Houthi Have a Checkpoint | Rewire News Morning Brief
Iran has installed a toll booth at the Strait of Hormuz, OpenAI chooses to acquire a media company instead of training a better model. When ownership is worth more than performance, the cost of rewriting the order is coming to light.
1|Iran Puts a Price Tag on the Global Oil Route in the Crossfire
The US military bombed Iranian civilian infrastructure for the first time on Thursday, destroying a bridge near Tehran with a B-1 bomber. On the eve, Trump's televised speech threatened to "bomb Iran back to the Stone Age." Almost simultaneously, an Iranian deputy foreign minister announced that they are negotiating a transit agreement for the Strait of Hormuz with Oman, imposing fees on passing ships. Wall Street interpreted this as a signal of easing tensions, with US stocks recovering all losses. However, crude oil didn't buy it, as WTI surged 9% to $108.95 per barrel.
From the start of the war in February until now, daily vessel traffic through the strait has plummeted from 130 ships to 6. The IEA called this the "largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." Iran's fee proposal is not about easing tensions but about transforming the passage rights of 20% of global oil supply from "freedom of navigation" to "conditional permission." Diplomats from over 40 countries are discussing reopening the waterway, with the US refusing to participate. Trump's position is clear: protecting the Strait of Hormuz is not America's concern.
(Source: Axios / Fortune / Al Jazeera / IEA / UNCTAD)
2|OpenAI Acquires a Media Company, Not for Content, But for Narrative Control
OpenAI has acquired the tech talk show TBPN, marking the first media merger in the AI industry. TBPN airs live for three hours daily, competing with Bloomberg and CNBC, with an estimated revenue of $60 million this year. Guests on the show have included Sam Altman, Zuckerberg, and Peter Thiel. OpenAI claims that TBPN will maintain editorial independence, but the show's reporting structure is overseen by the company's Chief Political Operating Officer, Chris Lehane.
The logic is not in the content but in the distribution. OpenAI is facing a triple threat of public trust crisis, employee turnover disputes, and regulatory pressures. When the official stance is "standard PR playbooks don't apply to us," the solution is to bypass the media and directly control the communication channels. Bloomberg, WSJ, Wired, Reuters, CNBC, and The New York Times all reported on this deal the same day, sending a clear signal: AI companies acquiring media is now in everyone's sights.
(Source: TechCrunch / Wired / Bloomberg / WSJ / Reuters / NYT)
3|Microsoft Officially Launches "De-OpenAI-fication," Suleyman Shifts Focus to Superintelligence
Microsoft has completed a key AI organization restructuring. Mustafa Suleyman is no longer in charge of the Copilot product line, instead focusing entirely on the development of the "superintelligence" model. The mid-March reshuffle brought about three things at once. Copilot is now overseen by former Snap executive Jacob Andreou, the MAI Superintelligence team has released three in-house foundational models for speech transcription, audio generation, and image generation, and according to the Financial Times, Microsoft has also introduced a "medium-scale" AI model for scenarios with limited computing power.
Looking back to October 2025, Microsoft and OpenAI revised their agreement, allowing both parties to "independently pursue AGI." Six months later, Suleyman wrote in an internal memo that the focus should be on "pouring all energy into superintelligence." This shift is no longer a hedge against risk; the contractual terms resulting from the $13 billion investment have now officially evolved into a separate path.
(Source: The Verge / TechCrunch / FT / Bloomberg / CNBC)
4|Blue Owl $5.4 Billion Redemption Wave, AI's Impact on Credit Assets Begins to Transmit
Two private credit funds under Blue Owl Capital face a run on redemptions. Quarterly redemption requests for Blue Owl Credit Income Corp. have surged from 5.2% to 21.9%, while Technology Income Corp. has reached 40.7%. The company has been forced to implement a 5% redemption cap, with approximately $5.4 billion locked behind closed doors. Blue Owl's stock price plummeted by 7%, while Blackstone, Apollo, and KKR simultaneously declined by about 3%, dragging the entire alternative asset management sector into panic.
Blue Owl attributes this to "negative market sentiment," but investors' fears have a specific focus. Blue Owl's core assets consist of loans to software companies, and AI is redefining which software companies can survive and which will be replaced. As AI programming tools begin to erode the moats of SaaS companies, the cash flow expectations behind these loans become uncertain. The $1.8 trillion private credit market has long been seen as a "more resilient fixed-income alternative," and Blue Owl is the first signal of a crack in that narrative.
(Source: Bloomberg / FT / Reuters / CNBC)
5|SpaceX Launches IPO at Over $2 Trillion, Musk Ties Rocket, AI, and Defense Together
SpaceX has increased its IPO target valuation to over $2 trillion, potentially becoming the largest IPO in history. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Morgan Stanley all have underwriting roles, with a fundraising scale of up to $750 billion, surpassing the 2019 Saudi Aramco record. SpaceX has submitted a confidential IPO filing to the SEC, with a planned listing expected this summer.
Just a few months ago, SpaceX was valued at $1.25 trillion, but jumped to $2 trillion after acquiring xAI. The premium is not from launch frequency but from Musk bundling Starlink satellite internet, military launch contracts, and xAI's Grok model into an inseparable whole. Investors are not buying shares of a space company but a ticket to the "Musk infrastructure." On the same day, Tesla's Q1 delivery figures were announced, showing a 6% year-over-year increase but a sequential decline, causing the stock price to drop over 5%.
(Source: Bloomberg / 36Kr / The Verge / SEC Filing)
Also Worth Knowing ↓
Mercor hit by a supply chain attack, AI training data security chain breached. The $100 billion AI data startup was breached by Lapsus$ through the open-source library LiteLLM, claiming to have stolen 4TB of data, including training datasets and project information provided to OpenAI, Anthropic, and Meta. The attack vector was the supply chain rather than a direct breach, meaning compromising one open-source component can impact the entire AI training pipeline. (Source: Fortune)
Google Gemma 4 switches to Apache 2.0 license, removing a commercial barrier to open-source AI. In four sizes and adopting an OSI-approved standard open-source license for the first time, it eliminates resistance from enterprise legal reviews. Previously, Gemma's custom license had pushed many enterprises towards Mistral and Alibaba's Qwen. The change in license may be more impactful in reshaping the market landscape than changes in model performance. (Source: Ars Technica / VentureBeat / Google)
Trump same-day fires Attorney General Bondi and Army Chief of Staff General George. Bondi was dismissed for her handling of the Epstein files and failure to prosecute political opponents, with Todd Blanche serving as Acting Attorney General. Hegseth immediately relieved the 41st Army Chief of Staff of his duties during the Iran War, with George being asked to "retire immediately." Changing leadership during wartime plus political cleansing, two personnel lines moving simultaneously on the same day. (Source: WSJ / Axios / CNN / NBC)
Anthropic has released a study stating that Claude has an internal representation of "functional emotionality." Researchers found a computational structure within the model that performs functions similar to human emotions. This doesn't mean AI "has emotions," but rather that the model has generated an internal state equivalent to emotional functions while processing information. The boundaries of AI safety research are expanding from "will it deceive us" to "does it have some form of inner experience." (Source: Wired)
The CFTC sues three states to defend federal jurisdiction over prediction markets. Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois are being sued by the federal derivatives regulator on grounds that the states lack the authority to regulate federally registered markets. Meanwhile, the suspicious trading pattern that occurred on Polymarket in Iran hours before the conflict remains unresolved, with six accounts profiting $1.2 million from bets placed before the airstrike. (Source: CoinDesk / Fortune / Bankless)
Goldman Sachs quantifies the labor bottleneck of AI infrastructure, revealing a gap of 500,000 positions. Data center construction requires 300,000 power jobs and 200,000 grid jobs, yet the U.S. currently has only 45,000 energy apprentices. Electrician salaries in Northern Virginia have surpassed $120,000 annually. Ford CEO Jim Farley states that while AI is eliminating white-collar entry-level positions, it is creating a structural shortage of blue-collar labor. (Source: Fortune / Goldman Sachs)
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