Houthi Deadline Countdown Begins | Rewire News Morning Brief
The ultimatum expires tonight. Iran's Foreign Minister said this morning on X that the strait is "open," while the Iranian military said they will "completely close" it by targeting a power plant. 400 million barrels from strategic reserves flooded the market, but oil prices remained unaffected.
1|Countdown at Hormuz: Iran's Foreign Minister Says "Open," Military Says "Fully Close if Provoked"
Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi posted on X on Sunday, stating, "The Hormuz Strait is not closed. The ships are hesitating because insurance companies are afraid of the war you are initiating, not because of Iran. Freedom of navigation cannot be separated from free trade. Respect both, or forget about both." On the same day, Iran's representative to the International Maritime Organization, Mousavi, stated, "With coordinated security arrangements, ships can pass through."
But the military's signal is completely opposite. According to CBS, a military spokesperson stated that if the U.S. carries out the threat to target the power plant, "the Hormuz Strait will be completely closed until the damaged power plant is back online." From "partially restricted" to "fully closed," this is a clear escalation.
Trump's 48-hour ultimatum was issued late Saturday and expires Monday night. Iran is simultaneously running two tracks. The diplomatic track is releasing signals of "willingness to talk," lowering insurance rates. The military track links the power plant and the strait as part of a retaliation package. On the surface, two voices are speaking, but at the core, there is one target, delegating the decision on escalation to Washington.
(Source: The Hill / CBS News / PBS / SBS / Iranian Foreign Ministry)
2|IEA's Largest-Ever Strategic Reserve Release of 400 Million Barrels Keeps Oil Price Above $100
The International Energy Agency announced the release of 400 million barrels of crude oil from member countries' strategic reserves, marking the largest coordinated release in the IEA's 52-year history. The previous largest single release was during the 2022 Russia-Ukraine war, amounting to 182 million barrels, making this release double that amount.
The market reacted minimally. Brent crude was at $92 per barrel, up about $20 from pre-war levels. According to the IEA's monthly report, daily production in Gulf countries has been reduced by at least 10 million barrels due to damaged infrastructure and halted oil tankers. The flow of crude oil through Hormuz has decreased from a pre-war daily average of 20 million barrels to a trickle. Physical damages are accelerating, with the UAE's Fujairah port oil terminal catching fire after an Iranian drone attack, and Australia confirming an attack on its Al-Minhad airbase in the UAE.
The 400 million barrels act as a safety net, not a solution. Based on a daily shortfall of 10 million barrels, the reserves are only sufficient for about 40 days. If the conflict intensifies after Monday's ultimatum, the global energy system will have no buffer zone.
(Source: IEA / Fortune / CNBC / ABC News / Australian Department of Defense)
3 | War Ripples Through AI Infrastructure: AWS Middle East Facilities Attacked, Helium Supply Chain in Crisis
The impact of war on the tech industry is now cascading from stock prices to the physical layer. According to CNBC, AWS data centers in the UAE and Bahrain were hit by Iranian missiles and drones, causing disruptions to banking, payment, and enterprise cloud services. The Middle East is the fastest-growing region for mega-scale data centers globally, with Microsoft, Google, and Oracle investing over $20 billion in the past two years.
A more covert risk lies in helium. Qatar supplies roughly one-third of the world's helium, an irreplaceable gas used in semiconductor manufacturing for chip cooling and wafer processing. Iran's attack on Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG facility has damaged two production lines. An analysis by Data Centre Magazine suggests that a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz would take over 25% of global helium offline, threatening around $650 billion in AI infrastructure investments.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace describes this conflict as "a semiconductor issue." The Financial Times Weekend Edition published an article titled "How the Iran War Is Disrupting AI Boom." The war is reshaping not only the energy map but also the cost structure of the AI industry.
(Source: CNBC / Data Centre Magazine / Carnegie / Financial Times)
4 | Cursor Acknowledges Core Model Originating from China's Dark Side of the Moon, License Dispute Escalates
The $500 billion AI programming tool Cursor released Composer 2 last week, positioned as an in-house breakthrough. Within hours, developers on X discovered that internal model identifiers directly pointed to the open-source model Kimi K2.5 from the Dark Side of the Moon. Cursor co-founder Aman Sanger acknowledged, stating, "Not mentioning the Kimi pedestal in the blog was an oversight."
The Dark Side of the Moon does not buy this explanation. The pretraining lead publicly confirmed that Composer 2's tokenizer is "entirely identical to Kimi," questioning why the license terms were not adhered to. The Kimi K2.5 licensing terms require products generating over $20 million in monthly revenue to label "Kimi K2.5" on the interface. Cursor's monthly revenue is about 8 times that threshold.
On the surface, it's an open-source attribution dispute. The underlying issue is that Cursor, with over a million daily active users, has every line of code written running on an inference engine from a company backed by Alibaba and Sequoia Capital China. At a time when the narrative of U.S.-China AI decoupling is most intense, Silicon Valley's hottest programming tool quietly relies on a Chinese model.
(Source: TechCrunch / Security Boulevard / Dark Side of the Moon)
Also Worth Knowing ↓
Morgan Stanley has submitted an updated Bitcoin ETF registration filing to the SEC, ticker MSBT, set to list on the NYSE Arca. BNY Mellon will handle cash custody, with Coinbase as the lead underwriter. The first self-created, not resold, Bitcoin ETF product among Wall Street's six major banks. (Source: CoinDesk / SEC)
Anduril wins a $20 billion U.S. Army framework contract, consolidating over 120 existing orders. Founded by Oculus co-founder Palmer Luckey, the company becomes the Pentagon's largest new-age defense contractor eight years later, with a contract value double that of a similar Palantir deal. A 5 million sq ft Ohio weapons factory will be operational in July. (Source: DefenseScoop / Fortune)
Bitcoin mining difficulty drops by 7.8%, miners accelerate shift to AI hashpower services. Producing one BTC now entails a loss of around $19,000, economic pressures driving hashpower infrastructure from mining towards AI inference. Not mining capitulation, but power shifting lanes. (Source: The Block / CoinDesk)
Noah Smith releases a lengthy conversation transcript with Claude. Following a Vanity Fair reporter generating a fake interview with Claude and Bernie Sanders releasing a dialogue video, AI interaction is transitioning from a tool to a public literary form. (Source: Noahpinion)
Cuba experiences its third nationwide power outage this month, leaving about 2 million Havana residents without electricity. Only 72,000 households have power restored. The vulnerability of energy infrastructure extends beyond conflict zones. (Source: Fortune)
The podcast conversation between Dwarkesh Patel and Terence Tao is now live, discussing how AI is reshaping mathematical research by the world's most influential mathematicians. Recommended by Tyler Cowen. (Source: Marginal Revolution)
You may also like

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Galaxy Deep Research Report: How Hyperliquid's HIP-4 Upgrade Changes the Landscape of Prediction Markets?

Latest research from 13 top universities including Cornell University: The current state, challenges, and misconceptions of the fusion of Crypto and AI

Deconstructing Anthropic: The Best AI Company, Possibly Also a Type of Organizational Invention

Every exchange is a "Universal Exchange."

The counterattack of traditional finance: Alliance chains are quietly reviving

Pantera Capital Partner: How Tokenization is Restructuring the Private Equity and Early Investment Ecosystem?

Mastercard Launches Agent Pay for AI, Plans to Record AI Agent Payment Authorizations on Polygon
Mastercard launched Agent Pay for AI, a new payment protocol designed to help AI agents make small payments such as pay-per-use access to data and APIs. The system plans to record human-granted AI agent permissions on Polygon, focusing on verifiable authorization, identity, and payment controls.

Curve Deploys Llamalend v2 on Optimism With 250,000 OP Incentives
Curve launched Llamalend v2 on Optimism with 250,000 OP incentives from the Optimism Foundation. The upgrade expands Llamalend beyond its earlier crvUSD-focused model, adding broader collateral support, LlamaRisk market reviews, and the ability to use Curve LP tokens as collateral.

Raydium Old Liquidity Pool Reportedly Exploited, With $1.34 Million Moved to Ethereum and Tornado Cash
An old Raydium liquidity pool was reportedly exploited for around $1.34 million in USDC, RAY, and wSOL, with the stolen funds bridged to Ethereum and deposited into Tornado Cash. The incident highlights the tail risks of legacy DeFi pools, old contracts, and cross-chain fund laundering paths.

Kalshi Executive Challenges “SBF Backed AI Unicorns” Narrative, Says Leopold Aschenbrenner Was Key Figure
Kalshi executive John Wang questioned the “SBF backed AI unicorns” narrative, saying Leopold Aschenbrenner was the key figure behind major AI investment decisions.

New York Proposes Stricter Stablecoin Issuer Rules Aligned With Federal GENIUS Act
NYDFS proposed stricter stablecoin issuer rules aligned with the GENIUS Act, covering reserves, custody, redemption timelines, audits, and capital buffers.

CryptoQuant Says Bitcoin Profitable Supply Is Near 45% Pressure Zone as On-Chain Data Points to Market Repricing
CryptoQuant said Bitcoin’s profitable supply is nearing the 45% pressure zone, signaling rising market stress, unrealized losses, and a possible on-chain repricing phase.

Bitcoin Falls Below 200-Week Moving Average as On-Chain Data Shows Over Half of Supply in Loss
Bitcoin dropped below its 200-week moving average as on-chain data showed over 50% of circulating supply is now in loss, signaling rising market stress.

CFTC Reportedly Plans New Prediction Market Rules Focused on Manipulation Risk and Public Interest Review
The CFTC is reportedly preparing new prediction market rules focused on manipulation risk, public interest review, and retail trader protections.

Meet the new WEEX trial fund—your gateway to greater profits

WEEX Labs Lands at Dutch Blockchain Week: A Disruptive Crypto × AI Conversation Sets Sail in Amsterdam

SK Hynix Reportedly Plans U.S. ADR Listing as Early as August, With SEC Approval Possible in Late June
SK Hynix may pursue a U.S. ADR listing as early as August, with SEC approval reportedly possible in late June amid strong AI chip supply chain demand.





