Jax Morning Brief
Good morning. It's Friday, June 26th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: The Federal Reserve's favorite inflation gauge just hit its highest level in more than two years, and for the first time this cycle, a sitting Fed official is openly calling for a rate hike instead of a cut. ANDREW: And a Nobel Prize winner walked out of Google's AI lab and into Anthropic this week, the latest move in a talent war that is reshaping the whole industry. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed essentially flat in yesterday's session at about 7,358, down a hundredth of a percent. The Dow edged up about a tenth of a percent to roughly 51,920. And the Nasdaq slipped about half a percent to around 25,360, its fourth straight losing session and the longest streak since February. The pain is concentrated in chip stocks. Apple and Microsoft both raised hardware prices this week, blaming the memory shortage, and a New York Times report that OpenAI may push its public offering into next year added to the jitters. The ten-year Treasury yield is sitting near 4.4 percent, and the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking around 6.45 percent, according to Mortgage News Daily. ANDREW: Let's start with the number that moved everything. Yesterday the government reported that core inflation, the Fed's preferred measure that strips out food and energy, rose to 3.4 percent in May. That's the highest reading since October 2023. The headline figure, which includes energy, came in even hotter at 4.1 percent, the highest since April 2023. JENNY: So this is the gauge the Fed watches most closely, and it's moving in exactly the wrong direction. ANDREW: Exactly. For most of the past year the conversation was about when the Fed would cut. That conversation is essentially over. After the June meeting, where the Fed held its benchmark rate steady at 3.5 to 3.75 percent, the new projections erased the rate cut they'd been signaling. And now Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari has gone a step further. He told reporters he now expects one rate hike by the end of this year. Back in March, that same official was projecting a cut. JENNY: How unusual is it for a Fed official to say the word hike out loud right now? ANDREW: It's a real marker. Kashkari is the first official in this cycle to flip all the way from a cut to a hike, and his reasoning is the Middle East. He thinks the energy prices pushed up by the Iran conflict aren't going to retreat quickly, and he's not convinced the ceasefire with Iran will hold. So the market is no longer debating cut versus hold. It's debating hold versus hike. JENNY: And the ceasefire he's worried about, where does that stand? ANDREW: It's holding for now. The Strait of Hormuz reopened after the agreement in mid-June, commercial tankers are moving again, and oil has fallen to a four-month low, which is actually helping on the rate side, as we'll get to. But the hard part, negotiating a permanent deal and limits on Iran's nuclear program, is still ahead over the next two months. Kashkari's point is that none of that is guaranteed. JENNY: That's a big shift in just a few weeks. ANDREW: It is. And on a separate front, the Supreme Court closed out its term with a burst of rulings yesterday. By six to three votes, the conservative majority handed the Trump administration major immigration wins, allowing the president to end temporary deportation protections for hundreds of thousands of people from Haiti and Syria, and easing the standard for turning green card holders away at the border. The court also struck down state rules requiring gun owners to get a property owner's permission before carrying a firearm onto their land. JENNY: A lot packed into the final days of the term. ANDREW: As always. And there's one more piece of the inflation picture that hits home, a story we've been tracking. Remember the memory shortage driving up the cost of computer chips? It's now showing up in store prices. Apple and Microsoft both raised hardware prices this week, in some cases by more than 10 percent, and they pointed straight at the cost of memory. JENNY: So the AI boom is literally making laptops and game consoles more expensive. ANDREW: That's the through-line. The same companies racing to build AI data centers are buying up the memory chips, which leaves less for consumer devices and pushes prices up. It's a small but real piece of why that inflation number keeps climbing. Now, here's where it gets interesting for anyone in the housing market. ANDREW: You'd think that with inflation running hot and a Fed official talking about hikes, mortgage rates would be climbing. They're doing the opposite. The thirty-year fixed is around 6.45 percent right now, down from about 6.5 percent earlier in the week and near its lowest in a month. Freddie Mac's weekly survey had it at 6.49 percent. JENNY: So what's pulling rates down when everything else points up? ANDREW: Two things, and neither one is the Fed. Mortgage rates track the ten-year Treasury yield, not the Fed's short-term rate, and that yield has drifted down to about 4.4 percent. Part of that is cheaper oil now that the Strait of Hormuz has reopened, and part of it is routine bond buying as money managers rebalance their portfolios at the end of the quarter. JENNY: But if Kashkari's hike talk catches on, does that window close? ANDREW: That's the risk, and it's the thing to watch. If more officials start sounding like Kashkari, the ten-year yield could back up and these lower mortgage rates could reverse in a hurry. For now, the lower rates are doing some good. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that applications rose 1 percent last week, with refinancing up 3 percent. Refinancing is now about 41 percent of all activity, the highest share in months. JENNY: Any red flags on the housing side? ANDREW: One the data folks are watching. Foreclosure filings in the first quarter ran about 119,000, up roughly 26 percent from a year ago and a six-year high, and federal changes to FHA servicing rules are squeezing the companies that manage troubled loans. It's not a crisis, but after years of historically low foreclosures, the trend line is worth keeping an eye on. Jenny, the AI desk has been busy. What's happening over there? JENNY: It has, Andrew, and the big story this week isn't a product, it's people. Google is losing some of its most important AI researchers to its rivals. John Jumper, who shared the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the AlphaFold protein-folding system, is leaving Google DeepMind after nearly nine years to join Anthropic. And in the same stretch, Noam Shazeer, a co-lead of Google's Gemini models, is headed to OpenAI. ANDREW: Shazeer, isn't he one of the authors of the original paper behind these models? JENNY: He is. He co-wrote Attention Is All You Need, the 2017 paper that introduced the architecture nearly every modern AI system is built on. So these aren't ordinary hires. They're foundational figures, and they're walking out the door at the same time. ANDREW: Why does that matter beyond inside-the-industry gossip? JENNY: Because talent is the scarcest resource in this race, and money follows momentum. After the departures, Alphabet shares fell about 5 to 6 percent, with analysts openly questioning whether DeepMind can hold its position at the frontier. Jumper's specialty, AI for science, also tells you where Anthropic thinks the next big opportunity is. ANDREW: So the smartest people are voting with their feet. JENNY: That's the read. And there's a second AI story that matters for the bottom line. After a year of what people in the industry are calling tokenmaxxing, where companies were encouraged to use as much AI as possible without watching the cost, enterprises are tightening up. The new buzzword is efficiency. CNBC reported that Uber burned through its entire annual AI budget in just four months, and one startup, Lindy, moved all of its traffic off Anthropic's models to a cheaper Chinese alternative because the math stopped working. ANDREW: So the spending free-for-all is ending. JENNY: It's maturing. Buyers want clear return on investment now, and that could slow revenue growth even at the leaders. To put the stakes in perspective, Anthropic is running at about a 47 billion dollar annualized pace, up from roughly 10 billion for all of last year. So these are enormous businesses, but the customers are finally asking what they're getting for the money. ANDREW: And there's the public-offering angle too, isn't there? JENNY: Right. That same caution is showing up on Wall Street. The New York Times reported this week that OpenAI is weighing pushing its public offering into next year, partly because an earlier AI listing stumbled out of the gate. That uncertainty is a big part of what's been dragging chip stocks lower all week. The whole sector is recalibrating at once. JENNY: Closer to home now. Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at 91 degrees and hot and humid today, with afternoon thunderstorms likely and about a 70 percent chance of rain, so keep the umbrella handy. JENNY: We've been tracking the Culinary Institute of America's plan to put a campus downtown, and there's a new wrinkle. The institute's board met in mid-June to decide on its Southeast campus, but according to News4Jax, the city's Downtown Investment Authority chief executive, Colin Tarbert, told council members the institute hasn't made any public announcement and appears to want to roll the news out jointly with local partners. ANDREW: Remind me what the city has riding on this. JENNY: A lot. The City Council voted 16 to 2 last month to approve up to 35 million dollars in incentives, timed to that board meeting, and the campus would anchor a 160 million dollar hotel and convention hall project on East Bay Street. So the city has put real money on the table and is now waiting on an announcement that's days overdue, and some council members are getting impatient. ANDREW: That's an uncomfortable place to be sitting after a 35 million dollar vote. JENNY: It is. And speaking of impatient council members, the special committee investigating workplace culture at JEA, the city-owned utility, is due to deliver its final report on Monday, June 30th. The utility's chief executive, Vickie Cavey, testified earlier this week, and she was expected to be the last executive to take questions. So by Monday we should know whether the committee recommends real changes or just delivers criticism. ANDREW: Worth watching after months of testimony. JENNY: One more quick local note. The City Council voted 15 to nothing this week to add 14 more city-owned properties to a list of sites that can be donated to nonprofit builders for affordable housing, spread across the North, Northwest, and Eastside neighborhoods. Small move, but a steady one in a tight housing market. Andrew, bring us home. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch this week, and it's local. That JEA report lands Monday, June 30th. After months of testimony about a toxic workplace and questions over uncollected fees, the key thing to look for is whether the committee recommends specific changes, to the utility's charter or its leadership, or whether it stops at criticism. The difference between those two outcomes is the difference between a report that fades and one that reshapes how Jacksonville runs its biggest public asset. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Friday. Have a great weekend. ANDREW: We'll see you Monday.
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