Prof G Markets - The Iran “Deal” Isn’t What It Seems
Episode Date: June 16, 2026Ed Elson is joined by Karim Sadjadpour to discuss the new agreement between the U.S. and Iran and whether or not this war is permanently resolved. Then, Reed Albergotti joins the show to unpack why th...e White House put export restrictions on Anthropic’s Mythos models. Finally, Ed explains why he is cautiously optimistic for a real end to the war with Iran. Karim Sadjadpour is a Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Reed Albergotti is a Tech Editor at Semafor. Subscribe to the Prof G Markets Youtube Channel Check out our latest Prof G Markets newsletter Follow Prof G Markets on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram, X and Substack Follow Scott on Instagram Send us your questions or comments by emailing Markets@profgmedia.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Prof G-Markets.
I'm Ed Elson.
it is June 16th.
Let's check in on yesterday's
market vitals.
The major indices rallied
on news that the US and Iran
have an agreement.
More on that in a second.
The Dow hit a fresh high.
Brent crude fell below $80
on hopes that the strait
will finally and truly reopen.
Meanwhile, treasury yields
and the dollar fell,
SpaceX shares soared 20%
in their first full day of trading,
and Fox tumbled 15%
after announcing its acquisition of Roku for $22 billion.
Okay, what else is happening?
The U.S. and Iran have reached a deal again.
After 107 days of war, the two sides agrees to a memorandum of understanding.
It includes a 60-day ceasefire, the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz,
and a halt to fighting in Lebanon.
A formal signing is set to take place on Friday in Geneva,
but the big negotiations, like Iran's nuclear program, sanctions, relief, and frozen assets
are all deferred to the next two months.
Meanwhile, Israel says it is not bound by the deal, and its forces will stay in Lebanon indefinitely.
Still, Brent Crude fell more than 5% on the news of the pending peace deal.
Here to help us unpack what this deal actually means.
We're speaking with Karim Sajapur, senior fellow at the Carnegie in Downey,
for international peace.
Kareem, thank you so much for joining us on the show today.
This is really important news.
I think the place I'd like to start is a place of skepticism.
And that is we've had deals with Iran before.
Trump said we had a ceasefire back in April.
Then he said we had a framework of a ceasefire.
He said that the deal was in its final stages in May.
He said it was all largely negotiated.
We've had plenty of false alarms.
So the question on this news is, is this also a false alarm or is this different?
I'm not going to try to disabuse you of your skepticism, because I share it.
I think there's a couple big questions.
Number one is whether indeed we do have a memorandum of understanding.
At the moment, you could call it a memorandum of misunderstanding because the U.S. version of this MOU is very different than the Iranian version of this MOU in terms of what kinds of economic.
economic relief are going to be provided.
What are Iran's nuclear commitments going to be?
The future of the Straits of Hormuz.
Virtually every single major issue appears at the moment unresolved.
So that's one of the big questions.
The second is, if indeed the two sides can agree on a common memorandum of understanding,
what happens next?
The most difficult questions have been deferred for future negotiations.
the two sides are given themselves 60 days to resolve those issues of tension,
like most notably the nuclear issue.
But there's very little chance that those issues are going to be resolved over 60 days.
So bottom line for me, this isn't a resolution of the U.S. Iran conflict.
We may have temporarily paused a hot war and gone back to a Cold War.
But unfortunately, these two sides are,
are going to remain adversaries. We haven't resolved the U.S.-Iran conflict. And in fact, as President
Trump alluded to today, there's even a possibility we could go back to conflict if he doesn't
see any flexibility from Iran on the nuclear file.
It's really fascinating that you say that. The first thing I was going to mention was that
disagreement over these reconstruction costs, because Iran says that the U.S. is going to pay $300
billion in reconstruction costs, that they were going to release $24 billion in frozen
assets, and then J.D. Vance goes and denies those claims. So memorandum of misunderstanding sounds
accurate to me, and I guess the question then becomes, what actually is this deal? Like,
we don't know yet, because they've said it's happened. And to be fair to Trump, Iran has said
they're going to sign it on Friday. But I guess my question is, like, what actually is it? What
are we even agreeing to? Well, phase one of this deal is supposed to essentially be a lifting of
the mutual blockade in the Straits of Hormuz. So over the last almost four months, Iran has been
strangling the global economy, trying to spike the price of oil with their blockade of the
Straits of Hormuz. Simultaneously, the U.S. has been strangling Iran's economy with the naval
blockade. And Iran has suffered as a result of that. It's losing as much as $450 million daily. It can't
get its oil exports out of the country. So even though you hear a lot of bluster and bravado from the
Iranian side, it's an economy which has been decimated, even more decimated than it was
before the war. So what phase A of this deal is meant to be is to lift that blockade. And virtually
the entire world wants to see the blockade of the straits of hormones lifted, with one exception,
perhaps, which is Vladimir Putin's Russia, who has really experienced the cash windfall over the last
several months. But then as we talked about, the blockade is meant to facilitate a nuclear deal,
and that it actually could serve to do the opposite, because once Iran gets some economic
relief as a result of this lifting of the blockade, it may actually feel less than
inclined to make nuclear compromises. And likewise, President Trump may feel I can actually go back
to war now that oil prices have dropped. This is exactly where my mind is going. Despite that,
oil prices did fall 5%. So clearly traders and investors are more optimistic about the notion that
the straight will be unblocked. I guess my question, do you think it will be opened up? And if so,
to what extent for how long?
I mean, how optimistic are you when it comes to the Strait of Hormuz, specifically,
which is the thing that impacts Americans the most in the form of inflation?
The Iranian regime has been saying consistently that the Straits of Hormuz will not go back to
status quo, to be what it was before the war, which was an international waterway.
They want to figure out a way to establish a fixed revenue stream over the strait, whether that is
tolling. Perhaps that's too ambitious for them to toll individual ships, but perhaps some type of
administrative fee over the strait. That's what they've been talking about. I haven't seen any
statements from senior Iranian officials saying they're going to go back to status quo ante.
The other way in which they want to use the strait is as a deterrent to essentially have
this sort of Damocles hanging you over it to send a signal to America, Israel, and others,
that if we're attacked again, we're going to take this straight hostage. And we've done it once.
We can do it again, and we can wreck the global economy. So it's my view that it is a major
U.S. priority, and it's obviously an enormous priority for our partners in the Persian Gulf
to have the straight be an international waterway. But I don't take it for granted that
Iran is going to accept that.
Do you think it would be an overstatement to say that Iran is strengthened coming out of this?
I mean, of course, their economy has been damaged.
Many of their military leaders have been taken out.
But it sounds as though they now have a point of leverage that they have realized in a very big
way that they perhaps didn't know they had before.
And it sounds like potentially this could mean higher oil prices forever, or at least
a suppression on demand that lasts for the foreseeable future.
Do you think that they are coming out of this feeling, I guess, strengthened or optimistic?
I think psychologically they certainly feel that they have been strengthened.
It's been a major psychological boost for this regime that they were able to defy the greatest
military power in the world, the greatest military power in the Middle East, Israel and the United
States and survive. For them, the bar was set pretty low. They didn't need to to thrive. They
just needed to survive, and they achieved that. At the same time, it is a country. It's a deeply
unpopular theocracy ruling over a society, which very broadly dislikes it. They have a decimated
economy, 70% inflation, triple digit, food inflation. So if you're looking at this from the outside,
Iran isn't a country you envy.
Few countries would want to be Iran,
but by virtue of the fact that,
A, they've survived
and they've discovered this newfound form of leverage
and closing the Straits of Hormuz.
I do think that they feel they've emerged from this stronger.
What we know from history and from wars
is that it oftentimes takes years, if not decades,
to really understand the true impact of them,
but certainly in the immediate term, Iran looks stronger than it did going into the war.
You mentioned that you thought that this was more of a temporary pause in the hot war,
that we've gone back to sort of a Cold War state,
but that implies that we might return to a hot war.
And this is probably the most important question in the markets right now,
arguably in the world.
It is the multi-trillion dollar question, which is,
will we go back to fight it? And if so, for how long? I know that we can't predict the future,
but if you had to make an estimate, what would your estimate be on the probability that this
is resolved permanently? In my view, the probability that this is resolved permanently,
I'd put it at less than 20%. If we look at the probability of a return to conflict, there's a
couple, there's a few triggers at least. One is that in negotiating phase two of this deal,
which is to get Iran's highly enriched uranium out of the country and to get Iran to cease its
enrichment of uranium, two big priorities for President Trump, that the regime shows no
flexibility. In that case, he may feel, he being President Trump, may feel obliged to return
to conflict. And remember, this is a problem.
president to on two occasions in the middle of negotiations with Iran launched military strikes on
them. Last June's 12-day war and then this year's war. So I think the Iranian regime certainly
feels that President Trump is capable of returning to war. Another potential trigger could come
from the back-and-forth missile and rocket volleys between Israel and Lebanese, Hezbollah.
If Hezbollah continues its attack on Israel or Israel continues its retaliations, at some point Iran may get in and launch attacks again on Israel.
Israel may respond inside Iranian territory, and that could again trigger another attack.
I should say there's one additional trigger, but I don't think it's a near-term trigger, and that is if we have any intelligence that Iran is making a mad dash for a nuclear weapon, I think that would like to trigger military.
reaction, but I don't think that's an immediate term possibility.
Just before we wrap up here, what do you expect the messaging will be from Trump?
I mean, part of me is trying to understand why he appears to be trying to pull out of this,
or at least say that we have a deal.
I assume that it's related to inflation and the fact that his approval ratings are just
tanking right now.
But do you think that this is enough for him to go out there and claim that?
victory? Do you think that that will be the strategy going forward?
It already is his strategy. I saw his statement today in a press conference with President
Macron in which he's declared victory. And his benchmark, his public benchmark for success is
to say that this was better than Obama's 2015 nuclear deal. And if you compare the two
objectively, you know, in this, you know, in the 2015 deal, there was no war.
that was long. So already this conflict has caused American taxpayers perhaps more than $100 billion.
Second, in Obama's nuclear deal in 2015, the United States handed over about $1.7 billion in
economic relief to Iran, which is why President Trump called that the worst deal in history.
But what is being talked about now is to provide Iran perhaps tens of billions of dollars
in economic relief. And then finally, the actual
terms of the agreement between President Trump's potential deal and Obama's deal in 2015
are not that dramatically different. So in essence, it's, you know, will President Trump's
potential deal vindicate the cost of this war? And in my view, the answer to that is almost
unequivocally no. The other concurrent approach he may take is to essentially transition accountability
for this deal to Vice President Vance.
I saw it was Vice President Vance this morning
who was trying to sell the deal.
And, you know, last thing I'll say before,
we parted it is that
what's interesting, if you look at the 47-year
U.S.-Iran conflict,
Iran has played a major role
in essentially sabotaging American presidency
since 1979.
They ended Jimmy Carter's presidency
with a hostage crisis.
They tainted Ronald Reagan's presidency
with Iran.
Iran-Contra. And then, you know, after that, you can count one-by-one. George Bush's efforts to
bring democracy to Iraq or sabotaged by Iran. The Iran nuclear deal consumed the latter
part of Obama's presidency. October 7th, the Hamas attacks, Hamas being in Iranian proxy,
consume Biden's presidency. So this is another example of Iran consuming an American presidency
and perhaps sabotaging the presidential campaign of J.D. Vance.
Blame it on Vance.
That's the new strategy.
Karim Sajapur is Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Kareem, we really appreciate your time.
Thank you.
Thank you, Ed. My pleasure.
After the break, the White House Anthropic feud returns.
And for even more markets insights, you can subscribe to my weekly newsletter,
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The feud between Anthropic and the White House has escalated yet again.
Last week, Anthropic released its powerful Mythos 5 model to a small group of cyber defenders.
It also rolled out Fable 5, a more secure version of mythos to the general public.
But on Friday, the Department of Commerce imposed export controls on both of those models,
restricting access for foreign nationals.
Because the ban also applies to foreign nationals inside the U.S., Anthropic decided to pull the models offline altogether.
Anthropic disagreed publicly with the administration's decision,
warning that restrictions like this could freeze AI development across the industry.
Here to discuss the latest in this.
saga between Anthropic and the White House. We're speaking with Reid Albegotti, tech editor at
Samifor. He's the one who broke news on this story. Reid, thank you for joining us on Profi
Markets. There's a lot of drama going on here between Anthropic and why there were these
export controls and what was the actual reasoning and what was going on in the White House and
the administration. Could you just give us sort of this simplified version of what actually happened
here, the sequence of events leading to Anthropic pulling these models offline.
The simplified version, I think, is that Anthropic did a great job of marketing this model,
mythos model, back in April when they announced it and they said, this thing is a danger to
the world because it is so good at finding software vulnerabilities and bugs that hackers
will be able to use this thing. I mean, I was in D.C. in April right after they announced it.
I mean, people were genuinely scared. And I think
when the White House started to get reports from companies like Amazon, which is a big investor
in Anthropic, an important partner saying people have been able to jailbreak Fable 5,
I think it actually scared them. And then I think Anthropics saying, you know, we're not,
we don't think these jail breaks are that serious, not responding with enough urgency.
You know, it just led to, I think, this kind of cascading series of events that led to the export
control, and it didn't help that they have just had one conflict after another with the White
House for the past year, which I've been covering, I've been writing about this a lot.
It's really interesting that, as you mentioned, Amazon goes to the White House and says there's
a problem over at Anthropic. They say that this model has a security issue. It can be jailbroken
into, is the term that is used, which looks a lot like Amazon is, I don't know, trying to
screw over Anthropic in some way, saying, hey, you guys, you need to go figure this out. But as you
point out, they're also a major investor in Anthropic. So maybe it's coming from a genuine place.
What do you think? Is that, was that a sabotage move or something else?
No, I don't think this is a sabotage move. But there were lots of companies. It wasn't just Amazon.
And actually, I think there was, from what I hear, it was kind of outgoing, like the White House,
they were going out to people. Obviously, Amazon is an important vendor for the U.S. government.
So whatever is happening on AWS is going to be important for the government.
So I think this is again, if you remember, Amazon was a little bit like in the middle of the
Pentagon Anthropic clash as well. They just find themselves in the middle of this thing.
And it's what's so strange about this whole situation. It just creates a very convoluted, you know,
network of friends and foes and frenemies.
And, I mean, it's fascinating and confusing.
On the one hand, I kind of understand the White House's argument, which is, Anthropic
is saying how dangerous their model is.
People tell the White House, hey, there might be an issue in the security here.
The White House then says, you need to go fix it, to which Anthropic says, it's not a big deal.
And then the White House goes, well, three months ago, you told us this all was a big deal,
and that we should be figuring this out,
and now you're saying, it's fine, don't worry about it.
At the same time, though,
I was suddenly made skeptical of the administration,
the White House's motives,
when I saw a tweet that was posted by Pete Hegset,
Secretary of War,
he said, quote,
three months ago, the Department of War kicked Anthropic
out of our building forever.
Every passing day proves why that was the right move.
So I read that, and now I'm thinking,
maybe they're targeting Anthropic
because they've decided,
We don't like them.
We're going to go after them.
Do you have a view on who might be in the right or the wrong?
I wouldn't read too much into the Hague South tweet.
I mean, look, it doesn't help for sure.
It doesn't help that Anthropic has been on the other side of the White House
when it comes to state preemption of AI regulation laws.
You know, certainly the Pentagon fight.
I think there's a lot of distrust that is built up
between these two groups of people,
and that needs to be fixed, especially if you're anthropic and you're trying to go public soon.
I mean, they need the government for lots of different reasons.
But I don't think this is like, oh, we're going to get back an anthropic.
I mean, this can't be a policy, right?
Because what it says is like any AI company that builds something, there's now like a benchmark.
If it's more powerful than mythos, then, you know, we need to shut this down.
If there are jail breaks, et cetera, they're always going to be jail breaks.
Like, that is just the nature of these things.
So you're basically shutting down progress on advanced, you know, frontier AI models,
which cannot be the policy of this White House.
So, no, I mean, it's, I don't think they're sitting there going, like, let's wait for an opportunity to, like,
snipe Anthropic.
This is, you know, this is clearly like a one-off situation.
And it has to get worked out, too.
What do you make of the fact that Anthropic said, we don't think that there is a security risk here?
because on the one hand, you might say, well, figure it out and explain to us exactly why.
But on the other hand, you might say Anthropic knows best.
They know their technology.
They probably understand cybersecurity better than the White House does,
would be my guess, when it comes to AI and their model specifically.
I mean, why didn't that cut it for this administration?
I think Anthropic is actually correct.
I don't think that it doesn't sound based on everything that I've heard and read.
It doesn't sound like these jail breaks were going to be some massive security threat on their own.
I think, though, this thing has been sort of overblown from the beginning.
I don't think these new models are going to come out and the world is going to have to adjust to them.
We're going to have to figure out how to deal with cybersecurity in the age of age.
AI writ large. But I don't think one new model coming out shifts the threat landscape so dramatically
that we need to take these rash steps. But if you go back to what Anthropics said, I also can
understand why people who are not in technology, who are not cybersecurity experts, would go,
wait a minute, like, I'm thinking of the worst case scenario here where all of a sudden
cyber threats just bring our economy to its knees.
And I get it. I get the fear.
Before you go, does this dispute affect either one, Anthropics business, or two, its IPO timeline,
which is, of course, what is on every investor's mind right now?
Yeah, I mean, for sure, if it stands, it will affect their business because now they can't
sell their most powerful model.
Of course, I don't know what percentage, you know, mythos and Fable Five are going to sort of make
up for their revenue. It might be very small. I mean, Anthropics also, you know, struggling with
a lack of tokens, token availability of compute power. So these things use up a ton of that.
So I don't know if this immediately affects their bottom line in any way. I'm sure it does a little
bit. But if it's a longstanding thing, it would be catastrophic. So I think they have to get
through this, especially if they want to IPO this year. All right. Read Albi-Ga-Ga-Tecate.
at Semaphore. Reed. Thank you for joining us. We appreciate it. Great to be here. Thanks.
So, Iran and the U.S. supposedly have a deal. If you're a regular listener, you know that I'm
incredibly skeptical of Trump's deals, especially when it comes to Iran. This was, in fact,
the basis of my prediction on our previous episode. Before this news came out, my base case was that we would
remain at war for many more months, and that as a result, inflation would remain high for the
foreseeable future. Well, my reaction to this deal is cautious optimism. Unlike previous announcements
of deals, which I completely wrote off, and rightly so, this one does have a bit more credibility.
Why? Because the counterparty, in this case, Iran, says, yes, we have a deal. Several Iranian officials have
said publicly that they're ready to sign it, and Iran's deputy foreign minister said it will be
signed on Friday, and that level of approval from Iran is new. At the same time, though, there are
still plenty of reasons to be pessimistic. For example, Israel just bombed Lebanon again, and
despite being a huge part of this war, they still have no part in this agreement. In addition,
there appears to be disagreement between Iran and the U.S. over whether the U.S. will pay for
reconstruction. That is a huge problem as well. And finally, there's still just a lot that we don't know
about this deal. We don't really know what it means for the nuclear program, or what it means for the
straight, or what it means for Iran's leadership. In some, not much has actually changed. So my
economic takeaway from this news is this. I'm less concerned about inflation than I was before the
weekend, but not by much. There are still huge questions.
surrounding the Strait of Hormuz and the war itself.
So to say this thing is done or complete or over would be a categorical misnomer.
Okay, that's it for today.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and Alison Weiss and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our video editor is Brad Williams.
Our research team is Dan Chalon, Isabella Kinsel, Chris Nodonohue, and Mia Silverio.
And our social producer is Jake McPherson.
Thank you for listening to Profi Markets from Profugee Media.
If you liked what you heard, give us a follow.
I'm Ed Elson. I will see you tomorrow.
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