Note: Apologies to subscribers to the free daily email, yesterday’s Daily Edge could not be sent out.
‘It’s a big wake-up call’: What market observers are recommending after Trump says Iran MOU ‘is over’
(…) “It’s a big wake-up call for the markets because the expectation was that following the MOU, we were likely to start to see the flow of oil coming back into the markets. And we saw inflation expectations being dialed down.
“The way we’re looking at it now is what has changed materially is the (Iranian) oil waiver is gone. It’s removed a very key incentive for Iranian compliance.”
“Trump’s comments add that further layer of additional risk premium into the markets. But the reality is with Trump, you always have TACO (‘Trump always chickens out’) trade at play.”
“He was fast approaching the midterm election. The fact that he wanted to do this memorandum of understanding with Iran implied that he wanted to improve his ratings ahead of the winter elections, and that is going to be a critical factor for him to keep in mind.” (…)
“And do we take Trump literally or seriously? He says that the peace deal is over, but that U.S. negotiators can continue doing their work. We also know that Trump can turn on a dime. He could have an about-face today, tomorrow, next week, or perhaps later. I don’t see him waging war with Iran into the elections.”
US Consumers’ Inflation Expectations Rose in June, NY Fed Survey Says
Americans’ expectations for inflation over the near and medium term rose in June amid strong increases anticipated for medical care costs and rent, according to a Federal Reserve Bank of New York survey released Tuesday.
Consumers said they see inflation at 3.7% over the next year, up from 3.5% in May. Expectations for inflation in three years increased to 3.3%, the highest since June 2022, up from 3.1%. Estimates for inflation in five years remained steady at 3%. (…)
Importantly, Americans’ higher inflation expectations are in spite of consumers expecting gasoline prices to be just 1.5% higher a year from now.
The minutes of the FOMC April 28-29 meeting said: “While both market- and survey-based measures of inflation expectations indicated upside risks to the near-term inflation outlook, measures of medium- and longer-term inflation expectations remained well anchored.”
The anchor is slipping…
And Kevin Warsh said “this committee will deliver”.
Consumers’ inflation sentiment is no longer simply a reflection of gas prices. Same decoupling with the bond market as Apollo shows:
Trump’s $40 Billion Travel Slump
Since Donald Trump’s return to the White House last year, the US has fallen into a tourism trough. His on-again, off-again tariffs, toughened borders and visa policies, agents dispatched to American cities and deployments of troops abroad have made the country a far less inviting destination for global travelers.
As would-be overseas visitors went elsewhere or simply stayed home, the US tourism industry lost out on as much as $16.6 billion in 2025 and is headed for an additional $21 billion deficit this year — what it might have earned if it had maintained its pre-Trump market share — researcher Tourism Economics estimates.
“Travelers have choices,” says Aran Ryan, a director at the firm.. “Trump administration policies and pronouncements are the primary contributor in the US decline that we’re experiencing.”
The US should be experiencing a tourism tsunami: The World Cup is expected to draw more than 1.2 million foreign fans to 11 American cities this summer, and the appetite for travel remains voracious, with global tourism projected to grow 5.8% in 2026 despite simmering geopolitical tensions and sky-high airfares.
Although 71 million foreign visitors are expected to journey to the US this year — an increase of about 3% — a full recovery to the pre-pandemic record of 80 million, reached in 2018, isn’t expected until 2029, the year Trump leaves office, according to Tourism Economics’ projections.
Riding a post-pandemic wave of so-called revenge travel, worldwide tourism rebounded to its pre-Covid-19 level in 2024. The US has yet to reach that milestone, though international arrivals jumped a respectable 9% that year. But in 2025, as Trump returned to office, visits to the US dropped 5.5% even as the global market expanded 4.7% — a difference of more than 10 percentage points.
There was a similar disconnect in the president’s first term: Total foreign arrivals to the US edged up 1.3% annually on average from 2017 to 2019, versus an increase of 5.7% per year in the global market before the pandemic shut down travel in 2020. That stands in stark contrast to the Obama administration, when US growth averaged 3.6% per year, roughly in line with the rest of the world, and under Joe Biden, when US expansion was about 3 percentage points higher than the global level.
Since Trump’s return to the White House, there have been fewer visitors from western Europe and China — traditionally the highest-spending holiday makers. The UK, the No. 3 source market (after Canada and Mexico), is down 2.2% this year through May after rising just 0.5% in 2025, according to the US International Trade Administration.
German visits have plummeted 13% year-to-date, while Chinese arrivals dropped 4% in 2025 and an additional 1.5% this year. Those travelers are being supplanted by people from less wealthy countries. Ecuadorians are up 21%, Hungarians jumped 18%, and Colombians climbed 16% so far in 2026.
Foreign tourists spend an average of $4,000 per trip to the US, and as more of them stayed away, international visitor spending in the US fell 4.6% last year, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council. The US was one of just a handful of developed countries to post declines in international visitor spending in 2025, according to Tourism Economics, joining the likes of Haiti, Iran, Nigeria and Pakistan.
Proposed changes to the visa waiver system known as ESTA, available to citizens of more than three dozen developed countries, would require visitors to hand over extensive information regarding social media accounts, family contacts and email addresses from the past decade. The new rules would deter some 4.7 million people from the affected countries coming to the US — almost a quarter below the typical level — blowing a $15.7 billion hole in foreign-visitor spending, the World Travel & Tourism Council estimates.
For hoteliers from Miami to Atlanta, who spent millions of dollars upgrading properties in anticipation of a global stampede, the World Cup math isn’t adding up. Almost four-fifths of owners and operators say bookings in US host cities during the tournament are significantly below expectations, according to an April survey by the American Hotel & Lodging Association. And some said reservations were even trailing typical summer demand. (…)
The Global Business Travel Association, which represents corporate bookers and travel management companies, says more than half its members plan to decrease either near-term or long-term business travel to the US. Business visas issued to western Europeans fell 2% in the 16 months through April. And regions that posted growth last year — Asia, the Middle East and Oceania — have flipped to losses this year, according to the US International Trade Administration.
China Auto Sales Drop Even as Exports Help Cushion Slump
Retail sales of passenger vehicles fell 23.2% from the year before to 1.6 million units, China’s Passenger Car Association said on Wednesday. New-energy vehicle sales, including plug-in hybrids and pure-electric vehicles, slipped 9% year-over-year, though the segment still accounted for over 60% of the market for a third straight month.
Manufacturers leaned heavily on exports to offset the slowdown. Exports of new-energy vehicles surged over 150% to 499,000 units, signaling that foreign markets are absorbing excess production. Despite a one-fifth drop in domestic sales, BYD Co.’s total shipments rose 5.5%, driven by exports that almost doubled from a year ago.
Amid the broader domestic deceleration, Tesla Inc. posted one of the month’s strongest performances. The Austin, Texas-based automaker delivered 89,091 vehicles from its Shanghai factory in June, including 52,920 sold locally. That extended Tesla’s year-on-year growth streak in China to eight months and marked its best monthly total of the year.
The latest figures highlight a widening pressure on weaker brands. Zeekr crossed the halfway mark toward its annual sales target, while Xpeng Inc. fell significantly behind initial projections following a pullback in first-half deliveries.
The industry now enters the second half of the year under immense pressure, while the the domestic auto market is increasingly defined by intense competition in a mature, replacement-driven market, according to the PCA statement.
“Internal polarization across the sector continues to widen,” said Cui Dongshu, secretary general of the association, while warning that both costs and margins are under severe pressure, squeezed by skyrocketing automotive-grade chip prices and speculative bidding for lithium carbonate.
While the association lowered its 2026 retail sales growth forecast to a 14% contraction in mid-June, the group expects market sentiment to steadily turn a corner after July.
Anthropic 3Q26 Profit Over $1B: The Anthropic IPO Financials Sneak Peak
(…) we expect Anthropic to take advantage of their superior business model and margins to invest in further in new models that help extend their lead and monetization over closed and open source competitors. Anthropic has the ability to truly make OpenAI dance and we see Anthropic as the first $6T company as a base-case possibility if they continue to execute.
Pricing power, gross margins, business model, and profitability are all reasons for Anthropic to IPO first and put the impetus on OpenAI to open their financials and raise the necessary capital to compete and fund the massive AI buildout still to come. (…)
While other SemiAnalysis work focuses on the technical aspects of AI Labs, this piece will focus solely on the current and future financials, margin economics, and long-term outlook for Anthropic.
(…) we see over 100GW of compute demand between OpenAI and Anrthropic by the end of 2030. This will require over 90GW of net compute additions through 2030 vs 2.5GW added in 2025 and 5GW in 2026. Today, we estimate OpenAI and Anthropic have access to just over 6GW of compute. (…)
Subscriptions make up just 15% of total ARR [Annualized Recurring Revenue]. Compare this to OpenAI and you’ll see a stark contrast. During 1Q26, OpenAI was over 65% subscription based.
The business vs consumer split is even more stark. Just 5% of Anthropic ARR today comes from Consumer subscriptions vs our estimates of OpenAI around 40% at the end of 2Q26 (the CCO of OpenAI said in a blog that B2B was around 40% of total ARR in 1Q26). Claude Code’s success has levered Anthropic to the right tailwinds and business model. As we show in the margin section below, margins on the API business are vastly superior to consumer subscriptions. (…)
The AI Lab inference business model is simple. Revenue is dictated by token volume and blended token prices. Token volume has skyrocketed, but blended token pricing has declined over time. With higher token pricing on new models, how has blended pricing gone down? Cache rates, input/output ratios, and agentic vs chat workflow mix are all factors in determining blended token pricing. (…)
As more agentic work gets adopted, revenue growth is driven by rising token consumption. Agentic workflows consume significantly more tokens than the traditional chat function, and blended token prices have actually fallen drastically since 2024. The consumption curve, then, is doing all the work in driving revenue growth.
Broadly, the business model of a lab is to invest in building new models, buy or rent compute to train and serve those models, and then sell that compute to customers via tokens. Anthropic and OpenAI have very different ways of selling that inference compute historically.
Anthropic has wholly aligned their business model with high-margin, usage-based pricing while OpenAI is serving costly free and subscription-based users who can run up token usage that hog compute. While OpenAI continues to converge towards Anthropic with incremental ARR being much more B2B and API based, they still have the weight of consumer and subscription-based usage hitting their financials. (…)
Labs rent or buy compute from various sources and sell subscriptions or usage-based tokens on top of that. Labs have several levers to pull to get the most out of a given unit of compute they have for inference.
First, new models typically have higher prices. Second, different accelerator chips have different token throughputs and can be optimized over time to better serve inference. Tokens are the fundamental unit of measure for AI workloads that LLMs use to process data. Think of a token as a fragment of the query; it could be a word, part of a word, or punctuation mark in a text-based query.
These compute costs are largely fixed per unit of compute, so when you can either: 1) get more tokens through a given unit or 2) higher prices on the tokens you run through a given unit of compute, incremental margins approach 100%. This is why you see blended gross margins today in the mid 60% range vs –94% in 2024.
Labs have made great strides in inference efficiency in the last 12 months, which enabled ARR per MW of compute to drastically rise, and margins followed. Anthropic ARR per MW will reach the $60M range later this year. Just 9 months ago, this number was $16M. This is the powerful margin upside in lab financials at work: token throughput can be improved and better monetized while compute costs are largely fixed, leading to massive margin upside when revenue growth is strong. (…)
Anthropic, at $1B of GAAP EBIT in 3Q26 (6% margin) and growing NNARR faster than OpenAI, who is sitting at –100% EBIT margins, is a stark contrast. (…)
Anthropic is showing that AI Labs are wonderful, profitable businesses when run with focus and execution. We expect investors to reward them with ample access to capital to fund the next stage of the compute build-out when they go public. For OpenAI, it is paramount that they continue to flex early Codex and API momentum into better margins they can reinvest in model development and chart a path to better profitability for their build-out.
Silicon Valley has long defined victory in the global artificial intelligence race as being determined by capability. Whoever has the smartest and most powerful AI model leads the pack. But what if winning were instead defined by adoption by technologists? In that case, China is swiftly gaining ground.
Anecdotes and tentative data suggest that more American startups are reaching for cheaper Chinese models from companies like Hangzhou DeepSeek Artificial Intelligence Co. (better known as DeepSeek), Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Moonshot AI Pte Ltd. to cut costs, as coding with AI and so-called tokenmaxxing becomes prohibitively expensive. (…)
With top-of-the-line AI built into their workflows, some companies are now looking at ways to pivot to cheaper options, the logic being that you don’t need a chainsaw when scissors will do. Smaller models can handle most everyday tasks, like sorting and drafting routine emails, summarizing documents, answering common customer service questions or tagging, sorting and cleaning up data. Many of those affordable, lightweight offerings now come from China.
The latest flagship AI model from Hangzhou-based DeepSeek, for instance, costs about $0.87 per million output tokens, versus roughly $30 for OpenAI and $25 for Anthropic. Tokens are the units AI companies charge by, and can be thought of as billable chunks of text, roughly equivalent to a word each.
Since companies often switch between different AI providers it can be difficult to get a clear view of market share, but there are signs that startups and software developers are increasingly moving toward models from China. Vercel Inc., a cloud platform used for deploying websites and apps that also tracks which AI models are being used by programmers, found that DeepSeek’s share of AI traffic jumped to 17% from under 1% in May.
A similar platform, OpenRouter Inc., saw DeepSeek’s usage double between January and June 2026, making it the most popular model among its users. It said in a recent blog post that a group of Chinese open-source models including those from Xiaomi Corporation, MiniMax Group Inc. and Tencent Holdings Limited “all saw their share of tokens rise over the past six months,” and that the shift had come at the expense of Google and OpenAI.
OpenRouter only represents about 3% of global AI traffic, most of it coming from startups and independent developers — not the big corporate customers who account for the bulk of AI labs’ revenue. But it signals a direction of travel for coders and raises questions about whether larger companies might eventually make a similar change.
Lindy, an AI assistant startup based in San Francisco, recently said it had switched to DeepSeek from Anthropic’s Claude after AI costs for the 25-person company exceeded personnel costs. CEO Flo Crivello said the move saved his startup “millions,” though it would continue using Anthropic for coding “because of the absurd Max plan subsidy.”
Some larger companies like Airbnb Inc. and Anysphere Inc., the firm behind coding platform Cursor that is being acquired by SpaceX, have added Chinese models to their mix rather than swap out US ones entirely.
All of this is happening because the frontier innovation that gave US labs a moat against competitors has been seeping out to the world, with startups in Shenzhen and Shanghai distilling that tech (a technique some see as flagrant copying) to make cheaper and lighter versions.
None of this means China has won anything yet. The US still builds the most capable models, and the largest corporate customers aren’t shifting who they buy from any time soon.
But history has shown that adoption has its own kind of advantage. The more the world’s developers build on Chinese models, the more entrenched the habits, standards and dependencies of those models become for the world of programming and fast-growing startups. That’s perhaps a quieter contest than the race for the smartest tools, and it’s one the leading US labs may be losing.