How did you inspect for "punctures"?
Is the pressure loss while driving, or even just sitting ?
I expect 1/2 psi per day will create obvious vigorous bubbles if submerged in water, or sprayed carefully with soapy water.
Tire bead seats, tire valve stem seats, and tire valve cores all are responsible for an air-tight wheel/tire assembly
Who installed the tubeless tires? Details like cleaning old rubber AND corrosion off the rim bead seat AND tire valve seat are all important to prevent problems just like yours. It is not a 1 minute job, and takes some close visual inspection.
I've had to clean, sand and even use epoxy to smooth some badly corroded sealing areas on alloy wheels that were otherwise in very good condition.
In the last 6 months, tire valve seat problems have emerged on 2 professionally installed tires of our friends and family.
- The older car is a 2008, just 8 years old. One repair was on a tire that set off its low pressure indicator after months of service. The pro repair still showed a
very fine trail of bubbles from the valve/rim joint when the stem was leaned outward, but 10X less than caused the mighty slow leak. I let that one go for now. Had to submerge that one in clean water, with good light.
- The other was low pressure alert and one soon-to-be flat tire the day after some new tires were installed on a 2012 Ford Flex with circus wheels by a very highly regarded large local indie shop. Soapy water revealed a Big leak around a (newly installed) tire valve.