build-out, this should drive materially higher power consumption; our hyper-electrification scenario – which suggests merely that the National Energy Plans run-rates will be met by the end of the decade – points to +5% power demand growth pa by 2029-30.
On our estimates, this would drive €3.5 trn of investment needs in power generation (largely renewables) and power grids, which would support high-single-digit/low-double-digit earnings growth well into the 2030s for most Electrification Compounders, at attractive returns.
Seven in 10 Americans oppose constructing data centers for artificial intelligence in their local area, including nearly half, 48%, who are strongly opposed. Barely a quarter favor these projects, with 7% strongly in favor. (…)
Half of opponents mention data centers’ excessive use of resources, including 18% each mentioning their use of water and energy. Sixteen percent mention a related environmental concern of pollution, including noise pollution and air and water pollution.
About one in five opponents are concerned with the impact on local quality of life, including increased population, increased traffic and preferring that the land be used for other purposes. A similar share mention potentially negative economic consequences, including higher utility bills, cost-of-living increases, and the cost of building the data centers (which could involve the use of taxpayer funds).
Most of the remaining opposition stems from general or specific concerns about artificial intelligence.
Majorities of all major demographic groups, including all party groups, say they would oppose having a data center built where they live. However, Democrats are much more likely than Republicans to be strongly opposed, 56% vs. 39%, with independents between the two at 48%. (…)
Majorities of all major demographic groups, including all party groups, say they would oppose having a data center built where they live. However, Democrats are much more likely than Republicans to be strongly opposed, 56% vs. 39%, with independents between the two at 48%.
In the same March survey, 53% of Americans say they oppose building a nuclear energy plant in their area, far less than the 71% opposed to data center construction. Since Gallup first asked the nuclear power plant question in 2001, the high point in opposition has been 63%.
Today’s WSJ turns this into a rebellion!:
- The American Rebellion Against AI Is Gaining Steam Booed commencement speakers, blocked data centers, plummeting poll numbers: Fast-growing industry has a faster-growing crisis
Delivering a commencement address at the University of Arizona, Schmidt told students the “technological transformation” wrought by artificial intelligence will be “larger, faster and more consequential than what came before.” Like some other graduation speakers mentioning AI, Schmidt was met with a chorus of boos.
In one poll after another in recent weeks, respondents have overwhelmingly voiced concerns about AI, a challenge to claims by industry executives that their technology would gain popularity by improving people’s lives.
Consumers resent energy-price jumps exacerbated by the spread of data centers. Workers fear widespread job losses. Parents worry about AI undermining education and harming children’s mental health. In recent months, the wave of anger has brought protests, swayed election results and spurred isolated acts of violence.
In April, a 20-year-old Texas man allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman’s home and made threats at the company’s San Francisco headquarters, according to a federal complaint filed against him. A few days earlier, someone fired 13 shots at the front door of an Indianapolis councilman who had recently approved a data center. (…)
Pollsters and historians say the souring of public opinion is all but unprecedented in its speed. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen something intensify this quickly,” Gregory Ferenstein, who conducted a recent poll with researchers at Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley, said of the backlash.
The poll showed about 30% of Democrats think America should accelerate AI innovation as quickly as possible, compared with roughly half of Republicans and 77% of tech founders. (…)
Voters in Festus, Mo., ousted four city council members a week after they approved a $6 billion data center. Dozens of communities in states from Maine to Arizona are trying to ban new data centers. Some 360,000 Americans are in Facebook groups opposed to the facilities, roughly quadruple the number from December, figures from organizations fighting the AI build-out show.
(…) for AI companies and builders of the data centers that serve them, it is creating an acute crisis. Investors have staked tens of billions of dollars in capital on the ability of OpenAI, Anthropic and other companies to get access to ever-larger quantities of computing power, and they in turn have pledged much of that capital to fund data-center construction. (…)
Local opposition blocked or delayed at least 48 projects valued at some $156 billion last year, according to Data Center Watch, an organization tracking the trend. A record of 20 were canceled in the first quarter of the year because of local backlash, figures from climate-media outlet and data provider Heatmap show. Dozens more are currently facing similar obstacles on top of obstructions because of permitting snafus and equipment shortages.
On Monday, Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller called for a moratorium on new hyperscale data-center development in the state, citing concerns about the costs to farmers and strain on the power grid. (…)
A string of high-profile layoff announcements in which executives have attributed steep job cuts to AI have furthered Americans’ mistrust of the technology.
Dylan Patel, CEO of AI-infrastructure consulting firm SemiAnalysis, recently predicted there would be large-scale protests against OpenAI and Anthropic within a few months. “People hate AI. AI is less popular than [Immigration and Customs Enforcement]. AI is less popular than politicians,” he said on a podcast. (…)
Data centers built for training can be remote but inference requires local DCs to reduce latency to a minimum (e.g. autonomous driving, delivery drones, etc.).
Nvidia’s most recent chip architectures reduce DC footprint and energy needs by 30% but Jevons Paradox is very much in play here: as a resource becomes more efficient to use, we don’t use less of it; we use vastly more.
- The explosion of agentic AI and compute shortages are pushing up prices: Average LLM token costs are now $2.12/mil tokens,+12% this week alone and +65% since end of Feb. (@LizThomasStrat)
Anthropic Sends Jolt Through Market for Buying Shares in Hot Pre-IPO Startups
In the moments after Anthropic expanded a ban on popular ways to buy its shares, investor chatrooms around the world lit up.
“Are we screwed?” one person wrote in a WhatsApp chat for family offices with several hundred members. Similar questions reverberated more publicly across X, Reddit and Chinese-language social media, as investors worried whether their shares in the artificial intelligence developer — one of the most coveted private companies — had suddenly become worthless.
Days later, there is little clarity. Anthropic PBC issued a stern warning on its website last week about unauthorized sales, taking the unusual step of naming eight firms whose offerings would be considered void. It also expressly prohibited investors from buying shares through special purpose vehicles, a common tool to raise financing.
Both Anthropic and rival OpenAI have long warned against unauthorized transactions — fine print overlooked by eager buyers until last week when the Claude maker removed any ambiguity. Publicly traded funds touting exposure have plunged on the back of the update and private brokers are reeling.
Sim Desai, founder of Hiive, one of the secondary trading platforms called out by Anthropic, said his company only facilitated deals that had Anthropic’s approval. Sohail Prasad, whose closed-end fund has lost about 25% of its share value in the intervening days, was adamant on X that his fund’s Anthropic holdings were valid.
“Anthropic threw a bomb into the market,” said Idan Miller, who runs Unicorns Exchange, another platform named by Anthropic. “We were unfortunately involved in a really bad and unjust way.” (…)
The crackdown “marks the beginning of a reckoning over our modern private markets,” wrote Anat Alon-Beck, a law professor who specializes in corporate governance at pre-IPO companies at Case Western Reserve University. “It raises questions like, who actually owns what? Who bears the risk when shadow ownership structures collapse? Should trillion-dollar private companies continue to operate outside the disclosure framework that governs other big companies?” (…)
Both OpenAI and Anthropic have greenlit some secondary transactions, primarily through tender offers, where early employees and investors can sell stakes. (…)
As secondary sales grew, so did SPVs, now a standard part of financing for many pre-IPO companies and a way for smaller investors to buy in. (…)
But as funding rounds have grown, SPVs have become complicated and murky, with little end clarity for the buyer and reduced transparency for the startup.
“Anthropic does and should have the right to control its cap table and shareholder base,” said Matt Murphy, the Menlo partner who led the firm’s investment. He said his firm didn’t use the kind of SPVs banned by Anthropic.
“Unauthorized SPVs are not in the company’s best interest and can often be downright shady,” he said. “Buyer beware.”
In one recent email pitch reviewed by Bloomberg News, a broker for the “Family Office Network” in Dubai offered would-be buyers a block of Anthropic shares at a $1.2 trillion valuation through an SPV for a 10% cut. It was a “layered” vehicle, meaning that the vehicle being sold by the broker is invested into yet another SPV that claims to own shares.
“Need to wire funds by Monday,” the message read. (…)
“Anthropic said the SPVs are void, not voidable, meaning it was never valid to begin with,” said Alon Kapen, partner at law firm Farrell Fritz. “That essentially means these investors in the SPVs don’t have a claim against Anthropic.”
Many SPV investors bought interest in “an empty box,” he added. (…)Two closed-end funds that disclosed holdings in Anthropic and OpenAI through SPVs, Fundrise Innovation Fund LLC and Destiny Tech100 Inc., fell about 29% and 33% since the Anthropic update. (…)
Justin Taylor, a London-based family office adviser, said the mad rush to buy into Anthropic, OpenAI and SpaceX means investors have skimped on due diligence process and missed the fine print on terms. (…)
In the family office chat about whether holders of Anthropic SPVs were hosed, one person offered a curt reply: “Ask Claude.”
Not totally unrelated:
Fear the greed!
China’s two-wheelers ride EV wave into Europe
Yadea, the world’s largest producer of battery-powered scooters and motorcycles, has enjoyed a sales surge across south-east Asia and South America since the conflict began. The group’s overseas sales this year are tracking about 70 per cent higher than 2025.
“The volume is rising in all these places,” Yadea’s senior vice-president Wang Jiazhong told the FT at its headquarters in Wuxi, eastern China. “Customers are asking if we can advance their orders — I need to speed up the shipments.”
Higher oil prices stemming from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz have also prompted the Hong Kong-listed group to accelerate expansion efforts in the UK and Europe, targeting cities such as London and Paris. (…)
In March the group said it was targeting overseas sales of 450,000 vehicles this year, up from 310,000. It plans to add as many as 10,000 sales points overseas in 2026, adding to its 3,700 sites.
This may only be the tip of the iceberg. Battery-powered vehicles accounted for about 15 per cent of the global two-wheeler market last year, according to International Council on Clean Transportation data, highlighting the massive potential for global growth. (…)
Yadea has six factories in China, where it has now sold about 100mn two-wheelers, as well as plants in Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, Turkey, Brazil and Mexico.
Wang said manufacturing in or near key foreign markets was necessary to avoid tariffs on Chinese exports. Yadea plans to build a factory in Hungary “as European demand increases”. (…)
Like battery maker CATL and EV giant BYD, Yadea was among the companies that pivoted early to Beijing’s supportive policies for transport electrification. There are about 300mn electric scooters in China, which Wang said averaged between 1.5 and 2 vehicles per household, while the declining population would limit growth. (…)
“In countries with power shortages, Africa for example, even charging mobile phones can be affected. I actually see this as an opportunity.”
He said vehicles could serve as a backup for households. An electric scooter with a 4kWh battery “can supply power during outages — enough to run basic household appliances like a TV, refrigerator or charge phones.”
As I wrote back from China last December, it was eerie to stand on the streets of Shanghai, Shenzhen or Beijing and hear zero noise. All electric!
FYI:
Last week, Trump gave an interview to Fortune’s Alyson Shontell. Some might say it was not his most shining moments:
- “Intel should be the biggest company in the world right now,” Trump says. “If I had been president when all these companies started sending their chips in from China, I would have put a tariff on that would have protected Intel.” Referring to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), currently the world’s dominant chipmaker, he adds, “Intel would have all that business now, and there would be no Taiwan.”
- Even the country’s intractable debt crisis draws real estate analogies. The country’s mounting red ink, the president notes, really is not so terrible if you think of it like a real estate mogul would: What’s the total value of America and its natural assets, he suggests, like the Grand Canyon, or even its surrounding oceans? “If you put down the value of these things, it’s like hundreds of trillions of dollars,” Trump says, and by that measure, “if you kept [the national debt] at $40 trillion, you’re way under-levered.”
- “It really pisses me off,” the president groans, as we delve into the Supreme Court’s recent ruling that roughly half of last year’s Liberation Day tariffs were unconstitutional. It’s not the ruling per se that he’s upset about, although he’s certainly not happy about it. But what has specifically ticked him off is the fact that the ruling didn’t come with an asterisk that would have allowed him to keep all of the tariff revenue collected prior to the ruling. “Can you imagine—to people who hate us, to countries that ripped us off for years, I’ve got to give them back $149 billion.”


