[2026-05-13 08:30] Iran ceasefire collapse, WTI breaks $101, CPI 3.8% fallout — DIR Daily Briefing
Daily Briefing · May 13, 2026 · 08:30 KST

Iran ceasefire collapse pushed WTI past $101, layering on top of the April 3.8% CPI shock. Risk assets sold off in unison; markets have essentially priced out 2026 Fed cuts. Tomorrow’s Trump-Xi summit in Beijing (5/14) is the next pivot.
- Iran ceasefire collapse. Tehran rejected Trump’s truce counter-proposal — “we will never surrender.” Trump called the current truce “unbelievably weak” and is reviewing military options. WTI breaks $101 on Hormuz risk.
- April US CPI 3.8% fallout. Hottest print since May 2023. Markets have erased 2026 Fed-cut bets and started pricing a 30% hike probability.
- Trump-Xi Beijing summit on May 14. Three top agenda items: chip-export controls, Taiwan arms sales, Iran sanctions. Risk of an Asian alliance rift.
- Fed Vice Chair confirmation hearing. Coming on the eve of the May 15 chair handover. CPI 3.8% × Trump-pressure double bind.
- JPMorgan ETH tokenized fund + DTCC-Chainlink. Wall-Street DeFi entry going operational. Short-term volatility for ETH and LINK.
1. Iran ceasefire collapse — WTI breaks $101 as Hormuz risk re-ignites
Iran’s supreme leader publicly rejected Trump’s counter-truce, restoring the Iran ceasefire collapse narrative. Trump posted on X that the current truce is “unbelievably weak” and that military options are back under review.
Crude moved on the headline. WTI rose +2.17% to $101.35, re-marking the four-year high; Brent followed. Strait-of-Hormuz blockade risk has now reset to its pre-April-truce level — CNBC’s international desk reads it the same way.
Why it matters
April CPI 3.8% was already driven by energy (+17.9% YoY). With the ceasefire collapse, additional upside pressure flows in. The May CPI baseline (June 10 release) likely steps up another notch.
2. Markets — KOSPI -1.73%, KRW 1,498, risk assets down in unison
Korea sold off on foreign-flow concerns: KOSPI 7,504.33 (-132.15), -1.73%. KRW/USD added +6.13 to 1,498.38 and is testing the 1,500 line again.
The US is weak in sympathy. S&P 500 futures -0.16%; Nasdaq is led down by high-PER growth as duration takes the hit. The US 10-year added +5 bp to 4.46%.
- BUY — Korean refiners and energy (SK Innovation, S-OIL), defense (Hanwha Aerospace, LIG Nex1), LNG infrastructure (HD Korea Shipbuilding, POSCO International)
- SELL — Airlines (Korean Air, Asiana), long-duration bond ETFs, high-PER growth and biotech
- WATCH — Semis (Samsung Electronics, SK hynix; May-14 summit swing factor), gold ($4,721, -1% short-term), ETH and LINK on the JPMorgan / DTCC catalysts
- AVOID — Oil-exposed shippers, consumer and retail, EM-currency-denominated assets
3. Policy — on hold to mid-2027; Japan 10Y at a 29-year high
CME FedWatch now prices 2026 cuts at effectively zero and a 30% hike probability. Bank of America moved its first-cut call to mid-2027.
A second global signal worth pricing in: the Japan 10-year yield touched 2.58%, a 29-year high. BoJ tightening pressure is compounding and dragging the global bond complex weaker in tandem.
Inflation rooted in the Iran ceasefire collapse is no longer a transient supply shock — it’s structural. Layer in concerns about Fed independence and the rate path becomes maximally uncertain.
— DIR deep read
4. Next pivot — Trump-Xi summit in Beijing on May 14
Three agenda items on tomorrow’s summit: chip-export controls, Taiwan arms sales, Iran sanctions. A breakdown would tighten chip-export rules further — direct hit to Samsung and SK hynix’s China revenue, with HBM demand pulled into the wash.
On the crypto side, JPMorgan’s ETH tokenized-fund filing and DTCC’s Q4-2026 Chainlink launch are Wall-Street’s DeFi entry signal. The institutional infrastructure layer is being built; the retail-access layer remains empty.
On the docket today: April PPI confirms whether inflation is broadening. Tomorrow’s retail sales (May 14) closes the near-term volatility window.
