Jax Morning Brief

Jax Morning Brief — Iran Truce Collapses, Oil Spikes, GPT-5.6 Launches, Rates Near 6.6%

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episode Jax Morning Brief — Iran Truce Collapses, Oil Spikes, GPT-5.6 Launches, Rates Near 6.6% cover

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Good morning. It's Thursday, July 9th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: The ceasefire between the United States and Iran has collapsed. Overnight, U.S. forces hit roughly ninety military targets across Iran, one day after Tehran struck commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz. ANDREW: And on a very different note, OpenAI's next model family, GPT-5.6, goes live to the public today, the first model to clear a new government security review before release. We'll get to what that means. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed at 7,482, down about a quarter percent. The Dow fell more sharply, off about 1 percent to 52,348, its worst day in weeks. The Nasdaq actually gained a fifth of a percent to 25,870, as chip stocks clawed back some of Monday's losses. Oil was the story underneath all of it. U.S. crude settled at $73.52 a barrel, up more than 4 percent, and Brent crude pushed close to $78. The ten-year Treasury yield climbed toward 4.6 percent, its highest level since May. The thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at roughly 6.56 percent according to Mortgage News Daily and Bankrate. All of it traces back to one story out of the Middle East. ANDREW: Let's start there. The ceasefire that had held since last month's Islamabad agreement is now, in President Trump's words, over. ANDREW: Here's how we got here. Tuesday, three commercial tankers were attacked transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S. and Gulf allies blamed Iran, and U.S. Central Command answered with strikes that night. Iran responded with attacks that set off alerts in Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait. By Wednesday night into this morning, Central Command said it had hit close to ninety Iranian targets, including air defenses, missile storage sites, and naval infrastructure along the coast, the second straight night of American strikes. JENNY: So is there any diplomatic track left, or is this back to open conflict? ANDREW: That's the open question. Technical talks in Doha had actually been making what negotiators called positive progress on the terms of that Islamabad agreement, before pausing for the funeral of Iran's late Supreme Leader. Those talks were supposed to pick back up this week. Right now, with strikes happening on both sides, whether anyone sits back down at that table is very much in doubt. The U.S. has also revoked the waiver that had allowed Iran to sell oil internationally and reimposed sanctions, which is part of why crude jumped the way it did. JENNY: How unusual is it for a ceasefire to break down this fast after both sides had already put a deal on paper? ANDREW: It's not unheard of, but the speed is notable. This agreement held for roughly three weeks, which is short even by the standards of recent Middle East ceasefires. What's different here is the trigger: an attack on commercial shipping in one of the world's busiest oil corridors. Roughly a fifth of global oil supply moves through the Strait of Hormuz, so even a brief disruption there tends to move prices faster than a purely military exchange would. That's exactly what we saw Wednesday. ANDREW: That oil shock is landing at an awkward moment for the Federal Reserve. Chair Kevin Warsh, in his role since replacing Jerome Powell in May, held rates at 3.50 to 3.75 percent at his first meeting last month, saying inflation was still too high even as energy prices had been easing. Now energy prices are moving the other way again. That's colliding with a June jobs report that came in soft: nonfarm payrolls up just 57,000, well below what forecasters expected, with the unemployment rate ticking up to 4.2 percent. Warsh now has a weakening labor market on one side and a fresh, Iran-driven inflation risk on the other, right before the Fed's next meeting, set for July 28th and 29th. JENNY: What has Warsh said about how he's weighing those two things against each other? ANDREW: Not much yet, and that's part of the story. In his first press conference, he leaned almost entirely on the inflation side, saying prices were still too high and treating price stability as the priority. He didn't spend much time on the jobs half of the Fed's mandate. He did announce the Fed is standing up several new internal task forces, including ones dedicated to productivity and to labor markets, which suggests the jobs data is getting more attention behind the scenes than it is in his public remarks. The June jobs miss happened after that first meeting, so late July will be the first time we hear him respond to it directly, and now he has to do that with oil back above $73 a barrel. JENNY: That's a tough needle to thread. Andrew, before we move on, is there anything on the tech side today that's actually a bigger story than usual? ANDREW: There is, and it's yours. Jenny, what's happening with this new OpenAI model? JENNY: It's a big one. GPT-5.6 goes public today, in three versions: Sol, the flagship; Terra, built for everyday use; and Luna, the budget option. What makes this launch different is the process behind it. Under President Trump's June executive order on AI cybersecurity, the most powerful models now have to go through a thirty-day government review before public release. GPT-5.6 is the first model to actually clear that review, after OpenAI sent technical staff to Washington to work with the Commerce Department's AI standards office. ANDREW: So this is really the first real-world test of that review process working as designed. JENNY: Exactly, and it sets the template for every major model that follows it, including whatever Anthropic or Google release next. On pricing, Sol runs $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens, aimed at coding and more complex agentic tasks. Terra and Luna are cheaper, general-purpose options. Early access has mostly been limited to around twenty vetted organizations since late June, so today is the first time the broader public and enterprise customers can actually use it. JENNY: Anthropic, meanwhile, is countering with its own move. The company extended free access to Claude Fable 5 for Pro, Max, and Team subscribers through this Saturday, July 12th, letting users tap it for half their weekly usage limits at no extra cost. That's the second extension in a week, and the timing right against a competitor's launch is not a coincidence. ANDREW: Is that just a promotional play, or is there something more substantial behind it? JENNY: A bit of both. Anthropic is also rolling out new admin tools for its Enterprise customers this week, letting company administrators control which models employees can access and see spending broken down by team and by user. That's a direct pitch to the financial-services and large-enterprise customers everyone in this space is chasing, since cost control and access governance are usually the first two questions a bank's IT department asks before approving any AI tool. So you have OpenAI leaning on a government-cleared flagship model, and Anthropic leaning on enterprise cost governance and a free-access promotion, on basically the same week. ANDREW: Worth watching whether banks and other regulated industries move faster on GPT-5.6 now that it has a government review behind it, versus models that don't. JENNY: Andrew, speaking of things moving fast, what's happening with mortgage rates this week? ANDREW: They're climbing again, and it traces right back to the bond market reaction we just talked about. The thirty-year fixed is sitting around 6.54 to 6.58 percent depending on the source, Bankrate has it at 6.54, Mortgage News Daily around 6.56, up from the low 6.4s just a few weeks ago. The driver is that ten-year Treasury yield pushing toward 4.6 percent as the Iran shock hits bonds. JENNY: So what does that mean for someone actually trying to close on a house this week? ANDREW: It means a slightly higher monthly payment than they might have locked in a month ago, and it's already showing up in the data. The Mortgage Bankers Association's latest weekly survey, for the week ending July 3rd, showed applications down 2.2 percent, and purchase applications down about 1 percent. The refinance share of activity also slipped, which tells you fewer homeowners see a reason to refinance at these levels. The Association's own tracked contract rate came in at 6.58 percent, up slightly from the week before. ANDREW: One regulatory item to flag: the Federal Housing Finance Agency has a public comment period open on a proposal that would loosen how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac count affordable-housing activity toward their mandates. That window closes July 24th, and it could shape how much affordable lending capacity gets credited going forward. JENNY: So bottom line, buyers shouldn't expect relief on rates in the immediate term. ANDREW: Not until the geopolitical picture settles down. Rates move with the ten-year yield, and the ten-year moves with how investors price risk. Right now that risk is an active conflict, not a data release the Fed can respond to on a set schedule. That makes this a harder rate environment to call than it was even a month ago. ANDREW: Jenny, what's happening back home in Jacksonville? JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high near 99 degrees today, sunny and hot, with the heat index pushing 109. Overnight lows only drop to around 79. JENNY: The story getting a lot of attention locally is a state fraud investigation into Massey Contracting, a Jacksonville roofing company. News4Jax's investigative team reported that customers, former employees, and subcontractors say they're owed close to a million dollars combined. ANDREW: What exactly are people alleging? JENNY: Homeowners describe paying tens of thousands of dollars in deposits for roofing work that was never finished. One of the country's largest roofing supply companies, SRS Distribution, is separately suing Massey for close to $927,000 in unpaid materials, and a former employee has filed suit over unpaid wages. The company's owner told News4Jax he expects the pending cases to be resolved within thirty to forty-five days, but the State Bureau of Insurance Fraud is now involved. JENNY: Looking ahead, two significant things are landing on the same day, July 20th. City Council President Nick Howland's new Financial Audit and Oversight committee starts its work that day, focused specifically on JEA's unbilled water capacity fees, with findings due back by mid-September. And that same day, Mayor Donna Deegan delivers her budget address to Council for the coming fiscal year, one she's already signaling will lean heavily into infrastructure spending. ANDREW: Two very different things, same afternoon. What's actually at stake with that JEA committee? JENNY: It grew out of a broader council investigation into JEA that's been running since the spring, looking at whether the utility properly billed developers for water capacity fees. An internal watchdog review found JEA was largely handling the collection issue appropriately, but Howland wants a narrower, standing committee to keep oversight going rather than let the matter drop. Its findings are due back to the council president by mid-September, so this will likely surface again before summer's out. JENNY: And one more for sports fans: Jaguars training camp opens July 29th at the Miller Electric Center, with veterans reporting July 28th and rookies arriving a few days earlier. Free public practice tickets require advance registration. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch: the Fed's next meeting, July 28th and 29th. Chair Warsh will have to weigh a labor market that just posted its weakest jobs report in months against an oil-driven inflation risk that's building fast because of the Iran conflict. Watch whether the ten-year yield holds under that 4.6 percent line in the coming weeks, because a sustained break higher would push thirty-year mortgage rates toward 7 percent, and watch whether Warsh's language shifts at all toward the jobs side of the mandate. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Thursday. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.

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episode Jax Morning Brief — Iran Strikes Pause, Oil Eases, GPT-5.6 Tops Copilot, Rates Dip cover

Jax Morning Brief — Iran Strikes Pause, Oil Eases, GPT-5.6 Tops Copilot, Rates Dip

Good morning. It's Friday, July 10th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: The US-Iran conflict is heading into its third day, but this morning brings something we haven't seen since the ceasefire collapsed: no report of a third night of American strikes, and oil prices actually easing. ANDREW: And in tech, OpenAI just got named the preferred model provider inside Microsoft's own Copilot products, even as reports swirl that Microsoft is quietly building in-house replacements. We'll untangle that one. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed at 7,543, up about eight tenths of a percent. The Dow added 139 points to close near 52,487. And the Nasdaq led the way, up 1.3 percent to just over 26,200, as chip stocks rallied ahead of SK Hynix's Nasdaq debut. Investors largely shrugged off the Iran headlines yesterday. The ten-year Treasury yield eased to around 4.54 percent this morning, down from its highest levels since May. And the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at roughly 6.5 percent according to Mortgage News Daily, down slightly from a ten-month high. We'll get to what's driving that. ANDREW: Let's start with Iran, since that's still the story underneath everything else. Overnight into this morning, there's no confirmed third round of US strikes, which is notable after two straight nights of American attacks on Iranian military targets. JENNY: Does that mean this is winding down? ANDREW: Not necessarily. President Trump has warned Iran that further strikes will follow immediately if Tehran attacks shipping again in the Strait of Hormuz, so this looks more like a pause than a resolution. Overnight Wednesday into Thursday, Central Command said it hit roughly 90 more Iranian military targets. Iran's Revolutionary Guards claimed retaliatory strikes on US-linked sites in Bahrain and Kuwait, and Kuwait's military confirmed sirens from intercepted missiles and drones. Jordan says it shot down missiles fired at a US base there earlier this week. Despite all of that, a US official told reporters that technical talks between Washington and Tehran are still continuing in the background. JENNY: So the diplomatic track survived two nights of bombing. ANDREW: Barely, but yes, and that's part of why markets reacted the way they did yesterday. Oil actually fell Thursday, with Brent easing toward 76 dollars a barrel and US crude dropping back under 72, as traders bet the talks give this some chance of not spiraling further. Iran's funeral for its late Supreme Leader wrapped up in Mashhad this morning, which some analysts think may have been a factor in the lull. It's a fragile calm, not a ceasefire. JENNY: How unusual is it for both sides to keep talking while they're also actively striking each other? ANDREW: It's not unprecedented, but it tells you neither side wants to fully close the door. Roughly a fifth of the world's seaborne oil passes through the Strait of Hormuz, so both Washington and Tehran have reasons to want that lane open even while the military exchange continues elsewhere. That's a big part of why this week has looked less like all-out war and more like an escalating exchange with an off-ramp still visible, at least for now. JENNY: How does that oil move connect back to the Fed story you were covering yesterday? ANDREW: Directly. Falling oil takes some pressure off the inflation side of the ledger right as we head into next week's big data point: the June Consumer Price Index, out Tuesday morning. That will be the first inflation reading that captures any of this Iran-driven energy volatility, and it lands two weeks before Chair Kevin Warsh's July 28th and 29th meeting. Prediction markets on Kalshi, as CNBC reported yesterday, now see roughly even odds on a rate hike sometime this year, essentially a coin flip, reflecting how split the outlook has become between Warsh's inflation concerns and that soft June jobs report. JENNY: A coin flip feels like a big shift from where things stood even a few weeks ago. ANDREW: It is. Warsh has spent his first month in the job leaning almost entirely on inflation, saying prices are still too high and standing up new internal task forces on productivity and labor data. But he took over right as the jobs numbers started softening and right before an oil shock landed in his lap. Tuesday's CPI print is really the first data point where we'll see which side of that argument starts winning out. JENNY: Andrew, I've got a big one on the tech side today. Mind if I take it from here? ANDREW: It's yours. What's this Microsoft Copilot news? JENNY: So OpenAI announced that GPT-5.6, which just went fully public yesterday, is now the preferred model across Microsoft 365 Copilot, meaning Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Microsoft's own Chat and Cowork tools. OpenAI says it means faster drafting in Word and more efficient data analysis in Excel. ANDREW: Wait, isn't Microsoft supposedly building its own in-house models to cut costs and reduce its OpenAI dependence? JENNY: That's exactly the tension here. There have been reports for weeks that Microsoft is rolling out its own models, internally called MAI, to power some of these same apps and save money. TechCrunch flagged this announcement as landing right in the middle of that breakup chatter. But the two things aren't actually contradictory. Microsoft can run its own models in some places and still lean on GPT-5.6 as the preferred option elsewhere. It's less a resolution and more a signal that OpenAI wants to publicly reassert its position before Microsoft's alternative gets any further along. JENNY: OpenAI also launched a new product alongside the model itself, called ChatGPT Work. It combines the chat assistant with Codex, OpenAI's coding tool, so it can pull context across your files and apps to actually draft documents, spreadsheets, and presentations, not just answer questions about them. It's rolling out first on the Mac and Windows apps, and OpenAI is also merging Codex directly into that same desktop app, so coding, chat, and this new work agent all live in one place now instead of three separate tools. ANDREW: That's a lot of consolidation happening at once. Why now? JENNY: Because the competition has gotten that intense. This is the same week Elon Musk's xAI put out Grok 4.5, and independent benchmarking groups have it landing behind Claude and GPT-5.5 on most reasoning tests, but xAI is pushing hard on cost efficiency for high-volume agent workloads. When three or four labs are all shipping flagship-level products in the same seven-day stretch, bundling your tools into fewer, stickier products is how you try to keep users from switching. ANDREW: And how is Anthropic answering all of this? JENNY: With its own expansion. Anthropic is rolling out Claude Cowork to mobile and web, on top of its existing desktop version. The idea is that a Cowork session now lives in the cloud, so it keeps running even after you close your laptop, and follows you across devices. To mark the launch, Anthropic doubled Cowork usage limits through August 5th. The company also published data from over a million anonymized Cowork sessions showing that most of what people actually use it for has nothing to do with writing code, which is a notable shift in how these agent tools are actually being used day to day. ANDREW: So depending on which company's press release you read this week, either OpenAI or Anthropic is winning the enterprise AI race. JENNY: Pretty much. Andrew, tell me rates are actually giving buyers a break this week. ANDREW: A small one. The thirty-year fixed eased to around 6.5 percent yesterday, according to Mortgage News Daily, down three basis points from a ten-month high the day before. Other trackers are more mixed. Some show rates ticking up slightly, so this is more of a pause than a clear turn. JENNY: What's actually behind the improvement? ANDREW: The same story we just covered. Rates track the ten-year Treasury yield, and that yield eased alongside oil prices yesterday. If the Iran situation stays contained and the talks hold, there's room for rates to drift lower. If strikes resume, we could be right back near 7 percent territory. JENNY: What about actual loan activity? Are people applying at these levels? ANDREW: Last week's numbers, still the most recent from the Mortgage Bankers Association, showed applications down 2.2 percent, with purchase applications off about 1 percent and the refinance share slipping to just under 41 percent. The Association's own tracked rate came in at 6.58 percent. We'll get an updated read next Wednesday. One regulatory date to flag: the Federal Housing Finance Agency's comment period on its Duty to Serve proposal, which would change how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac count affordable housing activity, closes July 24th. ANDREW: Jenny, what's happening back home in Jacksonville? JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high near 99 degrees today, mostly sunny, with the heat index pushing 107. There's a 30 percent chance of an afternoon storm, with lows tonight around 77. JENNY: The big local story is a housing move. City Council approved a 1 million dollar loan Wednesday to help demolish the long-troubled Franklin Arms apartments downtown, clearing the way for a 50 million dollar replacement. ANDREW: What was wrong with the original building? JENNY: Franklin Arms was declared a public nuisance back in 2022 over mold, rodents, and violent crime. The Jacksonville Housing Authority bought it in 2023 for 8 million dollars planning to renovate, but an architectural assessment found it no longer made financial sense to fix up the aging structure. So they're starting over. Housing Authority CEO Cheron Corbett says demolition is planned for early fall, and the new building will nearly rise from 98 units to 130, all reserved for residents 55 and older. It still needs rezoning approval, with the first public hearing set for July 23rd before the Planning Commission. ANDREW: That's a big swing, from troubled complex to senior housing in one project. JENNY: It is, and it's a bigger story about Jacksonville's affordable housing crunch generally, which a recent study ranked among the worst in the country for a large market. One more item locally: Jake Gordon, who has led Downtown Vision for eleven years, announced this week he's stepping down, effective September 30th. Under his tenure the group's budget grew from just over 1 million dollars to nearly 5 million, and he's described the timing as a natural point for the organization to bring in fresh perspective, especially with talk of expanding Downtown Vision's footprint further west and east. Chief Operating Officer Eric Miller will serve as interim CEO starting October 1st, while the board figures out a permanent search process. ANDREW: And any update on that roofing company you told us about yesterday, Massey Contracting? JENNY: Nothing new to report today. The owner's own estimate was thirty to forty-five days to resolve the pending lawsuits, and the State Bureau of Insurance Fraud investigation is still active. We'll flag it here the moment there's a real update. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch: Tuesday morning at 8:30, the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the June Consumer Price Index. This is the first inflation report that will reflect any of the oil price swings from this week's Iran escalation. A hotter than expected number would harden the case for a Fed rate hike at the July 28th and 29th meeting and likely push mortgage rates back up. A cooler number would ease that pressure and give Chair Warsh more room on the jobs side of his mandate. Either way, it's the most important data point standing between now and that meeting. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Friday. Have a great weekend. ANDREW: We'll see you Monday.

10. juli 202611 min
episode Jax Morning Brief — Iran Truce Collapses, Oil Spikes, GPT-5.6 Launches, Rates Near 6.6% cover

Jax Morning Brief — Iran Truce Collapses, Oil Spikes, GPT-5.6 Launches, Rates Near 6.6%

Good morning. It's Thursday, July 9th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: The ceasefire between the United States and Iran has collapsed. Overnight, U.S. forces hit roughly ninety military targets across Iran, one day after Tehran struck commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz. ANDREW: And on a very different note, OpenAI's next model family, GPT-5.6, goes live to the public today, the first model to clear a new government security review before release. We'll get to what that means. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed at 7,482, down about a quarter percent. The Dow fell more sharply, off about 1 percent to 52,348, its worst day in weeks. The Nasdaq actually gained a fifth of a percent to 25,870, as chip stocks clawed back some of Monday's losses. Oil was the story underneath all of it. U.S. crude settled at $73.52 a barrel, up more than 4 percent, and Brent crude pushed close to $78. The ten-year Treasury yield climbed toward 4.6 percent, its highest level since May. The thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at roughly 6.56 percent according to Mortgage News Daily and Bankrate. All of it traces back to one story out of the Middle East. ANDREW: Let's start there. The ceasefire that had held since last month's Islamabad agreement is now, in President Trump's words, over. ANDREW: Here's how we got here. Tuesday, three commercial tankers were attacked transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S. and Gulf allies blamed Iran, and U.S. Central Command answered with strikes that night. Iran responded with attacks that set off alerts in Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait. By Wednesday night into this morning, Central Command said it had hit close to ninety Iranian targets, including air defenses, missile storage sites, and naval infrastructure along the coast, the second straight night of American strikes. JENNY: So is there any diplomatic track left, or is this back to open conflict? ANDREW: That's the open question. Technical talks in Doha had actually been making what negotiators called positive progress on the terms of that Islamabad agreement, before pausing for the funeral of Iran's late Supreme Leader. Those talks were supposed to pick back up this week. Right now, with strikes happening on both sides, whether anyone sits back down at that table is very much in doubt. The U.S. has also revoked the waiver that had allowed Iran to sell oil internationally and reimposed sanctions, which is part of why crude jumped the way it did. JENNY: How unusual is it for a ceasefire to break down this fast after both sides had already put a deal on paper? ANDREW: It's not unheard of, but the speed is notable. This agreement held for roughly three weeks, which is short even by the standards of recent Middle East ceasefires. What's different here is the trigger: an attack on commercial shipping in one of the world's busiest oil corridors. Roughly a fifth of global oil supply moves through the Strait of Hormuz, so even a brief disruption there tends to move prices faster than a purely military exchange would. That's exactly what we saw Wednesday. ANDREW: That oil shock is landing at an awkward moment for the Federal Reserve. Chair Kevin Warsh, in his role since replacing Jerome Powell in May, held rates at 3.50 to 3.75 percent at his first meeting last month, saying inflation was still too high even as energy prices had been easing. Now energy prices are moving the other way again. That's colliding with a June jobs report that came in soft: nonfarm payrolls up just 57,000, well below what forecasters expected, with the unemployment rate ticking up to 4.2 percent. Warsh now has a weakening labor market on one side and a fresh, Iran-driven inflation risk on the other, right before the Fed's next meeting, set for July 28th and 29th. JENNY: What has Warsh said about how he's weighing those two things against each other? ANDREW: Not much yet, and that's part of the story. In his first press conference, he leaned almost entirely on the inflation side, saying prices were still too high and treating price stability as the priority. He didn't spend much time on the jobs half of the Fed's mandate. He did announce the Fed is standing up several new internal task forces, including ones dedicated to productivity and to labor markets, which suggests the jobs data is getting more attention behind the scenes than it is in his public remarks. The June jobs miss happened after that first meeting, so late July will be the first time we hear him respond to it directly, and now he has to do that with oil back above $73 a barrel. JENNY: That's a tough needle to thread. Andrew, before we move on, is there anything on the tech side today that's actually a bigger story than usual? ANDREW: There is, and it's yours. Jenny, what's happening with this new OpenAI model? JENNY: It's a big one. GPT-5.6 goes public today, in three versions: Sol, the flagship; Terra, built for everyday use; and Luna, the budget option. What makes this launch different is the process behind it. Under President Trump's June executive order on AI cybersecurity, the most powerful models now have to go through a thirty-day government review before public release. GPT-5.6 is the first model to actually clear that review, after OpenAI sent technical staff to Washington to work with the Commerce Department's AI standards office. ANDREW: So this is really the first real-world test of that review process working as designed. JENNY: Exactly, and it sets the template for every major model that follows it, including whatever Anthropic or Google release next. On pricing, Sol runs $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens, aimed at coding and more complex agentic tasks. Terra and Luna are cheaper, general-purpose options. Early access has mostly been limited to around twenty vetted organizations since late June, so today is the first time the broader public and enterprise customers can actually use it. JENNY: Anthropic, meanwhile, is countering with its own move. The company extended free access to Claude Fable 5 for Pro, Max, and Team subscribers through this Saturday, July 12th, letting users tap it for half their weekly usage limits at no extra cost. That's the second extension in a week, and the timing right against a competitor's launch is not a coincidence. ANDREW: Is that just a promotional play, or is there something more substantial behind it? JENNY: A bit of both. Anthropic is also rolling out new admin tools for its Enterprise customers this week, letting company administrators control which models employees can access and see spending broken down by team and by user. That's a direct pitch to the financial-services and large-enterprise customers everyone in this space is chasing, since cost control and access governance are usually the first two questions a bank's IT department asks before approving any AI tool. So you have OpenAI leaning on a government-cleared flagship model, and Anthropic leaning on enterprise cost governance and a free-access promotion, on basically the same week. ANDREW: Worth watching whether banks and other regulated industries move faster on GPT-5.6 now that it has a government review behind it, versus models that don't. JENNY: Andrew, speaking of things moving fast, what's happening with mortgage rates this week? ANDREW: They're climbing again, and it traces right back to the bond market reaction we just talked about. The thirty-year fixed is sitting around 6.54 to 6.58 percent depending on the source, Bankrate has it at 6.54, Mortgage News Daily around 6.56, up from the low 6.4s just a few weeks ago. The driver is that ten-year Treasury yield pushing toward 4.6 percent as the Iran shock hits bonds. JENNY: So what does that mean for someone actually trying to close on a house this week? ANDREW: It means a slightly higher monthly payment than they might have locked in a month ago, and it's already showing up in the data. The Mortgage Bankers Association's latest weekly survey, for the week ending July 3rd, showed applications down 2.2 percent, and purchase applications down about 1 percent. The refinance share of activity also slipped, which tells you fewer homeowners see a reason to refinance at these levels. The Association's own tracked contract rate came in at 6.58 percent, up slightly from the week before. ANDREW: One regulatory item to flag: the Federal Housing Finance Agency has a public comment period open on a proposal that would loosen how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac count affordable-housing activity toward their mandates. That window closes July 24th, and it could shape how much affordable lending capacity gets credited going forward. JENNY: So bottom line, buyers shouldn't expect relief on rates in the immediate term. ANDREW: Not until the geopolitical picture settles down. Rates move with the ten-year yield, and the ten-year moves with how investors price risk. Right now that risk is an active conflict, not a data release the Fed can respond to on a set schedule. That makes this a harder rate environment to call than it was even a month ago. ANDREW: Jenny, what's happening back home in Jacksonville? JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high near 99 degrees today, sunny and hot, with the heat index pushing 109. Overnight lows only drop to around 79. JENNY: The story getting a lot of attention locally is a state fraud investigation into Massey Contracting, a Jacksonville roofing company. News4Jax's investigative team reported that customers, former employees, and subcontractors say they're owed close to a million dollars combined. ANDREW: What exactly are people alleging? JENNY: Homeowners describe paying tens of thousands of dollars in deposits for roofing work that was never finished. One of the country's largest roofing supply companies, SRS Distribution, is separately suing Massey for close to $927,000 in unpaid materials, and a former employee has filed suit over unpaid wages. The company's owner told News4Jax he expects the pending cases to be resolved within thirty to forty-five days, but the State Bureau of Insurance Fraud is now involved. JENNY: Looking ahead, two significant things are landing on the same day, July 20th. City Council President Nick Howland's new Financial Audit and Oversight committee starts its work that day, focused specifically on JEA's unbilled water capacity fees, with findings due back by mid-September. And that same day, Mayor Donna Deegan delivers her budget address to Council for the coming fiscal year, one she's already signaling will lean heavily into infrastructure spending. ANDREW: Two very different things, same afternoon. What's actually at stake with that JEA committee? JENNY: It grew out of a broader council investigation into JEA that's been running since the spring, looking at whether the utility properly billed developers for water capacity fees. An internal watchdog review found JEA was largely handling the collection issue appropriately, but Howland wants a narrower, standing committee to keep oversight going rather than let the matter drop. Its findings are due back to the council president by mid-September, so this will likely surface again before summer's out. JENNY: And one more for sports fans: Jaguars training camp opens July 29th at the Miller Electric Center, with veterans reporting July 28th and rookies arriving a few days earlier. Free public practice tickets require advance registration. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch: the Fed's next meeting, July 28th and 29th. Chair Warsh will have to weigh a labor market that just posted its weakest jobs report in months against an oil-driven inflation risk that's building fast because of the Iran conflict. Watch whether the ten-year yield holds under that 4.6 percent line in the coming weeks, because a sustained break higher would push thirty-year mortgage rates toward 7 percent, and watch whether Warsh's language shifts at all toward the jobs side of the mandate. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Thursday. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.

I går11 min
episode Jax Morning Brief — Iran Ceasefire Collapses as Oil, Rates Jump; GPT-5.6 Launches Tomorrow cover

Jax Morning Brief — Iran Ceasefire Collapses as Oil, Rates Jump; GPT-5.6 Launches Tomorrow

Good morning. It's Wednesday, July 8th. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: The ceasefire between the United States and Iran that we've been tracking for weeks fell apart overnight. President Trump declared it over, and the U.S. struck Iran again after Iranian attacks on commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz, just as that waterway was starting to reopen for good. ANDREW: That's already moving oil prices, Treasury yields, and mortgage rates this morning. We'll also get to OpenAI's GPT-5.6, which goes public tomorrow after clearing a first-of-its-kind government review, and a rough week for a well-known Jacksonville roofing company. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed Tuesday at 7,503, down about half a percent. The Dow closed at 52,925, off a quarter percent, giving back much of Monday's record close above 53,000. And the Nasdaq fell just over 1 percent to 25,818, as a report that China's DeepSeek is building its own AI chip triggered another selloff in semiconductor stocks. Overnight, the ten-year Treasury yield pushed toward 4.6 percent as the news out of the Middle East hit the bond market, and the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking up too, right around 6.5 to 6.6 percent this morning according to Bankrate and Mortgage News Daily. We'll get into both of those. ANDREW: Let's start with what's now the biggest story we're following. The U.S. and Iran are back to trading strikes. ANDREW: Speaking as a NATO summit wrapped up, President Trump said the ceasefire the two countries agreed to last month is, in his words, over. That came after Iran struck three commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz on Tuesday, and the U.S. answered with a fresh round of strikes on Iranian targets overnight. JENNY: Wait, this is the same ceasefire that was supposed to hold through a sixty-day negotiating window? What happened to that? ANDREW: That's exactly the question. The two sides signed a memorandum in mid-June, and indirect talks in Doha had actually been making progress before they paused for the funeral of Iran's former Supreme Leader. Those talks were supposed to pick back up Friday. Right now it's an open question whether that even happens. ANDREW: The U.S. has also revoked the waiver that had allowed Iran to sell oil on international markets, according to CNBC, and reimposed sanctions. Iran's Revolutionary Guard says it retaliated against American positions in the Gulf. Oil jumped hard on the news, with U.S. crude settling up more than 4 percent at just over 73 dollars a barrel, and Brent crude up over 5 percent to about 78 dollars. JENNY: That's a sharp reversal from where things stood just last week, when shipping through Hormuz was actually picking back up. ANDREW: It is, and that's what makes this feel different from earlier scares. The market had started pricing in a real peace. Now traders are having to price in the possibility that this drags back into a longer fight. JENNY: And that oil spike is what flows straight into inflation and mortgage rates. ANDREW: Exactly. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has spent the last two weeks saying inflation is still too high, pointing to May's numbers, which were already running above 4 percent year over year because of higher energy costs from the first phase of this conflict back in the spring. A second flare-up gives him even less room to cut rates when the Fed meets again later this month. ANDREW: That's compounding a labor market that's already showing cracks. Last week's jobs report showed the economy added just 57,000 positions in June, well short of the roughly 115,000 economists expected, and the government revised down its estimates for the two prior months on top of that. Unemployment ticked up to 4.2 percent, though that's partly because more people stopped looking for work rather than because more people lost jobs. JENNY: So the Fed is stuck between weak hiring on one side and an oil shock reigniting inflation on the other. ANDREW: That's the bind exactly. Warsh has called the labor market steady enough for now, but a jobs report like that one, combined with oil back above 70 dollars a barrel, makes the call at the next Fed meeting a lot harder. ANDREW: That's actually a good place to talk about what all of this means for anyone trying to buy a home right now, given how tightly mortgage pricing tracks that same Treasury market. The thirty-year fixed is sitting around 6.5 to 6.6 percent this morning, according to Bankrate and Mortgage News Daily, up from the low six-fours just a few weeks ago. JENNY: So what does that actually mean for somebody trying to close on a house this week? ANDREW: It means a few hundred dollars more a month on a typical loan than they might have locked in a month ago, and it means the math keeps shifting day to day while this Iran situation plays out. If you're far enough along in the process to lock a rate, most loan officers would tell you this isn't the week to gamble on things settling down first. The Mortgage Bankers Association says purchase applications are still running higher than a year ago, so buyers haven't pulled back entirely. But the share of borrowers reaching for adjustable-rate loans is near its lowest point since January, which tells you people are betting rates stay elevated rather than dropping soon. ANDREW: The latest weekly numbers add some nuance to that. Application volume actually dipped 2.2 percent last week, though that's mostly a Fourth of July holiday adjustment, with refinancing pulling back more than new purchases. On the regulatory side, the Federal Housing Finance Agency has a proposal open for public comment through July 24th that would loosen how Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac count affordable-housing activity toward their federal mandates, which is worth watching if you're in the lending business. ANDREW: The real test now is whether the ten-year Treasury yield holds under 4.6 percent once the initial shock from overnight wears off. If it doesn't, thirty-year rates could push toward 7 percent for the first time since this whole cycle started. ANDREW: Jenny, I know you've been following the AI world closely. What's the latest there? JENNY: A big one. Tomorrow, OpenAI is publicly launching its GPT-5.6 family, three models called Sol, Terra, and Luna, after getting a green light from the Commerce Department. OpenAI is calling Sol its strongest model yet for agentic work in coding, biology, and cybersecurity, which is the kind of task enterprise customers have been asking for. ANDREW: Wait, the government had to approve this? JENNY: In a sense, yes. Under an executive order Trump signed back in June, AI labs are supposed to give the government a thirty-day look at their most powerful models before releasing them publicly. GPT-5.6 is the first model to actually go through that review. OpenAI got the sign-off to open it to everyone starting tomorrow, after initially limiting access to a small number of government-approved users. JENNY: Sol is the flagship, built for heavy agentic work like coding and cybersecurity tasks, priced at 5 dollars per million input tokens and 30 dollars per million output tokens. Terra is the mid-tier option, priced at roughly half of what comparable performance cost in the last generation. And Luna is the budget model, at a dollar in and 6 dollars out. ANDREW: And this is all happening while chip stocks are getting hit? JENNY: Right, that's the other thread. Reuters reported this week that DeepSeek, the Chinese AI lab, is quietly designing its own chip for running AI models, specifically to cut its reliance on Nvidia and Huawei. That's part of why Nvidia and the broader semiconductor sector sold off Tuesday, even as Samsung reported a record quarterly profit and still saw its stock fall. Investors are starting to reprice how much long-term chip demand these companies can actually count on. ANDREW: Where does that leave Anthropic in all this? JENNY: They're not sitting still either. Anthropic extended promotional access to its Claude Fable 5 model through this Saturday, giving subscribers up to half their weekly usage limit at no extra cost, timed right against OpenAI's launch. It's a reminder that this competition moves fast in both directions, on pricing and on access, and it's the everyday user who benefits most from that jockeying, at least for now. JENNY: Let's turn to Jacksonville. Weather-wise, we're under a heat advisory again today, with a high near 98 and a heat index that could feel like 107 degrees this afternoon. Forecasters say advisories are likely to keep stacking up through the weekend, so if you're outside for any length of time, take it seriously. JENNY: The biggest local story we're tracking is the resignation of JTA's CEO. Nat Ford told the transit authority's board last Friday that he's stepping down after more than thirteen years, effective January 8th. ANDREW: Thirteen years. What does he leave behind? JENNY: A lot. Ford built the First Coast Flyer bus rapid transit system, the largest of its kind in the Southeast, oversaw construction of the downtown Regional Transportation Center, and brought in more than 400 million dollars in federal grants, including for the autonomous-vehicle program that's replacing the aging Skyway monorail. He also helped push through the local gas-tax extension that's funding close to a billion dollars in regional infrastructure work. The JTA board takes up the search for his successor at its July 29th meeting, and Ford hasn't said what's next for him. JENNY: Two other Jacksonville dates worth flagging. City Council President Nick Howland's new Financial Audit and Oversight committee starts its work July 20th, narrowly focused on JEA's uncollected water capacity fees, with a report due back within sixty days. And that same day, Mayor Donna Deegan delivers her budget address to the council for the next fiscal year, expected to lean heavily into infrastructure and public safety spending. ANDREW: Two big Jacksonville dates landing on the same afternoon. JENNY: Exactly, so July 20th is one to circle. JENNY: One more local story to flag. News4Jax is reporting that Massey Contracting, a Jacksonville roofing company that once made headlines for giving away free roofs, is now under state fraud investigation. Customers, employees, and subcontractors say they're collectively owed close to a million dollars for work that was never finished or never paid for. ANDREW: That's a rough turn for a company that built its name on giveaways. JENNY: It is, and it's a reminder to do your homework before signing a contract with any storm-repair outfit. And for football fans, Jaguars training camp opens July 29th at the Miller Electric Center, with the team playing this season at a reduced-capacity EverBank Stadium while the 1.4 billion dollar Stadium of the Future renovation continues toward its 2028 completion. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch: whether the U.S. and Iran can pull back from the brink in the next 48 hours. Talks in Doha were supposed to resume Friday, and whether that meeting still happens is probably the clearest signal we'll get on whether this stays a contained flare-up or turns into something worse. Watch oil prices Friday afternoon. If crude keeps climbing, expect mortgage rates, and Kevin Warsh's calculus heading into the Fed's late-July meeting, to keep shifting right along with it. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Wednesday. It's a lot to track today, so stay close to reliable sources as this Iran story develops through the day. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.

8. juli 202610 min