Global & Geopolitical Developments
Quick summary
- Iran war and the Strait of Hormuz crisis are keeping oil near $100 and fueling a global inflation shock.
- Major Tuareg and jihadist offensive in Mali has seized key northern areas and killed the defense minister.
- U.S. markets face Fed meeting jitters and an AI-stock selloff tied to reports on OpenAI’s growth and revenue.
- Multi-day tornado outbreak across the central U.S. has produced an EF4 tornado, at least one death, and dozens of injuries.
- NASA’s Artemis II crew safely completed a record-setting crewed lunar flyby earlier this month.
Iran war and Strait of Hormuz crisis
The war in Iran, which began on February 28 with U.S.–Israeli strikes and the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, has left shipping through the Strait of Hormuz largely blocked, causing the biggest disruption to global oil flows since the 1970s.
Oil prices remain near triple‑digit levels (around $100 for WTI and about $111 for Brent), driving the highest U.S. gasoline prices since the conflict began and contributing to a global inflation shock. BP has reported more than double its year‑earlier profits, explicitly linking the surge to Iran‑related price increases.
Iran has proposed reopening the Strait in exchange for easing the U.S. blockade, and President Donald Trump has said Tehran wants it opened “as soon as possible.” Central banks, including the Bank of Japan, are holding policy rates steady while warning that the war and elevated energy prices pose major economic risks.
Sources: Wikipedia (2026), StoneX commentary (Apr 28, 2026), Al Jazeera reporting on oil and Hormuz proposals.
Large offensive in Mali
Since April 25, Tuareg separatists from the Azawad Liberation Front and al‑Qaeda–linked Jama'at Nusrat al‑Islam wal‑Muslimin (JNIM) have launched the largest coordinated attacks in over a decade across Mali.
The offensive has targeted Bamako’s international airport, the nearby military hub of Kati, and several northern and central cities. Rebel and jihadist forces have fully or partially seized key northern centers, including Kidal and parts of Gao, Mopti, and Sévaré.
Mali’s defense minister Sadio Camara died of wounds from the initial assault, and Russian troops and mercenaries have withdrawn from at least some northern positions. The junta leader has met Russia’s ambassador as Moscow labels the offensive a coup attempt, highlighting risks of further escalation and regional spillover.
Sources: Wikipedia (2026), Hamer Intelligence analysis (article 1737), Associated Press coverage of diplomatic reactions.
Domestic security scare and state visit
White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting
On Saturday, April 25, an armed attacker opened fire at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in Washington, D.C., in what authorities describe as an attempted assassination of President Donald Trump. He was evacuated unharmed; two people were injured and there were no deaths reported. The suspect faces federal charges including attempted assassination of the president.
UK royal state visit
King Charles III and Queen Camilla began a four‑day state visit to the United States on April 27, the first state visit of Trump’s second term, taking place amid the Iran war and heightened domestic political tension.
Sources: Wikipedia entries on the April 25, 2026 White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting and the Q2 2026 Trump presidency timeline.
Severe weather in the central United States
A multi‑day tornado outbreak sequence from April 23–28 is ongoing across the western and central U.S., with at least 38 confirmed tornadoes so far and a top rating of EF4.
An EF4 tornado south of Enid, Oklahoma, on April 23 caused extreme residential destruction and at least 10 injuries. Later storms, including a high‑end EF2 tornado in Runaway Bay, Texas, have killed at least one person and left thousands without power. Forecasters warn that severe weather could continue into April 28.
Source: Wikipedia entry on the April 23–28, 2026 tornado outbreak sequence.
Fed meeting, inflation worries, and AI‑stock selloff
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) begins a two‑day meeting today, with investors already on edge over inflation as crude trades back near $100. The U.S. dollar index is just under 99, the 10‑year Treasury yield is around 4.36%, and 2‑year yields are near 3.85%.
A wave of reports, led by the Wall Street Journal, that OpenAI has missed key internal user and revenue targets has triggered a sharp selloff in AI‑linked infrastructure and partner stocks. Shares of Oracle, Nvidia, Microsoft, Broadcom, SoftBank, CoreWeave, and others are down several percent, pulling the Nasdaq and Russell 2000 off recent highs.
Analysts warn these reported misses raise questions about OpenAI’s ability to fund massive data‑center spending ahead of a planned blockbuster IPO, and about the sustainability of current AI equity valuations.
Sources: StoneX market commentary (Apr 28, 2026), TheStreet and Semafor reporting on AI‑related market moves.
AI product shifts and competition
OpenAI’s Sora consumer video‑generation app was shut down publicly on April 26, even as the company rolls out new frontier models such as GPT‑5.5 and GPT‑Image‑Gen‑2. Competitors are advancing as well, with Anthropic launching Claude Opus 4.7 and DeepSeek releasing its V4 model.
Reports indicate OpenAI has begun testing in‑product advertising in ChatGPT and is positioning ads as a key long‑term revenue stream, signaling a shift toward ad‑funded AI services.
Source: Wikipedia overview of 2026 developments in artificial intelligence.
Artemis II completes record-setting lunar flyby
NASA’s Artemis II crewed lunar flyby mission successfully launched on April 1 and completed its journey earlier this month. The four‑person crew set a new record for the farthest distance humans have traveled from Earth while passing the Moon’s far side on April 6, then safely splashed down in the Pacific Ocean near San Diego on April 10.
Source: Wikipedia (2026) overview of the Artemis II mission.