Morning Briefing

Key points

1. Iran–US–Israel war

The war that began on February 28, 2026—after US and Israeli surprise airstrikes across Iran killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and other senior officials—continues to escalate, with heavy aerial and missile exchanges and significant civilian casualties. (Source: Wikipedia)

Iran’s air-defense commander says Iranian forces have used new indigenous systems to destroy several advanced fighter jets, dozens of cruise missiles, and more than 160 “enemy” drones amid ongoing US–Israeli operations. (Source: Dawn)

US media report that an American F‑15E warplane was shot down over Iran, with at least one crew member rescued, underscoring rising risks to US air operations. (Source: The Daily Star)

Iranian missile strikes have hit targets in Israel, including destroying a residential building in the Tel Aviv suburb of Ramat Gan, while Israel continues airstrikes on Hezbollah‑linked sites in Lebanon, including in southern Beirut and near the Litani River. (Source: Slobodna Bosna)

2. Russia–Ukraine war

Russia launched daytime missile and drone attacks that killed at least 10 people and caused major damage in Ukrainian towns such as Korosten, as the conflict and parallel peace efforts backed by US mediators continue. (Source: Dawn)

3. Afghanistan earthquake

A magnitude 5.9 earthquake in Afghanistan’s Hindu Kush region killed at least eight people and injured a child after a house collapse in Kabul. The deep quake was felt widely in Kabul, Islamabad, and New Delhi. (Source: The Kathmandu Post)

4. Global economic fallout of the Iran war

The IMF is urging the Bank of Japan to keep raising interest rates despite “significant new risks” from the Middle East war, warning that conflict‑driven oil price spikes and a weak yen are adding to inflation pressures even as growth moderates. (Source: KFGO)

Finance ministers from Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Austria are calling on the European Commission to impose a new windfall tax on energy companies benefiting from higher prices linked to the Iran war. (Source: Bloomberg via Reuters)

Global markets remain highly sensitive to war headlines and oil prices, with a Reuters‑based analysis noting that oil and the Middle East conflict are now top concerns for a volatile second quarter as investors reassess inflation and growth risks. (Source: The Daily Star)

In US markets, Treasuries sold off after a stronger‑than‑expected March jobs report, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve will delay rate cuts; 10‑year yields moved higher even after a week of earlier safe‑haven buying tied to the conflict. (Source: Business Recorder)

5. Energy security and sanctions

Taiwan, heavily reliant on imported liquefied natural gas, says it has secured assurances from the energy minister of a “major” LNG‑producing country to fully cover its gas needs amid disruption risks from the Iran war. Taipei has already lined up alternative supplies from the US, Australia, and others to reduce dependence on Qatar. (Source: KFGO)

Sweden has released the sanctioned tanker Flora 1—suspected of being part of Russia’s “shadow fleet”—after investigating a 12‑km oil spill in the Baltic Sea, though two crew members remain under suspicion of environmental crimes. (Source: Kyiv Post)

6. Major corporate and markets news

SpaceX has confidentially filed for a June IPO that could value the combined SpaceX–xAI group at about $1.75 trillion and raise up to $75 billion, positioning it as potentially the largest public offering in history and significantly boosting Elon Musk’s wealth. Starlink’s roughly 10 million subscribers globally underpin much of the proposed valuation. (Source: Billionaires.Africa)

7. Climate and shareholder pressure

Proxy adviser ISS is recommending that investors vote against BP’s board over its attempt to roll back elements of prior climate‑reporting commitments and to permit online‑only shareholder meetings, signaling ongoing investor pressure on fossil‑fuel companies’ governance and climate transparency. (Source: StreetInsider via Reuters)

8. Science and space

Astrophysicists report new indirect evidence for extremely powerful “pair‑instability” supernovas—explosions of very massive stars (around 140–260 solar masses) that can leave no remnant—based on analyses of black holes and gravitational‑wave signals, supporting a long‑standing theoretical prediction. (Source: Dawn)

9. Environment and wildlife

Kazakhstan has begun releasing dozens of endangered saker falcons into Altyn‑Emel National Park under a Saudi‑backed restoration program. The Saudi Falcons Club and Kazakh partners plan to release 35–45 birds annually for at least three years to rebuild populations that have fallen by up to 90% in parts of Kazakhstan. (Source: Dawn)

10. US domestic

In St. Louis, Missouri, three separate shootings at gas stations on Friday evening left two people dead and three injured, highlighting ongoing concerns over gun violence in a city with one of the highest homicide rates per capita in the US. (Source: National Today)