Jax Morning Brief
Good morning. It's Tuesday, June 2nd, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: Anthropic confidentially filed for an IPO yesterday, racing OpenAI to the public markets, and SpaceX just pulled its own roadshow four days forward. The race to lock in AI capital is happening this week. ANDREW: And on the national side, the Iran framework is still unsigned, the Senate ICE bill is still stuck, and a brand new state property tax proposal could blow a 300 million dollar hole in Jacksonville's budget. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. All three major indexes hit fresh record highs Monday. The S and P 500 closed at 7,600, up a quarter of a percent. The Dow finished at 51,079, up a tenth. The Nasdaq added four tenths to close at 27,087. That's the ninth consecutive weekly gain for the S and P, the longest streak since late 2023. Nvidia led the tape, up six percent on a new laptop chip announcement at Computex. The ten year Treasury yield closed at 4.46 percent, a couple of basis points higher on the day, and Brent crude pushed back above 95 dollars a barrel on Iran headlines. The thirty year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at roughly 6.6 percent according to Mortgage News Daily, up a few basis points from Friday. JENNY: Andrew, let me start at the AI desk because the story is moving fast. Anthropic confidentially filed its S-1 with the SEC yesterday. CNBC, Bloomberg, and NPR all confirmed it. The target is a public listing as early as this fall. ANDREW: This is built on the round we previewed last week, right? JENNY: It is. The 65 billion dollar Series H that closed at a 965 billion dollar post money valuation, with a 47 billion dollar revenue run rate. The new piece of news is that Anthropic beat OpenAI to the SEC. OpenAI reportedly filed confidentially around May 22nd, but Anthropic is now the lead candidate to price first, possibly in October. That matters because whoever prices first sets the comparable valuation for everyone else. ANDREW: How much room is there in the market for two trillion dollar AI listings in the same window? JENNY: That is exactly the question, and the answer arrives this week. SpaceX moved its roadshow up. Reuters is reporting the kickoff is now Thursday, June 4th, not next Monday as originally planned. Pricing on June 11th, trading debut June 12th on the Nasdaq under the ticker SPCX. They are targeting a 1.75 to 2 trillion dollar valuation, with a raise of 40 to 80 billion dollars. If it prices at the top of that range, it is the largest IPO in history. ANDREW: And the Anthropic compute contract embedded in that S-1 is still in dispute. JENNY: Still in dispute, three days from a roadshow. The filing says 45 billion dollars over three years. Elon Musk has publicly said on X that it is a 180 day lease with a 90 day mutual cancel, capped at 7.5 billion. Neither party has reconciled the language. That is the single biggest open question institutional buyers will be asking on the road. JENNY: There is one more story I have to put in front of listeners. Florida's attorney general filed suit against OpenAI and Sam Altman personally yesterday. NPR and Axios both covered it. The complaint cites the 2025 Florida State University shooting case and a University of South Florida graduate student murder case, where the defendant allegedly used ChatGPT to research body disposal. The counts include deceptive trade practices, negligence, strict liability, and public nuisance. Florida is the first state to bring this kind of suit, and naming Altman individually is the headline. ANDREW: Six weeks ahead of an OpenAI IPO that has not been formally announced. JENNY: Right. This is exactly the kind of contingent liability that the S-1 review process surfaces, and it will not be ignored. JENNY: Andrew, over to the national desk. ANDREW: We pick up where we left off yesterday on Iran. Trump still has not signed the framework. CNN's live blog reported Monday afternoon that Iran has suspended communications with US negotiators, with Tehran citing two reasons. One, the US position keeps shifting. Two, Israel just expanded its operations in Lebanon. Brent crude jumped about five percent intraday on the headline before settling around 95 dollars. The ten year traded heavier into the close. JENNY: And the Israel piece of this is escalating. ANDREW: Significantly. Monday morning, Prime Minister Netanyahu and his defense minister jointly ordered the IDF to strike targets in Beirut's southern suburbs. Civilians began evacuating in mass numbers. Jabal Amel hospital in Tyre took major damage in an afternoon strike. Lebanon's health ministry puts the total death toll at over 3,400 since this round began. By evening, Trump announced that Israel and Hezbollah had agreed to dial back the fighting. CNN reported a heated phone call between Trump and Netanyahu earlier in the day. So you have the President publicly trying to de-escalate while Iran says the Lebanon front is the reason it cannot close the deal it has on the table. JENNY: What about the Senate ICE bill? ANDREW: Still stuck. The Senate parliamentarian struck the one billion dollars in White House ballroom security funding under Byrd rule constraints, so that piece is gone. But the 1.78 billion dollar Department of Justice anti-weaponization fund is still in the bill, and Senator Susan Collins, who chairs Appropriations, remains opposed. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche briefed Republican senators last week and did not move her vote. Thune said yesterday the chamber will, quote, pick up where we left off. Translation, no progress, and Trump's June 1st deadline is now two days in the rearview. ANDREW: One quick data point worth flagging from yesterday. ISM manufacturing for May printed at 54, the highest reading since May of 2022 and the fifth straight month of expansion. Consensus was 53.3, so this was a meaningful beat. Cyclical equities ran with it, and it is one of the reasons yields backed up. The economy is not slowing the way some had positioned for. JENNY: That sets up Friday's payrolls report nicely. Andrew, the local desk is mine. JENNY: Weather wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high of 90 today, low of 70, partly sunny this morning with thunderstorms likely between three and five p.m. and a 70 percent chance of rain overall. And that rain is welcome. Fire Chief Percy Golden issued a city wide burn ban effective immediately yesterday. The Keetch-Byram Drought Index for Duval is sitting at 594 out of 800. According to Jacksonville Fire and Rescue, we are in the driest stretch the city has seen since 1872. JENNY: The biggest local story landing this morning is the DeSantis property tax plan, and what it means for Jacksonville's budget. Council Auditor Philip Peterson released his initial analysis yesterday. Jacksonville Today, the Jax Daily Record, and First Coast News all reported. The plan would raise Florida's homestead exemption from 50 thousand to 150 thousand in 2027, then to 250 thousand by 2028, with constitutional amendment language that could eventually push it to 500 thousand. The Council Auditor's office estimates that at the 250 thousand exemption level alone, the city would lose more than 300 million dollars a year starting in January 2027. ANDREW: For context, how big is the city's general fund? JENNY: Roughly 1.8 billion. So we are talking about a hole in the high teens as a percentage of the entire general fund. Mayor Donna Deegan pointed out that Jacksonville already has the lowest city millage of any major Florida metro, and the current rate does not fully cover police and fire. The Florida Legislature convened in special session Monday to vet the plan for the November ballot. ANDREW: That is a much bigger budget threat than the JTA cuts we talked about yesterday. JENNY: An order of magnitude bigger. And it would land on top of all the other pressures the city is already absorbing. So for local listeners, this is the one to track from now through the November ballot. JENNY: Quick second item. The JEA investigation is still on track. Chief Administrative Officer Jody Brooks testifies next Monday, June 8th, at 1 p.m. CEO Vickie Cavey on June 22nd. Former general counsel Regina Ross has also been subpoenaed. The committee's focus is the Mayo Clinic capacity fee dispute, alleged workplace culture issues, and the natural gas plant decision. Brooks said publicly she does not believe she is a target of the parallel criminal probe, but is taking the subpoena seriously because her communications are being sought. ANDREW: And one more from Jacksonville. The Jaguars announced mandatory minicamp runs June 9th through 11th, and the Wednesday June 10th practice is open to the public at the Miller Electric Center. Free, registration required. Travis Hunter is still rehabbing the knee but reportedly in every huddle holding a play sheet. Trevor Lawrence has called him, quote, the twelfth guy. JENNY: Andrew, over to mortgage. ANDREW: Rates ticked up into the week. The thirty year fixed closed Monday at roughly 6.60 percent according to Mortgage News Daily, a few basis points higher than Friday's print. That is the daily index. The Freddie Mac weekly survey came in at 6.53 percent last Thursday, its sixth straight weekly increase and the highest reading since August. Both are now moving the same direction. JENNY: So the cooling we talked about Monday flipped. ANDREW: It did, and the driver is exactly what I flagged yesterday. The ten year backed up to 4.46 percent on the Iran headlines and the ISM beat. If oil pushes the ten year through 4.5 percent in the next two sessions, the thirty year fixed is going to test 6.75 percent by the end of the week. The asymmetry is still toward locking sooner rather than later. ANDREW: On the data side, the latest Mortgage Bankers Association weekly print showed purchase applications down four tenths of a percent and refinance applications down 18 percent week over week. Refi share dropped from roughly 42 percent of all activity to 37.5 percent. The next print drops tomorrow morning. If the purchase number turns positive on tomorrow's print despite higher rates, that is a real signal that buyers are accepting this range. If it drops again, the housing market is going to spend the summer flat. JENNY: And on the servicing side? ANDREW: National Mortgage News flagged that first quarter foreclosure filings hit roughly 119 thousand nationally, up 26 percent year over year, the highest in six years. The new FHA loss mitigation rules from February are starting to bite. There is a mandatory three month trial payment plan, a cap of one home retention option per 18 months, and a new borrower affordability attestation requirement. The industry view is that servicers are getting squeezed. Watch the next default servicer earnings calls for color on margin compression. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch today. The April Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey drops at 10 a.m. Eastern. JOLTS. The March print showed 6.9 million open jobs, essentially flat. Today's number is the appetizer ahead of Friday's payrolls, and the figure to watch is the quits rate. If it ticks up, workers are confident enough to move, and that is a hot signal for wages and for the Fed. If it falls again, it confirms the labor market is cooling under the surface, which is the case for any cut talk later this year. Either way, the bond market will price the print inside ten minutes, and the mortgage market will follow. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Tuesday. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.
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