Jax Morning Brief — Trump Cancels Iran Strikes, Markets Surge, SpaceX Debuts Today
Good morning. It's Friday, June 12th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny.
ANDREW: And I'm Andrew.
JENNY: The story we've been tracking all week just turned on a dime. President Trump cancelled a planned overnight strike on Iran and now says a peace agreement could be signed within days. Markets ripped higher, oil tumbled, and the war premium that has driven this entire week's tape just started unwinding.
ANDREW: And in another story we've been following, SpaceX priced the largest IPO in U.S. history last night at a one point seven eight trillion dollar valuation. Shares start trading today. We'll get to what the order book is telling us about the rest of the year's IPO pipeline.
JENNY: Let's get into it.
ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed at 7,394, up one point seven five percent. The Dow surged 930 points to 50,849, up one point eight six percent. And the Nasdaq led the way, climbing two point five four percent to 25,810. It was the strongest session in weeks, and it was almost entirely about Iran. The ten-year Treasury yield slipped to four point five three percent as oil sold off, and the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at six point five seven percent according to Bankrate, with Freddie Mac's weekly survey out yesterday at six point five two. We'll come back to those numbers in the mortgage section.
ANDREW: Let's start with the story driving all of it. Late Thursday afternoon, President Trump posted on Truth Social that he had cancelled the planned strikes on Iran, saying discussions had been brought to the, quote, highest level of Iranian leadership and approved. He told reporters the two sides had made a, quote, great settlement, and that he expects the agreement to be signed in Europe within days. Just hours earlier, the same president had warned Iran would be hit, quote, very hard tonight.
JENNY: So which one is it? Because we spent the last 48 hours covering an active kinetic exchange. CENTCOM strikes Wednesday, Iranian retaliation against U.S. bases in Bahrain and Kuwait, Brent oil near 94 dollars. How real is this de-escalation?
ANDREW: That's the honest question, and the answer is, we don't know yet. Iran's foreign ministry spokesman told state media that reports of a finalized agreement are, quote, merely speculation, and that Tehran has not made a final decision. So we have the U.S. president saying a deal is essentially done, and the Iranian government saying nothing has been agreed. Markets chose to believe the optimistic version. Brent crude fell more than four percent to about 89 dollars a barrel. U.S. crude dropped to 86.51. The Strait of Hormuz technically remains closed to traffic, but the directional bet was clear.
JENNY: And the political pressure on both sides is real. Trump wants a foreign policy win heading into the Fed meeting next week. Iran's economy can't take a sustained shutdown of the Strait.
ANDREW: Right. The risk for listeners is that this is a Trump-style negotiation that swings back the other way over a weekend tweet. If you woke up this morning relieved, just remember the same president threatened maximum strikes and announced a peace deal in the same six-hour window yesterday.
ANDREW: One more thing on the national side, and it ties directly to what happens next week. The Federal Reserve meets Tuesday and Wednesday. Kevin Warsh's first meeting as chair. Markets are pricing a 98 percent probability of no change at the current three and a half to three and three quarter percent range. But the real event is the dot plot and Warsh's first press conference. Warsh has telegraphed that he wants what he calls strategic ambiguity, fewer scheduled press conferences, and an end to formal forward guidance. So the format of how the Fed communicates may be changing in real time on Wednesday.
ANDREW: Jenny, on that note, the other story that traders couldn't take their eyes off yesterday is on your beat. Take us through it.
JENNY: Thanks, Andrew. SpaceX priced its IPO last night at 135 dollars a share. The company is selling 555 million shares to raise roughly 75 billion dollars. That makes it, by a wide margin, the largest IPO in U.S. stock market history. The implied valuation is one point seven eight trillion dollars. Trading opens today on the Nasdaq under the ticker S P C X.
ANDREW: And the demand side of this is the part everyone's talking about.
JENNY: It's almost hard to overstate. According to Bloomberg, retail investors alone submitted more than 100 billion dollars in orders. Total demand, retail and institutional combined, ran north of 250 billion dollars. That's three and a half to four times oversubscribed. SpaceX originally planned to give retail investors 30 percent of the deal, an unusually generous slice. It quietly cut that allocation to the low 20s as institutional bids piled up. If you put in an order through Robinhood for 100 shares, you're more likely to get 20.
ANDREW: So what does today's open actually tell us beyond SpaceX itself?
JENNY: Two things. First, the appetite for very large, very profitable private tech is enormous, even with the macro picture as messy as it is. Second, and this is what bankers care about, S P C X is the bellwether for the rest of the AI and frontier-tech IPO pipeline. Anthropic filed confidentially on June 1st. OpenAI filed June 8th. If SpaceX trades up cleanly today, both deals get easier. If S P C X breaks the issue price, the conversation in those boardrooms gets very different over the weekend.
JENNY: And speaking of OpenAI and Anthropic, Bloomberg also reported yesterday that OpenAI is weighing significant price cuts on its API tokens, specifically to counter expected cuts from Anthropic ahead of both IPOs. A pricing war between the two largest frontier labs would be brutal for margins on both sides, and it would land right in the middle of the S-1 process.
ANDREW: That's a weird incentive. You usually want to dress up margins ahead of a listing, not gut them.
JENNY: It's a market-share play. They both believe whoever owns enterprise adoption when they go public gets the higher multiple, and they're willing to sacrifice short-term gross margin to lock in customers. The enterprise customers reading those S-1s are going to be very happy this quarter.
JENNY: Andrew, the move in the ten-year yesterday was a real shift. What does it mean for the mortgage market today?
ANDREW: Thanks, Jenny. It's a small but real bit of relief after a tense two weeks. The thirty-year fixed sits at six point five seven percent this morning per Bankrate's Friday read. Freddie Mac's weekly survey, which posted yesterday, came in at six point five two. Mortgage News Daily has it tracking in the same neighborhood. That's down from the spike we got after Wednesday's hot C P I print, and it's a direct response to the ten-year falling back to four point five three.
JENNY: For someone trying to close on a house this weekend, what does that translate to?
ANDREW: On a 400,000 dollar loan, a quarter point lower rate is about 65 dollars a month, roughly 23,000 dollars over the life of the loan. But the more interesting story is what borrowers did before any of this happened. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported Wednesday that applications for the week ending June 5 jumped ten point eight percent. Refinance applications were up 15 percent. Purchase applications up 7. Refinance share hit forty point two percent of all applications, the highest in months.
JENNY: So people were locking ahead of C P I.
ANDREW: They were locking ahead of everything. C P I, the Fed meeting, Iran. When borrowers see a tape this volatile, they pull forward. The question now is whether this Iran de-escalation, if it holds, lets the ten-year break lower toward four point four, which would take the thirty-year fixed back under six and a half. If the deal falls apart over the weekend and oil reverses, we'll be talking about seven percent rates again by mid-week.
JENNY: A lot riding on a Truth Social post.
ANDREW: That is the world we live in.
ANDREW: Jenny, what's happening at home today?
JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at 94 degrees and partly cloudy today. Sunshine early, clouds building this afternoon, and a stray thunderstorm possible later. Classic mid-June heat. Drink water.
JENNY: The big local story this morning is at City Hall, and it isn't going away. The city released nearly 1,000 pages of subpoenaed records from Council President Kevin Carrico on Tuesday after a delay of more than 100 days. The subpoena came from State Attorney Melissa Nelson's office back in February. It covered Carrico's calendar, emails, and texts going back to January 2025, all related to his communications with JEA board members about appointments and about CEO Vickie Cavey.
ANDREW: And what's in the records?
JENNY: The reporting from News4Jax and First Coast News focuses on one text in particular. Carrico told JEA board member Arthur Adams he would not be renominating him, and that he planned to nominate the CEO of the Boys and Girls Club instead because he owed him, in Carrico's words, a, quote, big favor. A longtime member of the City Council went on the record yesterday saying Carrico's priorities are, quote, not on the people of Jacksonville.
ANDREW: Are the records complete?
JENNY: That's the second story inside this. Carrico's lawyer issued a statement yesterday saying personal text messages don't have to be released, and the council secretary has acknowledged that some personal communications were redacted from the file with no explanation provided. So the question of what's still being withheld is now a live issue.
JENNY: This matters because it intersects directly with the JEA investigation we've been tracking. CEO Vickie Cavey is scheduled to testify before the Special Investigatory Committee on June 22nd. The committee's report is due by the end of the month. If the Carrico texts establish a pattern of board appointments being traded for personal favors, the charter-change conversation about how JEA is governed is going to get a lot louder.
JENNY: Two quick local items before we go. The Jaguars wrapped mandatory minicamp yesterday at the Miller Electric Center. The headline is Travis Hunter. After spending the entire spring on what the team called mental reps following his October knee injury, Hunter actually played both ways in the final practice. Three catches on offense, played zone coverage on defense, made a stop. Head coach Liam Coen said Hunter ran 22.6 miles per hour in a pre-practice sprint earlier this week, which puts him near team-best speed numbers. He'll be a full participant when training camp opens in late July.
JENNY: And on infrastructure, the city and the Florida Department of Transportation start a 9.6 million dollar multi-modal improvement project along Mayport Road on Monday. Expect lane shifts and detours through the summer if you commute through the Beaches corridor.
JENNY: Andrew, take us out.
ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch this weekend: whether the Iran agreement actually gets signed. Trump said the deal would be inked, quote, in Europe within days. Iran's foreign ministry has not confirmed any deal. If you wake up Saturday or Sunday to a signed framework, the ten-year Treasury likely breaks below four point five, mortgage rates ease into next week, and the Fed has more room to sound neutral on Wednesday rather than hawkish. If the weekend ends with no signing and Brent crude back through 95 dollars, the Tuesday tape resets to where we were Wednesday morning. Watch oil at the Sunday futures open. It will tell you everything before the equity market does.
JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Friday. Have a great weekend.
ANDREW: We'll see you Monday.
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