Jax Morning Brief
Good morning. It's Tuesday, June 9th, 2026. This is The Morning Brief. I'm Jenny. ANDREW: And I'm Andrew. JENNY: A fragile pause this morning in the Middle East. Iran says it has suspended its attacks on Israel after a one-night exchange, but the warning labels are doing a lot of work. ANDREW: And the largest IPO in U.S. history starts trading in the gray market today. SpaceX is now 48 hours from its Nasdaq debut, and the first real demand read lands this morning. JENNY: Let's get into it. ANDREW: A quick look at the markets. The S and P 500 closed Monday at 7,406, up about three tenths of a percent. The Nasdaq added nine tenths to close at 25,930, a small step back toward Friday's losses. The Dow lagged, off about a tenth of a percent at 50,786. The ten-year Treasury yield is sitting near 4.55 percent, and the thirty-year fixed mortgage rate is tracking at 6.68 percent according to Mortgage News Daily. That's the highest daily print since December. Stocks held up Monday largely because chip names recovered some of Friday's bloodbath after Iran said it was halting attacks. ANDREW: Which is the right place to start. Jenny, I'll take this one and then hand it back to you. ANDREW: Updating the story we led with yesterday. Iran's military said Monday afternoon it had suspended operations against Israel, and Prime Minister Netanyahu confirmed Israel had stopped its strikes on Iran, though he pointedly avoided calling it a ceasefire. This follows the first direct missile exchange since the April truce. Roughly thirty Iranian ballistic missiles fired overnight, an Israeli strike on a petrochemical plant in southwest Iran in response. JENNY: So is this actually a pause, or just a breather while both sides reload? ANDREW: That's the question, and the conditional language tells you everything. Iran said it will resume attacks if Israeli operations in southern Lebanon continue. Netanyahu refused to use the word ceasefire. President Trump posted Monday that the U.S. is close to declaring, quote, total victory, and that final negotiations are proceeding. The market took the pause at face value. Brent crude, which spiked above $98 a barrel intraday Monday, eased back to about $94 by the close. But the underlying framework Trump described over the weekend, a 60-day extension, Hormuz reopening, Iran selling oil freely, is still very much in doubt. The petrochemical strike on the Mahshahr complex is the part nobody is talking about publicly, but it materially raises Iran's domestic political cost of accepting any deal. JENNY: And what does this do to the CPI print on Wednesday? ANDREW: It absolutely puts it back in play. If energy stays elevated through the May data window, headline inflation could come in hotter than the roughly 3 percent consensus. The Cleveland Fed nowcast was already drifting up. We'll get to that in the close. ANDREW: One more on the national desk. The House reconciliation bill is now expected to clear this week, and the centerpiece controversy looks resolved. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told lawmakers the Justice Department is, quote, not moving forward with the proposed $1.8 billion anti-weaponization fund. Speaker Mike Johnson told the president directly that the fund made the math impossible. Without it, Johnson has a path to passage on the $69.5 billion ICE and CBP package the Senate sent over last Friday. Trump's June 1 deadline is already gone, but the bill should be on his desk by Friday. JENNY: That's a big climbdown on the DOJ fund piece. ANDREW: It is. Whether the White House revives it through some other vehicle is the open question. Jenny, over to you for AI. JENNY: Thanks, Andrew. The story we've been tracking on SpaceX hits its first real market test today. The gray market opens this morning, which is the first honest read on institutional demand before Wednesday's formal pricing. SpaceX has set a fixed offering price of $135 per share. That values the company at roughly $1.77 trillion, which would make it the seventh-largest U.S. company by market cap on day one, larger than Tesla. The Nasdaq debut is Thursday under the ticker SPCX. ANDREW: A fixed price, not a range. That's unusual for a deal this size. JENNY: It is. Most large IPOs use a range to gauge demand sensitivity. SpaceX skipped that step after weeks of testing-the-waters meetings, basically signaling they already know what the book looks like. And they reserved 30 percent of the float for retail, which is about three times normal. There's a retail event tomorrow for about fifteen hundred investors. The thing to watch on the gray market this morning is whether shares trade meaningfully above or below $135, because that's the first uncensored signal of where institutions actually value this. ANDREW: And if it trades below? That would be a problem at a $1.77 trillion valuation. JENNY: It would. The whole reason for the fixed price approach is to project confidence. A weak gray market would force some uncomfortable conversations between now and Wednesday's close. JENNY: Quick second story on the AI beat. The enterprise services build-out we flagged last month is starting to look like the dominant frame for this cycle. Both Anthropic and OpenAI now have multibillion-dollar joint ventures purpose-built to embed engineers inside customer companies. Anthropic's venture with Blackstone, Hellman and Friedman, and Goldman Sachs raised $1.5 billion. OpenAI's deployment company raised $4 billion led by TPG. The bet on both sides is that the bottleneck in enterprise AI is no longer the model. It's the implementation. ANDREW: Which is interesting, because that's also a bet against the traditional consulting industry. JENNY: Exactly. They are squarely targeting the Accenture, Deloitte, McKinsey lane. The pitch is that the consulting firms can write a deck about AI transformation, but they cannot put forward-deployed engineers in your finance team for nine months. That's the gap these joint ventures are trying to fill, and the early customer signal has been heavily weighted toward financial services. Banks, insurers, and private-equity-owned portfolio companies are the named launch partners on the Anthropic side. ANDREW: Which explains the Goldman and Blackstone involvement. They're already distribution channels. JENNY: Exactly right. Andrew, what's happening on the mortgage side? ANDREW: Rates are the story. The Mortgage News Daily index pushed to 6.68 percent Monday, the highest daily print since December. That move is almost entirely a delayed reaction to Friday's hot jobs report. Payrolls came in at 172,000 versus expectations near 85,000. The ten-year Treasury jumped to about 4.55 percent, and lender quotes are now firmly in the high sixes. JENNY: How does that hit borrowers who were trying to close this week? ANDREW: It hits hard. A buyer locking today on a $400,000 loan is looking at a monthly payment roughly $80 to $100 higher than someone who locked two weeks ago. And the MBA's weekly survey out last Wednesday already showed the strain. Purchase applications were at their slowest pace since April. Refinance activity hit its weakest level since last June. The refi window, which had cracked open in May when rates briefly touched 6.4, has essentially slammed shut. JENNY: What about borrowers already in trouble? You mentioned foreclosure data last week. ANDREW: That trend is the harder problem. First-quarter foreclosure filings ran about 119,000, up 26 percent year-over-year, a six-year high according to National Mortgage News. And the FHA's February mortgagee letter is still squeezing servicer margins on the loss-mitigation side. The CFPB pullback under the new administration is shifting more of the consumer-protection burden to state regulators and the FHA itself, and the FHA doesn't have the bandwidth. JENNY: So practical takeaway for someone buying right now? ANDREW: If you have a rate lock that expires this week, extend it if you can. If you're shopping, expect quotes to bounce around with every Treasury auction and every Trump Truth Social post on Iran. Hedge desks at the big lenders widened their spreads overnight, which is why the daily index moved more than the underlying Treasury did. Jenny, speaking of Jacksonville, what's the city looking at today? JENNY: Weather-wise, Jacksonville is looking at a high near 87 degrees and partly sunny today, with an east wind around 5 to 14 miles an hour. The June burn ban remains in effect. JENNY: City Council meets tonight, and the big agenda item is the final vote on the Yellow Water Road rezoning. That's the 478-home subdivision on 112 acres in West Jacksonville, just north of Normandy Boulevard. The Land Use and Zoning committee approved it 6-0 last week. The developer is Partridge Hill Capital, and the underlying PUD actually allows for up to 550 homes, though current plans show 478. Worth watching whether anyone surfaces the property-tax amendment in the debate, because more rooftops at the same time the homestead exemption is jumping is a real fiscal puzzle for the city. ANDREW: That homestead piece is a $300 million-a-year hole by FY29 if I'm remembering right. JENNY: That's the Council Auditor's estimate, yes. Roughly 17 percent of general fund revenue at full phase-in. JENNY: Second story. The JEA Special Investigative Committee heard testimony Monday from Chief Administrative Officer Jody Brooks and former JEA legal counsel Regina Ross. The committee met twice, eleven a.m. and one p.m. Brooks was specifically asked about JEA's nonrefundable down payment to GE Vernova for a combined-cycle natural gas turbine at the Northside Generation Station. That decision is tied to the $1.57 billion natural gas plant whose regulatory applications were filed June 4th. CEO Vickie Cavey is scheduled to testify June 22nd, and the parallel state-level investigation by the statewide prosecutor and the Fourth Judicial Circuit State Attorney is still pulling records on the utility's lobbying contracts with Ballard Partners. ANDREW: Is the committee getting closer to recommending charter changes? JENNY: That's the direction this is heading. Workplace culture, water capacity fees, and now generation-asset decisions are all getting woven into the same probe. The statewide prosecutor subpoena is still active. JENNY: Last one. Jaguars mandatory minicamp opens today at Miller Electric Center, runs through Thursday. The big watch is Travis Hunter, who is still working his way back from last season's knee injury. GM James Gladstone has said the plan is for Hunter to be at, quote, full tick by training camp in late July. Expect a limited role this week. Wednesday's session is open to the public from 8:40 to 10:55 a.m. Tickets are free. ANDREW: Good to know. Hunter at full tick by camp would settle a lot of questions about that wide receiver room. JENNY: It would. Andrew, take us out. ANDREW: Before we let you go, one thing to watch tomorrow morning. The Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the May Consumer Price Index at 8:30 a.m. Eastern. Consensus is for headline inflation around 3 percent, but the Cleveland Fed nowcast has been drifting higher, and last month's Iran-driven energy spike falls inside the May reference window. A print above 3.2 percent would close the door on any June rate cut and reopen serious conversation about a hike at the June 16-17 FOMC meeting. The ten-year Treasury at 4.55 percent already has some of that priced in. Watch the 4.60 level on the ten-year. If it breaks above that on the print, mortgage rates push toward 7, and the housing market enters a different conversation. JENNY: That's your Morning Brief for Tuesday. Have a great day. ANDREW: We'll see you tomorrow.
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