Australia Briefing
Good morning, it’s Angus here in Sydney. Here’s what you need to know to start your Thursday.Today’s must-reads:• Trump remains coy on Iran
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Good morning, it’s Angus here in Sydney. Here’s what you need to know to start your Thursday.

Today’s must-reads:
• Trump remains coy on Iran plan
• Albanese and EU plan defense pact
• Bali flight cancellations

What's happening now

Expanding trade ties between Australia and the European Union would be “symbolically important” in an environment of rising protectionism, said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, as the two sides also plan talks on a defense pact. The security partnership will be an important framework for co-operation in defense, cybersecurity and counter-terrorism.

Singapore’s largest bank, DBS Group, partnered with the Australian government to boost trade with Southeast Asia amid upheaval from the Trump administration’s impact on global flows. The agreement between Singapore’s largest bank and the Australian Trade and Investment Commission will allow exporters from Australia to expand their businesses in the fast-growing neighboring region. 

Australia approved the sale of slaughter-free Japanese quail, becoming only the third country to permit the sale of meat cultivated from animal cells. The technology is intended to address the environmental damage caused by conventionally produced meat. Sydney-based startup Vow said it will offer parfait, foie gras and other dishes made from quail cells at local restaurants within weeks.

Forged cultured Japanese Quail foie gras. Photographer: Benito Martin/Forged

Bali airport saw dozens of flights canceled because of a volcanic eruption nearby, stranding holidaymakers at one of Australia’s most popular getaway destinations. Singapore Airlines, Jetstar, AirAsia X, Batik Air and Wings Air were among airlines that halted flights citing the volcanic activity, taking the cancellations to at least 30, according to data on Bali’s international airport website Wednesday.

Link Real Estate Partners, an investment platform run by BlackRock’s former head of Asia Pacific real estate John Saunders, is in talks to buy a warehouse in Sydney owned by Dexus, according to people familiar with the matter. A transaction could value the property at about $100 million, the people said.

What happened overnight

Here’s what my colleague, market strategist Mike “Willo” Wilson says happened while we were sleeping…

It was a night of respite in offshore markets as the Federal Reserve held rates steady in a range of 4.25%-4.5% as they have all year, but continued to pencil in two interest-rate cuts in 2025. US stocks and interest rates were little changed. The dollar ended mixed against major peers as markets await president Trump’s next step in the Israel-Iran conflict. On the local data front, Australian jobs growth should ease. ASX stock index futures point to a subdued opening.

President Donald Trump concluded a meeting Wednesday with top advisers as he weighed whether to plunge the US into the ongoing war between Israel and Iran, but the White House offered few clues about whether he had decided to join the offensive aimed at destroying Tehran’s nuclear program. According to the Wall Street Journal, Trump approved an attack plan targeting Iran on Tuesday but withheld the final authorization to see if officials in Tehran would meet his demands to abandon its nuclear program.

New projections from US Fed officials showed a growing divide among policymakers over the trajectory for borrowing costs as tariffs make their way through the US economy. The Federal Open Market Committee released new economic forecasts showing they expect weaker growth, higher inflation and higher unemployment this year.

Air India is reducing international services using widebody planes by 15% as the nation’s flag carrier grapples with the fallout from a fatal Boeing Co. 787 crash last week and an Israel-Iran clash in the Middle East.

Microsoft is planning to cut thousands of jobs, particularly in sales, as part of the company’s latest move to trim its workforce amid heavy spending on AI. The terminations would follow a previous round of layoffs in May that hit 6,000 people and fell hardest on product and engineering positions, largely sparing customer-facing roles like sales and marketing. 

What to watch

• Australia’s statistics bureau releases employment data for May at 11:30 a.m. Sydney time

One more thing...

LVMH’s €221 billion market value slump is heaping pressure on the company’s billionaire chief executive officer, Bernard Arnault. Fashion label Dior and alcoholic beverages unit Moët Hennessy are particularly struggling, and Arnault's children are in uncomfortable positions as they try to turn things around. Read our Big Take here.

A Christian Dior SE store on Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills. Photographer: Eric Thayer/Bloomberg
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