A volatile 24 hours reset the global risk board: Washington and Tehran traded fire while insisting diplomacy isn’t dead, Ukraine struck targets inside Russia, and Congress’s Epstein probe widened to include Bill Gates. Inflation jitters, a fresh Artemis crew, and a rare sunscreen update rounded out a packed news day.
War watch: U.S.–Iran

- The Iran war entered another tit-for-tat cycle as Iran launched retaliatory strikes on American targets following a U.S. operation that officials described as limited. The White House does not expect the exchanges to derail talks aimed at ending the conflict [5].
- Former President Trump vowed a U.S. response after saying Iran shot down an Army Apache helicopter, heightening political pressure around the conflict’s trajectory [3].
- Markets and wallets are watching: economists expect headline CPI to top 4% for the first time in three years, driven largely by oil prices tied to the war [5].
Ukraine strikes deep
- Ukraine launched long-range strikes on military and energy facilities inside Russia, underscoring Kyiv’s expanding reach as both sides test air defenses and supply lines [2].
Power and accountability: Epstein probe
- Bill Gates will testify in the House panel’s investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, signaling lawmakers’ intent to map the late financier’s network and influence trail [1].
- A longtime Epstein assistant portrayed him as a master manipulator while denying knowledge of his crimes; one Democratic lawmaker publicly questioned the credibility of much of her testimony [3] [8].
Democracy and the map
- On Capitol Hill, a bipartisan push to tackle gerrymandering gathered steam, with backers arguing partisan line-drawing erodes faith in representation and governance [4].
Science, health and tech quick hits
- NASA named the four astronauts for the next Artemis mission, a two-week test flight that marks the next big step toward returning humans to the moon [3].
- For the first time in two decades, the FDA approved a new sunscreen ingredient, BEMT, which experts tout as a safer option than many chemicals currently used in the U.S. [3].
Markets and macro
- In a sign of deepening structural malaise, every slice of China’s bond market has now “Japanised,” with ultra-low yields and stagnant dynamics drawing comparisons to Japan’s long grind through deflationary pressures [6].
Also watching
- Gaza faces a surge of disease-carrying rodents amid war damage and sanitation breakdowns, a stark snapshot of humanitarian strain [7].
- Primary day offers fresh tea leaves in Maine, South Carolina, Nevada, and North Dakota as voters weigh candidates under clouds of controversy [3].
The bottom line: The global picture is hardening around three fronts—conflict risk, cost-of-living pressure, and institutional credibility. Watch the CPI print, Hill testimony calendars, and strike dynamics in Iran and Ukraine for the next significant turns.
References
- [1] Bill Gates to testify in congressional panel’s Jeffrey Epstein investigation – AP News
- [2] Ukraine launches long-range strikes on military and energy sites in Russia – AP News
- [3] Election updates, new Artemis crew, sunscreen changes: Catch up on the day’s stories – CNN
- [4] Bipartisan effort in Congress to address gerrymandering: “It’s not good for the people we represent” – CNN
- [5] 5 things to know for June 10: Maine primary, Iran war, inflation, World Cup, Bill Gates testimony – CNN
- [6] Every slice of China’s bond market has now succumbed to Japanisation – Financial Times
- [7] The plague of rodents terrorising Gaza – Financial Times
- [8] Democrat says he doesn’t think most of Epstein assistant’s testimony was ‘truthful’ – CNN

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