Jax Morning Brief
Good morning. It's Wednesday, June 17th. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: Kevin Warsh holds his first press conference as Chair of the Federal Reserve this afternoon, and Wall Street is waiting to see whether he sticks to his strategic ambiguity playbook or breaks new ground. ANDREW: Plus, the heads of OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind are sitting down together at the G7 summit in France today. First time the three of them have appeared in front of world leaders at the same table. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The Dow closed at just under 52,000, up six tenths of a percent — a new record high. The S and P 500 was effectively flat, slipping less than a tenth of a percent to finish at 7,548.60. And the Nasdaq pulled back 1.15 percent to close at 26,376. The ten-year Treasury yield is sitting at 4.43 percent this morning, down about five basis points on the session. And the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at 6.54 percent according to Mortgage News Daily. All of that with traders essentially running out the clock on this afternoon's Fed decision. ANDREW: Let's start there. At 2 p.m. Eastern, the Federal Reserve releases its rate decision and an updated Summary of Economic Projections. At 2:30, Kevin Warsh steps up to deliver his first press conference as Chair. CME FedWatch is pricing a 98.4 percent probability that the Committee holds the benchmark rate at 3.50 to 3.75 percent. JENNY: So if the hold is essentially a foregone conclusion, what is the market actually waiting for? ANDREW: The dot plot. The March projections still penciled in at least one rate cut this year. Today's dot plot is widely expected to wipe that cut out entirely — and a growing hawkish minority on the committee is openly arguing for a 2026 hike. May CPI came in at 4.2 percent, the hottest reading in three years, with energy prices up almost 24 percent year over year. Warsh is inheriting the most internally divided Federal Reserve in three decades. JENNY: And there's a separate question about how he actually runs the room. ANDREW: There is. Warsh has telegraphed what he calls strategic ambiguity — fewer scheduled press conferences, an end to formal forward guidance, and there is real speculation he may decline to submit a personal dot in today's projections. We may learn the new communications cadence in real time this afternoon. Listeners should care because the format itself moves markets. Every word from that podium gets parsed for trading signal, and Warsh is signaling he wants to deliver less of it. JENNY: Trump has also been very public about wanting rate cuts. Does that pressure factor in today? ANDREW: It is the elephant in the room. Warsh was Trump's pick, and he has spent the run-up to this meeting going out of his way to talk about Fed independence. The signal to watch in the press conference is how directly he addresses the political backdrop — or whether he very pointedly does not. ANDREW: One more story driving sentiment this morning: the U.S.-Iran framework deal. After Sunday's announcement of a 60-day ceasefire extension and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, the formal signing ceremony is now set for Friday in Switzerland, mediated by Pakistan and Qatar. The deal explicitly bars Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, with a 60-day window after signing to negotiate the comprehensive details. Brent crude has been drifting lower on the news, and that easing in oil is the cleanest disinflation channel the Fed has right now. If the signing actually holds Friday, it could change the tone of Warsh's next meeting more than it changes the tone of this one. JENNY: Andrew, before we leave the national desk — the mortgage market is wired directly into what Warsh says today. ANDREW: It absolutely is. So let me stay on this beat. Where are rates this morning? Mortgage News Daily has the top-tier thirty-year fixed at 6.54 percent. Bankrate's national average is 6.53. Freddie Mac's most recent weekly survey came in at 6.52. So we have stabilized in the low-to-mid sixes after the post-CPI spike, helped by that easing in the ten-year Treasury we mentioned — 4.43 percent yesterday, down about five basis points. JENNY: So what does the average buyer trying to close this week actually need to watch? ANDREW: The ten-year yield in real time at 2 p.m. If Warsh sounds more hawkish than the market is bracing for, the ten-year backs up through 4.50 percent, and the lender lock you got Monday morning is the lock you wish you had this afternoon. If he sounds balanced, we likely drift back toward 6.45 by week's end. JENNY: And the MBA put out its weekly applications data this morning. ANDREW: They did, and it tells you the consumer is leaning into the dip. Mortgage applications rose 8 percent for the week ending June 12. Refinance applications jumped about 10 percent — that is four straight weeks of building refi momentum. And purchase applications hit their highest level in more than 11 years, which is the more interesting number, because it suggests the pent-up spring demand that froze in April is finally getting unleashed. The risk to that story is straightforward — if Warsh signals higher-for-longer with conviction this afternoon, that purchase pipeline shrinks again by next Wednesday's MBA print. ANDREW: Jenny, over to you for the AI beat — and the gathering in France is the story. JENNY: It is. The G7 summit wraps today in Évian-les-Bains, and the closing day is built almost entirely around artificial intelligence. The headline visual: Sam Altman of OpenAI, Dario Amodei of Anthropic, and Demis Hassabis of Google DeepMind sitting down at the same working lunch — the first time all three frontier-lab CEOs have appeared before world leaders together. ANDREW: That has to be slightly awkward. JENNY: It is the kind of awkward that money buys. The session is officially themed around — and I'm quoting the agenda here — ensuring a safe, rapid, and effective deployment of artificial intelligence. Unofficially, European leaders are openly pushing back on what they're calling American dominance of the industry. France's Mistral is at the table. So is Germany's Black Forest Labs, Japan's Sakana AI, Canada's Cohere, and the U.K.'s Synth. Frontier risk, infrastructure, and sovereignty are all on the agenda. The expected outcome is some kind of joint statement on AI safety guardrails. Whether it has any teeth is a separate question. ANDREW: Anything coming out of the lunch we should be tracking? JENNY: Two things. First, watch for any specific commitment from the U.S. labs on safety testing or red-teaming access for European regulators — that would be a real concession. Second, watch the language around export controls on frontier model weights. The Europeans want a seat at that table, and the U.S. has spent the last two years saying no. JENNY: One related thread on the enterprise side: Anthropic had planned a major credit overhaul for its Claude agent products to take effect this past Monday — that would have moved Claude Code, the Agent SDK, and GitHub Actions off subscription billing and onto a per-user credit pool at full API rates. Anthropic paused that change on June 15. For enterprise buyers, the message is that the pricing model is still very much in flux ahead of the dual Anthropic-OpenAI IPO timeline. OpenAI, for its part, is leaning into the moment — Sam Altman last month offered new business customers two months of free Codex usage to peel off Claude developers caught off guard by the credit-pool announcement. ANDREW: And SpaceX last Friday was the warm-up act for those AI IPOs. JENNY: It really was. SPCX priced at $135 a share, opened at $150, and closed at $161.11 — up about 19 percent on day one. The market cap pushed above two trillion dollars, making Elon Musk the world's first trillionaire on paper. For Anthropic and OpenAI bankers running their roadshows over the next few months, that trading print is exactly the demand signal they wanted to see before their own debuts. JENNY: Andrew, let me bring it home to Jacksonville. JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high of 88 and a low of 78 today, with morning showers giving way to cloudy skies this afternoon. Bring an umbrella for the school drop-off. JENNY: The JEA investigation continues to be the dominant local story this week. JEA's CEO, Vickie Cavey, is scheduled to testify before the City Council's Special Investigatory Committee next Monday, June 22. That's the testimony everyone has been waiting for. It follows last week's appearance by JEA's Chief Administrative Officer Jody Brooks and the utility's former chief legal counsel Regina Ross, who were grilled on uncollected capacity fees and on the workplace-culture allegations that prompted this whole investigation. ANDREW: And the Carrico thread is still overlapping all of this. JENNY: It is. About a thousand pages of Council President Kevin Carrico's subpoena response were released last week after a 100-plus-day delay. Among the more eyebrow-raising items: a text in which Carrico told a JEA board member he was declining renomination, citing — and this is his phrasing — a, quote, big favor he owed the local Boys and Girls Club CEO. Carrico's attorney has argued personal texts shouldn't have to be released at all. The committee's report deadline is June 30, and the open question is what those records ultimately do to the committee's narrative — whether they reshape the JEA storyline, or get folded into a separate State Attorney inquiry. ANDREW: One more thing on Carrico — there's a fellow council member who went after him publicly last week. Is that gathering steam? JENNY: It's gathering at least some. There are now multiple council members who have said, on the record, that Carrico's priorities are, quote, not on the people. Whether that translates into a formal leadership challenge is the question to watch over the next two weeks. JENNY: One more local item — the Culinary Institute of America's board of directors was scheduled to vote yesterday and today on whether Jacksonville will host its southeast campus. The City Council put up 35 million dollars in incentives last month to land the project, which would anchor 50,000 square feet inside Corner Lot's $160.5 million riverfront hotel and convention hall on East Bay Street. Jacksonville is competing against Atlanta, Charleston, and Nashville. As of this morning, we have not seen a public announcement from the CIA board. Watch the Jacksonville Daily Record and News4Jax later today. ANDREW: That's a real economic-development moment if Jacksonville wins it. JENNY: It is. Mayor Deegan has been very public that this is the kind of downtown anchor the city has been chasing for a decade. JENNY: Andrew, one thing to watch. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch today: at 8:30 this morning Eastern, the Commerce Department releases May advance retail sales. Coming on top of that 4.2 percent CPI print last week, a hot retail number would lock in the case for a hawkish dot plot this afternoon and could push the ten-year Treasury yield through 4.50 percent for the first time since April. A soft retail number gives Warsh the cover to sound more balanced at 2:30. Either way, mortgage rates and your equity portfolio are moving by lunchtime. The number to circle: a print above 0.6 percent month over month is the hawkish trigger. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Wednesday. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.
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