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A peace deal with Iran has been a few weeks away for three and a half months, but this weekend might have been a breakthrough. Kinda. Sort of.

The U.S. and Iran struck a tentative agreement to extend their ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but they haven’t touched the latter’s nuclear program and there are plenty of unanswered questions. Even in the best of circumstances, it will take weeks to get oil moving, and months to lower gas prices.

We’ll get you up to speed on the market reaction below, but first let’s get you up to speed on the tricky decision in front of the new Fed chair later this week.  — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh stands at a White House lectern while President Donald Trump looks on.
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
What will Kevin Warsh do in first meeting as Fed Chair?
Rising inflation and the bond markets are telling the Fed to raise rates. The guy in the White House is demanding cuts. Marketplace’s Henry Epp has the state of play.
It's time for Kevin Warsh's big debut as the new chair of the Federal Reserve. The Federal Open Market Committee meets this week, and will make an interest rate decision by Wednesday.

Markets expect that the FOMC won’t do much of anything for now. But the backdrop to this meeting is anything but calm, as Warsh takes the reins from Jerome Powell, who faced relentless pressure from President Trump to cut rates.

The central bank's decisionmakers are meeting as inflation is ticking up again, by 4.2% in May’s consumer price index. Producer prices on goods and services rose even faster at 6.5%, which could mean consumers will feel more of a pinch soon.

This current bout of inflation is tricky for the Fed because it’s driven by a spike in energy prices caused by the war in Iran. But food and energy prices tend to be too volatile to inform the Fed’s decisions.

“That's why historically they've looked through headline inflation, that is, that include food and energy, to the core inflationary numbers,” said Andrew Clinton, head of Clinton Investment Management.

Core inflation last month was a lot closer to the Fed’s target rate of 2%, at 2.9% in the CPI. Fed officials might be tempted to think this spike in inflation is temporary.
Except that’s what they did a couple years ago — and it didn’t work out.

“The Fed's error in 2021 was precisely this, was to assume that the supply shocks were temporary, transitory, in the word of the day, and they were caught flat-footed,” said Peter Conti-Brown, a professor of financial regulation at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.

Fed officials don’t want to make that mistake again. So, the bond market has started to indicate that it thinks the Fed will probably have to deal with inflation, said Derek Tang, an economist at the research firm MPA Macro.

“They do expect more of a chance the Fed might have to raise its policy interest rate sooner rather than later, and that's making some of these bond yields rise,” he said.

But the White House keeps pushing for the Fed to go in the opposite direction.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street has been pretty unbothered by the war, but cheered on peace today. The S&P 500 closed up 1.7% , the Dow jumped 0.9% to a new record and the Nasdaq composite surged 3.1%. 

  • The price of Brent Crude fell to $83.17 a barrel, and the national average gas price fell to $4.06 a gallon.

  • Cryptocurrency was loving the news too; bitcoin hit a two-week high and other currencies saw bigger jumps today.
Government
  • President Donald Trump hosted UFC fights on the White House lawn last night to celebrate his birthday and, oh yeah, the semiquincentennial. The spectacle reportedly cost $60 million to put on, offset by prominent brand deals. Some prominent CEOs in attendance have business with the administration.

  • The federal government blocked Anthropic’s Mythos 5 and Fable 5 AI models, citing national security concerns. There may be a bit more to it than that.
M&A
  • Fox announced a deal to acquire the streaming company Roku for $22 billion, but investors were not pleased — Fox shares fell upwards of 15% and Roku’s stock dropped 1.9%.

  • The Justice department signed off on Paramount’s deal to buy rival studio Warner Bros., reportedly ahead of investigators who were preparing to recommend an antitrust suit. State attorneys general may bring their own suits.
The World Cup
  • Of the 25 million people who tuned into the U.S. team's debut at the World Cup, around 9 million watched in Spanish. That’s a huge advertising opportunity.

  • Brace yourself for a lot of gambling ads. One forecast says $4.4 billion in online wagers will fly during the tournament, more than double last World Cup.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Those ticket sales talk to the studios. The studios are the folks that we need investing in new voices and truly original filmmaking.”
— Stephanie Silverman, executive director of the Belcourt Theatre in Nashville, Tennessee
Summer’s off to a hot start for movie theaters. Steven Spielberg's original sci-fi blockbuster “Disclosure Day” made nearly $94 million at the global box office this weekend, but the real story is “Obsession,” a horror debut from a former YouTuber that outgrossed the latest “Star Wars” in the U.S. on a $750,000 budget. The heaviest hitters may be still to come: “Spider-Man” and “Toy Story” sequels, plus Christpher Nolan’s epic adaptation of “The Odyssey.” 
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Ben Stein plays a teacher in
Paramount Pictures via IMDB
Final note
One more thing about the movies
Last week marked the 40th anniversary of “Ferris Bueller's Day Off,” the teen classic that gave many young viewers their first lesson in the peril of economic protectionism. In the famous classroom scene, Ben Stein’s teacher is droning on about the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. If you find that history as interesting as I do, we have a whole story about how raising barriers to trade… anyone? Anyone? Backfired.
READ MORE
 
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