Jax Morning Brief
Good morning. It's Tuesday, July 7th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: OpenAI has pulled the wraps off its next flagship, GPT five point six, but almost nobody can use it yet, and that "almost nobody" tells you a lot about where this technology is headed. ANDREW: And Wall Street liked what it heard. The Dow closed above fifty-three thousand for the first time ever yesterday, on a wave of revived optimism about artificial intelligence. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed at 7,537, up about seven-tenths of a percent. The Dow climbed 156 points to 53,056, a record, its first close ever above fifty-three thousand. The Nasdaq jumped more than one percent to 26,121, as semiconductor stocks came roaring back after a rough stretch last week. It was the best session in a couple of weeks. The ten-year Treasury yield sits at about 4.47 percent, and the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking just above 6.5 percent according to daily surveys. The story here is a rotation reversal. A week ago chips were sliding and tech was the drag. Yesterday they were the engine. ANDREW: Jenny, that rally was built on AI enthusiasm, so let's start there. It's your beat. JENNY: It is, and it's a story we've been tracking. You'll remember that a couple of weeks ago Washington actually slowed OpenAI down over a safety review. Well, now the model is out, sort of. OpenAI has begun a limited preview of GPT five point six. There are three versions. Sol is the frontier model built for heavy reasoning and long, multi-step agent work. Terra is the everyday workhorse. And Luna is the fast, cheap one. ANDREW: You said limited preview. How limited are we talking? JENNY: Extremely. According to OpenAI's own announcement, and confirmed by VentureBeat and Axios, it's going to roughly twenty organizations to start. And here's the part that's genuinely new. OpenAI says it shared the models and its release plans with the U.S. government before this preview went out. ANDREW: So the government is essentially in the loop before the public is. JENNY: That's the shift. We've talked about the White House drafting voluntary release standards for frontier AI. This looks like the first real test of that idea in practice, a company briefing Washington on a product before customers can touch it. General availability is expected in the coming weeks. On pricing, the cheapest model, Luna, runs about a dollar per million tokens of input, which keeps pushing the cost of using this stuff down. ANDREW: What's the flagship, Sol, actually built to do that the last generation couldn't? JENNY: The pitch is long-horizon agentic work. Not just answering a question, but carrying out a multi-step task that unfolds over minutes or hours, checking its own work along the way. OpenAI is also launching Sol on specialized hardware from a company called Cerebras at up to seven hundred and fifty tokens per second, which is fast enough that an AI agent can feel almost instantaneous. For a bank or a lender, that speed and that reasoning depth is the difference between a chatbot and something that can actually run a workflow. ANDREW: And that cost curve matters for the companies actually deploying it. JENNY: It does, and that's the other big number this morning. Anthropic, OpenAI's chief rival, says its run-rate revenue has now passed thirty billion dollars. To put that in perspective, that figure was around nine billion at the end of last year. The company also says more than a thousand business customers are each spending over a million dollars a year with it, and that count doubled in under two months. ANDREW: A thousand customers at a million dollars apiece. That's not experimentation anymore. JENNY: No, that's production. And to give you a sense of the trajectory, Anthropic has said it expects to reach roughly forty-seven billion dollars in revenue and to be profitable by 2029. Whether every one of those numbers holds up, we'll see, but the direction is unmistakable. ANDREW: And for our listeners in banking and lending specifically, what should they take from a week like this? JENNY: That the tools are no longer the bottleneck. A year ago the honest answer to "can we trust this in a regulated workflow" was mostly no. Now you've got faster, cheaper, better-governed models, and a government that's inserting itself into the release process. The frontier keeps getting more capable, the price keeps dropping, and enterprise adoption is accelerating faster than almost anyone forecast a year ago. Andrew, that AI optimism spilled straight into the markets and it connects to your beat, so what's happening on the national side? ANDREW: The single most consequential thing on the national calendar this week is a Friday meeting in Doha. U.S. and Iranian negotiators are set to resume indirect talks on July 11th, after a pause for the funeral of Iran's late supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, who's due to be buried on July 9th. This is the continuation of the fragile ceasefire that ended the war earlier this year. JENNY: Remind us what's actually on the table Friday. ANDREW: Three big items, according to reporting from Al Arabiya and the Times of Israel. U.S. sanctions on Tehran, Iran's frozen assets, and the future of the Strait of Hormuz, which is the flashpoint we flagged last week. Iran says it intends to charge fees on shipping through the strait. The U.S. flatly rejects the idea that any country can charge tolls on an international waterway. If that dispute cracks the ceasefire, oil prices move, and everything downstream, inflation, Treasury yields, your mortgage rate, moves with it. JENNY: So Friday is the one to watch. ANDREW: Friday is the one to watch. On the domestic economy, the picture is a Fed that's stuck. Chairman Kevin Warsh, who took over the Federal Reserve in May, said last week that inflation is still, in his words, too high, even as the labor market softens. June job growth came in weak, and the Fed is holding its benchmark rate at three and a half to three and three-quarters percent. JENNY: So which way does that push them at the next meeting? ANDREW: That's the bind. A softening job market normally argues for cutting rates to support hiring. But inflation that's still stuck above the Fed's two percent target argues for staying put, or even hiking. Right now Warsh is choosing to wait, and bond traders have largely given up betting on a rate hike this year. The next policy meeting is the end of the month, July 28th and 29th, and the inflation reports that land in the next two weeks will shape it. That tension, cooling jobs but sticky prices, leads us right into home lending, which is also my beat. ANDREW: Mortgage rates have barely budged. The thirty-year fixed is sitting just above 6.5 percent in the daily surveys, and Freddie Mac's weekly average was 6.43 percent as of its last reading. It's been essentially flat for a couple of weeks. JENNY: So for someone trying to lock a rate this week, is there any reason to wait? ANDREW: Honestly, not much of one. Rates are being pulled in two directions that roughly cancel out. The weak jobs data has nudged the ten-year Treasury down toward 4.47 percent, which is mild downward pressure on mortgages. But the Iran situation is the wildcard. If those Hormuz talks go badly Friday and oil spikes, that downward drift reverses fast. So the calm you're seeing today is real, but it's borrowed against a geopolitical outcome we won't know until the weekend. JENNY: That's a useful way to frame it. ANDREW: One bright spot in the data. The Mortgage Bankers Association has reported purchase applications running higher than a year ago for nearly three straight months. So even at these rates, buyers are slowly coming back into the market. JENNY: Are people still reaching for adjustable-rate loans to get a lower payment? ANDREW: Less than you'd think. Adjustable-rate mortgages have fallen back below eight percent of all applications, the lowest share since January. And that's actually a quiet signal of confidence. When buyers expect rates to fall, they lock in a fixed loan and plan to refinance later, rather than gambling on an adjustable rate. So the drop in ARMs tells you households increasingly believe six and a half percent is closer to the ceiling than the floor. Jenny, speaking of buyers and building, let's head downtown. Jacksonville's your beat. JENNY: Thanks, Andrew. Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a hot one, a high near 95 degrees with a heat index that could touch 102, and about a thirty percent chance of afternoon thunderstorms. Classic July. Drink water, find shade. JENNY: Now to a story we've been following that just took a concrete step forward. The city has finalized the sale of the former JEA headquarters campus downtown, and we now know what's going to become of it. A developer, Live Oak Contracting, plans to turn those old office buildings into a residential project they're calling The Jewel at 21 West, roughly 180 apartments, with rooftop amenities, some office space, and ground-floor retail. ANDREW: Remind me what the city got for it. JENNY: About a million dollars, and the City Council approved that purchase agreement on a sixteen to nothing vote. Now, a million dollars for a downtown campus sounds low, and it is. But the bet the city is making is about people, not price. Jacksonville wants roughly twenty thousand residents living downtown, and the core is somewhere around nine thousand now. Every one of these office-to-apartment conversions is a down payment on closing that gap. ANDREW: So it's less a real estate deal and more a population strategy. JENNY: Exactly. And it fits a bigger downtown building boom. Just a few blocks away, Gateway Jax is bringing a full Publix grocery store to street level, with a fifteen-story residential tower planned above it, around 250 more apartments. Downtown Jacksonville has something like seven billion dollars in its development pipeline right now. The open question, and this is the one to keep an eye on, is whether the city can keep funding these incentives. ANDREW: Why is that in doubt? JENNY: Because of a property-tax measure on the November ballot that could blow a real hole in the city's budget. The Council Auditor has estimated it could cost Jacksonville north of three hundred million dollars a year by the end of the decade, and the new Council president has been openly skeptical of writing big checks downtown while that threat is looming. ANDREW: So the incentives and the tax cut are on a collision course. JENNY: They are, and that collision comes into focus next week. Mayor Donna Deegan delivers her proposed budget to the Council on Monday, July 14th, and it's expected to feature record spending on police and fire, with the Sheriff's Office alone asking for around six hundred and seventy-six million dollars. Budget hearings then run through August. So the question of whether Jacksonville can afford both a downtown renaissance and a property-tax cut, that fight starts Monday. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch this week. Circle Friday, July 11th. That's when U.S. and Iranian negotiators sit back down in Doha, and the sticking point is who controls the Strait of Hormuz, the channel that carries a fifth of the world's oil. Watch whether they keep the ceasefire on track or let the fee fight escalate. Because the answer flows straight into oil prices, inflation, and the mortgage rate you'll see next week. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Tuesday. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.
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