Jax Morning Brief
Good morning. It's Thursday, July second, twenty twenty-six. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: The number that could reset everything lands this morning. At eight thirty Eastern, we get the June jobs report — and the Fed chair just changed the mood music right before it. ANDREW: And the U.S. and Iran wrapped up two days of talks in Doha with what both sides are calling progress — then hit pause, because Iran is about to bury its supreme leader. We'll explain. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. Stocks took a breather to start the second half of the year. The S and P 500 slipped about two-tenths of a percent to close at 7,483. The Dow was essentially flat, down fourteen points to 52,305. And the Nasdaq fell two-thirds of a percent to 26,040, as investors cashed in some chips — literally. Semiconductor stocks had run up more than eighty percent in the first half of the year, so a little profit-taking there is not a surprise. The ten-year Treasury yield eased to about 4.47 percent, and the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking just above 6.5 percent according to Mortgage News Daily. And that ten-year move is actually the story, Jenny — it dropped because of something the Fed chair said. JENNY: This is the piece I want to start with, because it feels like a shift. What did Warsh actually say? ANDREW: So Kevin Warsh was speaking in Portugal, at the European Central Bank's annual forum. And for weeks the story on this Fed has been hawkish — nine officials leaning toward hiking rates, inflation stuck near a three-year high. Warsh just softened that. His words: inflation expectations and inflation risks have, quote, come down. He pointed straight at energy — gas prices have fallen substantially since the U.S. and Iran signed that framework to wind down the war. JENNY: So is that Warsh backing away from a rate hike? ANDREW: Not quite — and he was careful about it. He repeated that the Fed still has more work to do to get inflation back to two percent, and he's still nowhere near cutting. But the tone is different. A month ago the conversation was about how many hikes. Now the chair is publicly saying the risks are easing. Markets heard it immediately — the ten-year yield dropped, and even bitcoin jumped back above sixty thousand dollars on the news. JENNY: And all of that sets up the number this morning. ANDREW: It's the perfect setup. The June jobs report comes out at eight thirty Eastern — a day early, because of the Fourth of July holiday. Economists are looking for somewhere around one hundred ten thousand jobs added, with unemployment holding near four-point-three percent. Here's why the timing matters. If Warsh is right that inflation pressure is fading, a soft jobs number could accelerate the pivot — from talking about hikes to talking about holding, or even eventually cutting. A hot number does the opposite. So this one report, dropping in a couple of hours, could reprice everything we just talked about. JENNY: Let's go to the other big national thread — Iran. The talks in Doha wrapped up. Where do things stand? ANDREW: They ended on a cautiously positive note. These were indirect talks — the U.S. and Iran not in the same room, passing messages through Qatari and Pakistani mediators over two days. Qatar said the two sides made, quote, positive progress on the framework to end the war, and agreed to keep going. The two big items on the table: unfreezing Iran's assets, and the future of the Strait of Hormuz. JENNY: And Hormuz is still the sticking point. ANDREW: It's the whole ballgame. Roughly a fifth of the world's oil moves through that strait. Iran wants the right to charge tankers a passage fee once the current sixty-day truce window ends — Tehran claims joint control of the waterway with Oman. The U.S. position is that Hormuz is an international waterway, so any toll scheme would need the Gulf states to sign off too. That gap is unresolved. JENNY: And you said the talks are now pausing. Why? ANDREW: Because of a funeral. Remember, Iran's longtime supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, was killed back in February at the start of the war. His burial was postponed while the fighting dragged on, and it's finally happening now — days of ceremonies in Tehran starting this weekend, ending with his burial on July ninth. His son, Mojtaba Khamenei, has already taken over as supreme leader. So the next round of talks won't happen until after the ninth. For markets, the read is: no breakdown, but no breakthrough either — just a ten-day intermission. And with oil already down sharply, that calm is exactly what's letting Warsh sound more relaxed. That's the national desk. Andrew stays put, actually — because the jobs number ties straight into mortgages. ANDREW: It does. Let's talk about what all this means for rates. The thirty-year fixed is sitting just above 6.5 percent — Bankrate has it around 6.5, Mortgage News Daily in the same neighborhood, and a couple of trackers had it ticking toward 6.6 percent after the hawkish June Fed meeting. So rates drifted up over the last two weeks, but they've basically been treading water. JENNY: So for someone trying to lock a rate right now — does today's jobs report change the calculus? ANDREW: More than usual. On a normal week I'd say a day won't matter much. But this morning's number is exactly the kind of thing that moves the ten-year Treasury, and mortgage rates follow the ten-year almost step for step. If Warsh is right and the data cooperates, you could see rates drift lower into the summer. If June comes in hot, the opposite. If you're closing this week and you like the rate you can get, there's a real case for locking before eight thirty. JENNY: And underneath the day-to-day, what are borrowers actually doing? ANDREW: They're leaning in on the dips. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported applications ticked up about one percent in its latest week, and refinancing has been the strong spot — homeowners who bought at higher rates are jumping on even small improvements. There's a wall of demand that's been coiled up for months. Any real break lower and you'd see a surge in refis. For now it's a waiting game, and everyone in the industry is watching the same eight-thirty clock. Jenny, over to you — there was a big move in AI. JENNY: There was, and it fits a theme we've been tracking all week: the race to make these models cheaper. Anthropic launched Claude Sonnet 5 — and it's calling it the most agentic Sonnet model it's built. Agentic just means it can actually go do things on its own — plan out a task, use tools like a web browser or a terminal, and run for a while without a human holding its hand. ANDREW: And the news is the price? JENNY: The news is the price. Sonnet 5 launched at two dollars per million input tokens and ten per million output — and through the end of August it's even cheaper than that. That undercuts Anthropic's own flagship, and it comes in below OpenAI's and Google's comparable models too. So you've got the same pattern we saw with OpenAI's release last week: capability that used to require a big expensive model, now available at a fraction of the cost. ANDREW: And you keep connecting this back to industries like ours — banking, lending. Why does the price tag matter so much there? JENNY: Because in a regulated industry, cost is what turns a pilot into a real deployment. When a mortgage company wants to run one of these models across millions of documents or customer interactions, the per-use price is the whole business case. Cut it in half, and suddenly the math works at scale. And there's a governance angle too — Anthropic also announced a partnership with the data company Snowflake this week aimed specifically at enterprises that need AI they can audit and control. That combination, cheaper plus more governable, is exactly what a bank needs to say yes. ANDREW: So the price war is really an adoption war. JENNY: That's a good way to put it. The labs figured out that the winner isn't whoever has the flashiest demo — it's whoever the compliance department will actually approve. Speaking of home, Andrew — let's bring it back to Jacksonville. JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high around 93 degrees today with the usual summer afternoon thunderstorms rolling through, and it stays hot and steamy right through the holiday weekend. So if you're headed downtown for fireworks, pack the poncho and keep an eye on the radar. JENNY: And downtown is where the action is this weekend, because Jacksonville is throwing a big party. The city is marking America's two hundred fiftieth anniversary with free, family-friendly celebrations on both the north and south banks of the St. Johns on July third and fourth — think music, activities, and fireworks over the river. It's a genuine civic moment, and it lands right as downtown is trying to prove it's a place people actually want to be. ANDREW: And is that just a holiday thing, or is there real momentum behind downtown right now? JENNY: There's real momentum, and the numbers back it up. Downtown Jacksonville now has around nine thousand residents — up from eight thousand just a year ago — and the city's stated goal is twenty thousand. That's the target that makes a downtown feel alive after five o'clock. To get there, you need the anchors, and they're lining up: the Four Seasons hotel and residences is expected to top off this year, the University of Florida is bringing a graduate campus, and there's a new Florida Semiconductor Institute planned for the urban core. ANDREW: And this connects to that grocery store story from yesterday, right? JENNY: It's the same thread. As we reported, developer Gateway Jax got the permit to clear the way for a fourteen-story tower that will include a downtown Publix — the first full-service grocery store downtown has had in years. Residents, then the grocery store, then the amenities. That's the sequence a real downtown follows, and Jacksonville is finally moving through it in order. JENNY: A couple of quick business notes to round it out. The Jacksonville Daily Record reports that Williams Sonoma, West Elm, and Pottery Barn Kids are all returning to the local market, with first openings expected next year. And the city is set to convey land in Northwest Jacksonville for up to fifty new homes aimed at middle-income buyers — the kind of workforce housing that's hard to build and badly needed. Small items, but they point the same direction: people betting on this city. Andrew, take us out. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch — and you won't have to wait long. The June jobs report hits at eight thirty this morning, Eastern time. The consensus is about one hundred ten thousand jobs added and unemployment near four-point-three percent. Here's the thing to listen for: with the Fed chair now saying inflation risks are easing, a soft number would strengthen the case that the next move is down, not up — and that would ripple straight into the mortgage rates we just talked about. A hot number reopens the hike debate. Everything today hinges on that one line at eight thirty. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Thursday. Have a great day, and a happy Fourth. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.
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