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Good morning. All that glitters may not be gold when it comes to bullion tariffs. Tesla disbands the team it said last month it was doubling down on. And for some weekend fun, teach your children how to play poker. Listen to the day’s top stories.

Markets Snapshot
S&P 500 Futures 6,385.25 +0.29%
Nasdaq Futures 23,569.25 +0.31%
Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index 1,205.09 +0.12%
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The bullion market is getting banged up. Gold futures surged after the US confirmed it put levies on imports of one-kilo and 100-ounce gold bars. Border patrol clarified that the bars aren’t exempt as the industry initially thought, people familiar said, leaving traders and analysts scrambling to understand the situation and whether tariffs are already in force.

Oil steadied at least after its longest losing run since May as traders await Donald Trump’s next move in efforts to end the war in Ukraine. The president may sit down with Vladimir Putin soon, but still said he’s “very disappointed” with the Russian leader’s behavior.
 

Why Isn’t Trump Mad at China For Buying Russian Oil?
Bloomberg's Allen Wan explains what leverage China may have.

Tesla is disbanding its Dojo supercomputer team and its leader will depart the company, according to people familiar, upending the effort to develop in-house chips for driverless technology. Former execs that left previously have already started a new venture. So much for Elon Musk’s comments last month that he was doubling down on Dojo.

Speaking of tech companies in turmoil…Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan said he’s got the full backing of his board, responding for the first time to Trump’s call for his resignation alleging he has conflicts of interest.

Closer to home, Trump moved to increase the presence of federal police around Washington, DC, a day after suggesting he could act to take control of running the capital city. Further afield, the US doubled the reward for the arrest of Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro to a whopping $50 million, and denounced him as one of the world’s largest drug traffickers.

Deep Dive: International Stocks

Trump’s tariffs are making international stocks great again

  • International equity markets are on pace to outperform the broad US stock benchmark this year, the first time they’ve done that since 2022.
  •  Fears that tariffs and trade uncertainty will have an outsized effect on Corporate America’s earnings growth are holding back US share prices. One big-name strategist says investors are pulling out in favor of cash funds.

The Big Take

Wall Street’s post-crisis rules added 51 million work hours a year. Deregulators are now weighing what to keep and what to scrap.

Big Take Podcast
Private Equity Is Coming for Your 401(k)

Opinion

No, private companies cannot replace the Bureau of Labor Statistics or any other US statistical agency, Claudia Sahm writes. Private companies aren’t in the business of creating public goods, which is what economic statistics from the government are.

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How the US Decided China Is Too Big to Bully

Before You Go

Illustration: Rosa Sawyers for Bloomberg

Here’s how to teach your kids to play poker the easy way. The trick: you can start with just one card, and at the age of four. Now begin the betting.

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