- Drones struck a power station at the UAE’s Barakah nuclear plant Sunday, with two others intercepted; Iran has made no public comment — though the UAE attributed the attack to “one of its proxies.”
- Trump responded on Truth Social: Iran “better get moving, FAST, or there won’t be anything left of them” — his most belligerent public comments since the ceasefire began April 8.
- Brent crude climbed ~1.5% to $110.70/barrel Monday; 10-year Treasury yields surpassed 4.5%, the highest in ~15 months, intensifying pressure on the Fed and equity markets.
- Iran’s terms for a peace deal include reparations, unfreezing of assets, ending the U.S. port blockade, and retaining control over Hormuz shipping traffic — conditions Washington has not publicly accepted.
What Happened?
A drone struck a power station at the UAE’s under-construction Barakah nuclear plant Sunday, sparking a fire; two additional drones were intercepted. Abu Dhabi’s media office confirmed no radiological impact. Saudi Arabia separately intercepted three drones entering its airspace from Iraq. Iran made no public comment on the attacks. President Trump responded on Truth Social with his strongest threat since returning from Beijing, warning Iran to move “FAST” or face destruction. The strikes pushed Brent crude above $110 and triggered a bond selloff that brought 10-year Treasury yields above 4.5% — their highest in roughly 15 months — compounding the macro pressure from the ongoing Hormuz closure.
Why It Matters?
The Barakah strike marks a significant escalation — targeting a nuclear facility in a Gulf state that has been among the most aggressive toward Iran — and signals the fragility of the April 8 ceasefire. For markets, the attack reinforces that no near-term Hormuz resolution is in sight: Brent at $110 feeds directly into inflation that is already running at multiyear highs, pushing bond yields higher and making the Fed’s position even more difficult. Iran’s stated conditions for peace — reparations, asset unfreezing, control over Hormuz transit — remain far from what the U.S. has signaled it will accept. Trump told Axios he’s waiting for an updated Iranian proposal: “They are not where we want them to be.”
What’s Next?
Putin’s scheduled visit to Beijing on Tuesday and Wednesday is expected to include discussions about the Iran war — adding a Russia-China diplomatic dimension that complicates U.S. pressure on Tehran. Treasury Secretary Bessent has called on G-7 nations to increase Iran sanctions. Watch for whether Iran responds to Trump’s latest ultimatum with a proposal or with further proxy attacks across the Gulf. Any additional strikes on Gulf energy or nuclear infrastructure would likely send oil above $115 and further destabilize already-stressed global bond markets.
Source: Bloomberg













