Morning Brew Daily - Anthropic Blacklisted By US Government? & US-Iran War Disrupts Gulf Travel
Episode Date: March 2, 2026Episode 790: Neal and Toby talk about the US-Iran conflict that’s erupted and the shake up across the global economy. Then, OpenAI reaches an AI agreement with the Defense Department after Anthropic... refuses to give it access. Plus, Pokemon celebrates its 30th anniversary and continues to be one of the most valuable brands in the world. Meanwhile, former New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is the latest case of ‘brain drain’ in the move to Australia. Finally, what you need to know in the week ahead. Learn more about Bland AI at bland.ai/mbd Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Good morning,
Brew Daily show. I'm Neil Freyman.
And I'm Toby Howell. Today, how the Iran war
could impact the global economy.
Then Anthropic was blacklisted by the US
government and OpenAI said, hey,
remember us? It's Monday,
March 2nd. Let's ride.
Good morning.
Welcome to the first full week of March,
everyone. And welcome back, Toby.
If it feels like things are a little more
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for another three years. Toby, are you feeling the disturbance? I'm going to get scientific with it
before I get superstitious with it. The moon turns red because when the Earth blocks the moon from
the sun's light, the light that does make it around the edges is filtered by our atmosphere.
in our atmosphere scatters blue light more readily than red light.
So that's the spectrum that you end up seeing more.
If you want to see this phenomenon, then and sort of ruin the moment by giving the
explanation that I just gave above, the eclipse begins at 3.44 a.m. Eastern and ends around
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The global economy is in a precarious moment after the United States and Israel launched a war
against Iran this weekend, which has spiraled into a major regional conflict.
On Saturday, the two countries attacked Iran with sweeping airstrikes and killed the
supreme leader of 37 years in the hopes that the Iranian people will rise up and overthrow
the autocratic government.
Iran's military responded with strikes around the Middle East against the U.S.
U.S. and allies, and three U.S. service members were killed that the Pentagon said yesterday.
With the war spilling into its third day this morning, the consequences for the global
economy are huge, spanning energy markets, global capital flows, and travel.
The first thing everyone is watching is oil prices, which shot up 8% last night, the most
in four years over concerns of disrupted supplies. Iran is not only an oil producer, but it
sits next to the most important maritime choke point in the world, the Strait of Hormuz.
One out of every five barrels of oil in the world flows through the strait, and a prolonged closure of tankers accessing the waterway could keep oil prices elevated and in turn cause a spike in inflation around the world, something we saw after Russia invaded Ukraine.
Another potential economic casualty from the war is the Gulf.
Nations like the United Arab Emirates, home to Abu Dhabi and Dubai, Qatar, and Bahrain have emerged as global economic hubs in the past decade, pitching themselves as a business-friendly, peaceful oasis, and a region otherwise prone to conflict.
That image was shattered this weekend when Iranian drones pierced glitzy Gulf hotels and tourist hotspots as well as airports.
Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways, and Emirates, the world's largest international airline, all suspended flights in an unprecedented move that stranded tens of thousands of passengers.
Last night, President Trump said that combat operations will continue until, quote, all our objectives are achieved.
Toby, one thing's for certain. There are no certainties.
Yeah, let's start with the straight of Hormuz, because that's the name that you're going to be hearing a lot when it comes to
this regional conflict. How can the Strait of Hormuz be closed? That is a question that I saw
floating around online yesterday in the Khabisi letter, which is a stock account, kind of explained
how this actually happens because no country owns the Strait of Hormuz, so no one can effectively
close it. But what happens is that when the ships travel through this region, they purchase war
risk insurance, which protects their companies from the cost of being attacked. But insurers
are looking at the risk of the region right now and saying, we are either not going to offer that
anymore or we're going to charge you astronomical rates. And if that happens, then basically
no ship is going to sail through that region because they know that they're going to be on the hook
if they end up getting attacked. So insurers actually are playing a much larger role here than
you would expect when it comes to so-called closing the Strait of Hormuz. And the Strait of Hormuz is
effectively closed. I was just tracking this morning on my maritime shipping app. And
There's just no ship. They're all kind of parked either on either end of this waterway because
Marisk MSC, Hatbag, Lloyd, these are these big shipping container companies that if you drive
by a port, those are the companies that run all of these tankers and container ships. They're not
traversing it. And it's so critical because on one side of the straight, you have Dubai, UAE,
these are the big oil-producing nations. And then on the other side of the street, you have the
rest of the world. So if no ships can traverse this straight, then there's going to be no supply
coming on to the market.
And we're already seeing a major reaction in oil prices.
They're up 8% this morning.
That's going to have an immediate effect on your gas bill when you're filling up your tank
because James Dahan, who runs gas, buddy, is very a noted gas predictor.
Said, we're already going to see gas prices climb above $3 per gallon for the first time
in more than three months.
He's predicting another 15% increase in gas prices.
Meanwhile, just overall, we're you.
might see a spike in inflation. Remember, when Russia invaded Ukraine, there was oil prices
went skyward and everywhere around the world, including the United States, saw a huge spike
in inflation. The question is how high will oil go? Right now, Brent crude is at $78 a barrel.
If it hits $100, that is when you'll see a lot of spookiness. But I do just want to put into
context this move because Javier Blas, who's a Bloomberg reporter, posted yesterday that
If Brent market closed at current levels, which was up around 7.5%. That one-day percent increase would rank as the 53rd largest. So it's not, you know, even a top 10 move, even though all this craziness happened in the region. And part of the reason why is that it might have been a little bit priced in because this attack was telegraphed a little bit. But also, the U.S. makes a lot more oil now than it has in the past. Only 17 percent of U.S. energy is imported. That is the lowest level in 40 years.
years. So, yes, it's still exposed to global oil benchmarks, but a lot less exposed than it has
been in the past. All right. Let's talk about Dubai, UAE. I mean, this is the nightmare scenario.
They had pitched themselves over the past decade as this safe haven for global capital.
They've emerged as this huge player in investing AI, entertainment, just try to infashion themselves
into the center of the world and brought in a lot of foreigners. Nearly 90% of everyone living
there are foreigners. Now, the images coming out over the weekend were unbelievable. You saw
the Burj Khalifa, which is the biggest skyscraper in the entire world, seeing drone strikes
around it. There were five-star hotels in Bahrain that were getting hit. And then people were leaving
reviews on the Fairmont Palm Hotel in Dubai saying, one-star, no air defense systems.
One person on next kind of summed up the vibe in the UAE in Dubai right now saying,
move to Dubai for tax shelter, and now I'm in a bomb shelter.
And one of the biggest consequences here is air travel.
These are the busiest international hubs in the world.
They connect east and west.
They connect north and south.
And the fact is right now Qatar Airways at Dihad and Emirates are not flying.
No, Dubai is literally the busiest international hub in the world.
92 million international travelers flew through it last year.
That is 13 more than Heathrow Airport in London.
And it's not only the fact that, you know, commercial traffic has been disrupted.
It's also the fact that logistics are disrupted because, you know, airports don't just fly people.
They fly food. They fly other things. And according to Ryan Peterson, CEO of Flexport, which is a shipping logistics company, he said 18% of global air freight capacity has been taken out of the market by the conflict in the Middle East right now.
So if we were talking about the region of Strait of Hormuz disrupting maritime travel, same thing is happening on air travel as well.
Yeah, this is a huge deal for the Middle East, for those Gulf countries trying to project.
safety at a time when it's not really safe there at all. Finally, the sea plot here is,
is polymarket, as it always is for any major world event, these prediction markets where you
can bet on literally anything. Well, people were betting on a strike in Iran. A lot of people were
betting on this particular market. These markets for when the United States would strike
had amassed $530 million, making it one of polymarkets largest ever. And once again, there were
accusations and skepticism around possible insider trading here.
Yeah, absolutely, because you just looked at accounts posted online.
One account turned $87,000 into $5,000 in a $15,000.
Six wallets made $1.2 million betting on a February 28th strike.
So whenever you see these very outlier calls, yes, hypothetically someone could have a
lot of conviction and make that bet and place those bets, but also they probably had access
to someone with access to information around this, which is.
why you're seeing, you know, again, a lot of people pointing out prediction Markinson saying
this is just a hallmark of what they do now. Anytime a big event happens, it looks like insiders
new before or ahead of time. All right, let's move on. Anthropic and the Pentagon broke up
over the weekend and Open AI slid into the government's DMs faster than your X's X did when
you broke up. The Pentagon Ananthropic had been on thin ice all week.
Claude had been the chatbot of choice for the military, including aiding the U.S. in its
Maduro operation, but the Defense Department wanted full access to use the tech in any way
they pleased. Anthropic wanted some guardrails in place, namely that Claude could not be used
for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. Defense Secretary Pete Hegeseth issued
an ultimatum to the company promising to cancel its $200 million contract by 501 p.m. on Friday
unless it met its demands. After that deadline passed, the government took the very intense step
of blocking Anthropic on Instagram
and also designating it a supply chain risk,
which bars any company with U.S. government contracts
from doing business with them.
Enter Sam Altman, who had been leaving fire emojis
on the government stories for month,
waiting for the perfect moment to shoot his shot.
By 10 p.m. on Friday,
he announced that OpenAI had, quote,
reached an agreement with the Department of Ward
to deploy our models in their classified network,
though Altman maintained that their agreement
had similar red lines to Anthropics,
which brings us,
to today, Anthropic is a supply chain risk but is promising to take the issue to court.
Open AI is an opportunist who landed a deal but may have damaged its reputation in the process,
and no one even really considered using Groch deal.
No, they didn't.
You can get really deep with this, and many folks say that this story, basically disregard
anything else that's going on in the world, this story is the most important thing that's
going to be happening now for decades in the future because it really is a sign of how
the government and the Pentagon and militaries are adopting AI and using it at scale for the first time.
But going back to the narrow impact, I mean, the first thing you saw is a big brand boost for Claude.
Claude overtook ChatGBTGBT as number one app on the App Store.
There seemed to be this upswelling of support for Anthropic and Claude for sticking to their guns and staying true to their principles and going at it with the Pentagon, even Katie Perry.
posted that she upgraded to a higher tier of cloud.
He saw many folks posting that they canceled their chat GPT subscription.
So they did get a lot of goodwill, especially from just the rank and file tech employees.
Many folks at Google and OpenAI penned a letter saying, we stand with Anthropic.
And even Sam Malman of OpenAI said that Anthropic took a principled stand, even though he disagreed with them.
Very similar to what we saw back in 2016 when Apple took on the FBI.
They refused to unlock an iPhone blogging to a terrorist suspect.
and they also earned a lot of goodwill.
So a lot of big picture questions you can ask here and talk about.
But the most immediate effect is that a lot of people are supporting Claude over Open AI.
I was seeing some people say that technically everyone did come out of this deal a winner in a weird way
because the government now hypothetically gets more control, even if it now has to use what's
probably the second best product on the market.
Open AI and Altman pulled off the power play that they love to pull off.
it's a very cutthroat and a very bottom line focus power play and we'll see how that actually
translates into brand equity down the line and then anthropic stood up for itself gets to entreats
itself as like the very ethical AI lab in the AI playing field right now and Nate Silver noted
that this adds a political characterization of to the top AI labs he wrote among the general
population Anthropic now gets more lib coded and opening eye gets more conservative coded but
Then he went on to point out that, hey, Tesla went down this rabbit hole as well. Look at what it did to its brand equity.
A lot of consumers of these tech products probably are more left-leaning than right-leaning. So again, when we're talking about big picture, yes, Open AI now has a big contract with the government.
What is that going to do down the line to its reputation?
Yeah, some say, certainly you could take that view. Some would argue that this sets a bad precedent for the Pentagon to be bullying its own AI champion that way.
I mean, there are very few companies that have been blacklisted like this by the Pentagon,
and they all come from either China or Russia, which are two huge geopolitical adversaries.
Dean Ball, who is a former Trump administration AI advisor, called it a dark day in the history
of American AI.
The message sent to the business community and to countries around the world could not be worse
for the Pentagon to essentially go to war with an amazing piece of American innovation
and a company that is now worth, I don't know, hundreds of billions of dollars.
It is another chapter in the battle between Open AI and Anthropic.
It cannot get any juice here.
We were in India a couple weeks ago with Dario and Sam.
Everyone was holding hands except those two guys,
and they're all barreling toward an IPO later this year,
both raising tons of money.
It's just quite a heavyweight fight.
All right, we're going to take a quick break
and come back with our winners of the weekend.
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Welcome to Winners of the Weekend,
the segment where Toby and I pick two things
that are so happy it's March.
My winner is Pokemon,
which, much like your boy Neil,
turn 30 and really hit its stride.
The Japanese media juggernaut celebrated
its 30th birthday on Friday
at the peak of its powers,
announcing a slew of projects
that aimed to extend the franchise's domination
well into middle age.
The Pokemon company said
it would launch two new games for Nintendo Switch 2 next year,
which will add new storylines, regions, and characters to its already immersive world.
There is no way Tajiri Satoshi could have anticipated what was about to be unleashed
when he created Pokemon back in February 1996.
A designer living in the suburbs of Tokyo,
Satoshi was an insect collector and lamented the urban sprawl that tarnished their habitats.
And so he was inspired to invent a digital world where people could collect cute pocket monsters,
yep, that's where the word Pokemon comes from,
and have them spar against each other.
decades later, Pokemon is the highest grossing media franchise in the world, topping even Star Wars and
Marvel with total revenues of $150 billion. It's an empire that transcends age or gender, spanning
trading cards, TV shows, video games, theme parks, and merchandise. And it has never been
stronger. Pokemon cards have been at the forefront of the collectibles boom of recent years,
while Pokemon Go led the critters into the mobile age. Toby, when it comes to brand building,
Pokemon is the very best, the best there ever was.
The scale of Pokemon is insane.
They've sold nearly 500 million video games.
They've sold over 75 billion trading cards.
That is so many trading cars.
And I do just want to shout out Pokemon Go here because for a while, it was like the
biggest thing in the world, 2015, 2016, 500 million downloads immediately upon release.
30 million people are still playing it every single month.
It has obviously fallen from its peak a little bit, but that is a very successful video game.
You do just associate Pokemon with the trading card game more, and that has been a fantastic investment
if you were a nerd in high school or middle school, because the card ladder index,
which tracks the value of a collection of the most popular trading cars was up about 6,208% since May of 2004.
The S&P 500 was up a measly, 521% during that time frame.
So you should go dig through your attic and see if you have only old boxes left over.
And also, Pokemon was important, not just for Pokemon, but for unleashing Japanese culture
on the rest of the world.
Pop culture expert in Tokyo, Roland Kelts put it this way.
I think it's so apt.
He called it the Rosetta Stone that unlocked Japanese storytelling.
And the economist writes that Pokemon channels two Japanese sensibilities.
One is Kauai or cuteness, which the Pokemon show through their wildest.
wide-eyed innocence, and the other is Otaku, which is Greek culture. That's when fans love
collecting things and catalog-gogging things. So those are two essential elements of Japanese
culture that most folks didn't really know about around the world. And then Pokemon sort of unleashed it.
Then we had Digimon. And all the, anime is one of the biggest booming, you know, media
properties globally now. And it appeals across many different generations. It appeals against
many different demographics. It's not just for kids, although kids obviously find great
join it. Adults are doing most of the collecting at this point. And then also, there is,
if you want to be cute, there's jigglypuff. If you want to be like hardcore and fierce,
there's Charmander and Charmillion. So there's something for everyone, which is why it just explains
it's enduring and lasting appeal. I never collected them, Neil, never got into it.
Maybe you were a little late. Maybe. I think I was. 90s babies. Yeah, because I was early 90s and
Pokemon was the biggest thing around. And I was just thinking about, I was born in 1991. Like, we had
at best. Pokemon 1996. Harry Potter first comes out in 97. 98, Mark McGuire, Sammy Sosa
race. I mean, those three things were just the peak. I was six, seven, and eight during when
those were happening. It was an amazing childhood. Six seven. All right, sorry about that.
My winner of the weekend is Australia because it's stealing Kiwis, not from the grocery store,
but from similarly accented New Zealand. Sixty-three thousand New Zealand citizens left the country
last year with 61% heading to Australia, but perhaps none as high profile as Jacinda Ardern.
The former Prime Minister of New Zealand became a poster child for the issue when she made
the decision to relocate her family to Sydney last week. The move across the ditch, as it is known in
the region, has always been a popular migration route. Citizens of both countries can live and work
indefinitely under a reciprocal visa arrangement, which has attracted 670,000 New Zealanders to Australia.
But it's becoming an existential issue for the smaller nation.
Brain drain is a real concern, especially since most Kiwis leave for economic opportunity.
Skilled blue-collar workers fetch much higher wages in Australia,
while the white-collar pay gap is estimated at 5 to 10% in favor of Australia.
Plus, New Zealand's economy is already in a precarious position,
having contracted the last four consecutive quarters,
so it can't afford to lose much more talent to the Aussies.
Neil, there's sort of this friendly, big brother, little brother relationship between the two countries, but sibling rivalry is tipping a little bit too much in one direction at the moment.
Yeah, this is like if Justin Trudeau moved from Canada to the United States, it's just a real blow to your pride.
But you can understand why the New Zealand economy is just not doing well at all right now.
It had the largest contraction in gross domestic product of any developed country in 2024.
The unemployment rate, 5.3%, the highest in nearly a decade.
read and listen to interviews of people who moved from New Zealand to Australia, they describe a
general vibe of optimism and that things can get better for them in Australia, whereas in New Zealand,
things just seem to be on this downward spiral. There's not a lot of career opportunities,
not a lot of advancement opportunities. The unemployment rate is high. People just can't find the
jobs that they want and they're getting paid less. There's one social worker moved from Christchurch on
the South Island to Perth, which is on Australia's west coast. He's earning about $20,000 more as a
social worker than he did in New Zealand. That's why more than 1% of the New Zealand population
has left the country in the 12 months ending last October. Right. Australia just offers a lot more
in terms of economic opportunity. They have more generous pension contributions as well. They think
there's better and stronger family allowances as well. So there's just this perception of a
much stronger labor market over there. There's this joke in New Zealand for a long time that
It used to be a good recession to clear out the Cowboys on New Zealand.
Now it's nurses, police, and soldiers.
So that does speak to a broader issue here is that you don't want your young people leaving to another nation.
Because if mid-20s and mid-30s professionals are leaving, that is a permanent migration pattern
because that is the backbone of your economy.
That's the backbone of your labor market.
So yes, there is kind of like this friendly relationship between the two countries,
but now it's becoming existential in a way for New Zealand.
It's so far, I really do, I don't think I fully understand the relationship between New Zealand and Australia.
It's far away.
I don't think it's a U.S. Canada thing.
I kept wanting to call them neighbors, and then I'm like, they're not even close to neighbors, but you're right, because they're closer to each other than anything else in the world.
So very interesting that particular trend of people leaving New Zealand to Australia.
Meanwhile, New Zealand's trying to court a lot of Americans with these visa programs, and the number of Americans living in New Zealand has certain.
I don't think it's enough to make up for the exodus, but it's been interesting to see New Zealand try to court wealthy Americans.
Ever since Peter Thiel started coming over, 2018, there was this big surge in wealthy Americans buying property in New Zealand, thanks to friendly tax situations.
I don't think they can, it can't make up for the exodus.
Okay, it's Monday, so here's what you need to know to stay ahead in the week ahead.
Apple is holding its first product launch of the year.
And it's not just one day, but three, starting today and running through Wednesday.
If Apple wants us to pay attention all that time, they better deliver the goods.
And reportedly, at least five gadgets will be introduced, including a new low-cost MacBook,
the iPhone's 17E, and an updated iPad air and entry-level iPad.
Toby, in the early days of the show, you got a reputation as an Apple fanboy.
You still get hype for these product launches?
I'm a fan boy of apples, honeycryphs, and Granny Smith.
I am an objective analyst of tech companies, Neil.
And objectively, no, I'm not that excited for this.
I actually have my eye set on a future fall event, which is expected to be Apple's foray into
touchscreen laptops. This one is a little bit more, you know, similar devices coming out
at different price points, so it doesn't really get me going. I will also be eating a cosmic
crisp when I go home. On Wall Street, besides war developments, all eyes are on the February
jobs report that comes out on Friday. January showed surprisingly strong employment gains,
but fears of an AI-induced white collar whiteout are still palpable, especially
after Jack Dorsey cut nearly half of the workforce from his fintech company block, citing artificial
intelligence. Elsewhere, it's another busy week for earnings, including the chipmaking giant
broadcom and retailers, Costco, Target, and Best Buy. The block layups are absolutely going to be top of
mind when this report comes out in a week. Wall Street economists expect the U.S. economy to add
60,000 new jobs, which would be a slowdown from the 130,000 jobs that were created in January.
As for the earnings front, not sure what the market wants to see right now, because,
because Nvidia blew it out of the water last week,
but that didn't settle any fears about AI disruption.
So good luck to Broadcom.
Target has a new CEO as well.
So interesting to see the tone he strikes
as they look to kick off their turnaround.
And finally, if you're having Olympics withdrawal,
international sporting events are back
with the World Baseball Classic beginning on Thursday.
The stacked US team is looking for revenge
after losing a thrilling championship game to Japan in 2023.
But plenty of MLB stars will be reppping other countries too,
with contenders such as Mexican,
Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.
And I know we're all ready for baseball season,
but don't sleep on more winter sports.
The Paralympics begin on Friday from Italy.
More luge, baby.
Also, you being so excited for the world
baseball class, it reminds me of a challenge we recently did
where we each tried to name as many athletes
as we could in one hour across any sport.
And I think you ripped off 170 baseball players.
I did 12, including shoeless and Joe Jackson and Horace Wagner.
So you're definitely a little bit more excited
for this than I am and I love that for you.
There are a lot of people who are excited about this.
I saw videos of Shoyotani taking batting practice in Japan and it was Bedlam.
And, you know, he won it for Japan a few years ago.
He's the biggest baseball star in the world.
So me and everyone in Japan is super excited for the world baseball classic.
But no, Toby, I'm going to know.
As soon as this thing gets going and there's some amazing games, they're going to be totally locked in.
I just want, I got to learn more baseball players' names.
It was sobering to see that list.
I'm like, how do I only know 12?
baseball players. I was under pressure. Shulist, Joe Jackson didn't make the roster this year.
Okay, that is all the time we have. Thanks for starting your morning with us and have a wonderful
start to the week. If you'd like to reach us, send an email to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com
or DM us on Instagram at MB Daily Show. Let's roll the credits. Emily Milliron is our executive
producer. Raymond Blue is our producer. Our associate producers are Olivia Graham and Olivia Lake.
Hair and makeup is moving to Australia. Devin Emery is our president and our show is a production
of Morning Brew. Great. Show today, Neil. Let's run it back tomorrow.
