Ultimatum expires tonight. Iranian Foreign Minister said on X this morning that the strait is "not closed", while the military stated it would "completely shut it down" if power plants are attacked. 400 million barrels of strategic reserves poured into the market, yet oil prices remain unmoved.
1| Countdown to Hormuz: Iranian FM Says "Not Closed", Military Says "Will Completely Shut It Down if Provoked"
Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi posted on X on Sunday, stating, "The Strait of Hormuz is not closed. Vessels are hesitating because insurers fear the war you started, not because of Iran. Freedom of navigation cannot be separated from freedom of trade. Respect both, or you will have neither." On the same day, Iran's representative to the International Maritime Organization, Musavi, stated, "Through coordinated security arrangements, vessels can pass."
But the military's signals are completely opposite. According to CBS, a military spokesperson said that if the U.S. follows through on its threat to strike power plants, "the Strait of Hormuz will be completely closed until the damaged power plants are restored." From "partially restricted" to "completely closed," this is a clear escalation.
Trump's 48-hour ultimatum was issued late Saturday and expires Monday evening. Iran is operating on two tracks simultaneously. The diplomatic track releases signals that "negotiations are possible" to lower insurance premiums. The military track bundles the power plants and the strait together as a retaliatory package. Superficially, two voices are speaking; fundamentally, it's the same goal: pushing the decision to escalate onto Washington.
(Sources: The Hill / CBS News / PBS / SBS / Iranian Foreign Ministry)
2| IEA's Largest Ever Strategic Reserve Release of 400 Million Barrels, Oil Prices Remain Above $100
The International Energy Agency announced the release of 400 million barrels of crude oil from member countries' strategic reserves, the largest coordinated release in the IEA's 52-year history. The previous single release was 182 million barrels during the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022; this release directly doubles that.
The market barely reacted. Brent crude traded at $92/barrel, up about $20 from pre-war levels. According to the IEA monthly report, Gulf countries' daily output has been cut by at least 10 million barrels due to damaged infrastructure and tanker suspensions. The flow of crude through Hormuz has dwindled to a trickle from a pre-war daily average of 20 million barrels. Physical damage is accelerating; the Fujairah oil terminal in the UAE caught fire after an Iranian drone attack, and Australia confirmed its Al Minhad Air Base in the UAE was also attacked.
The 400 million barrels are a safety net, not a solution. Based on a daily shortfall of 10 million barrels, the reserves would only last about 40 days. If the conflict escalates after Monday's ultimatum expires, the global energy system will have no buffer.
(Sources: IEA / Fortune / CNBC / ABC News / Australian Department of Defence)
3| War Impacts AI Infrastructure: AWS Middle East Facilities Attacked, Helium Supply Chain in Crisis
The war's impact on the tech industry is moving from stock prices to the physical layer. According to CNBC, AWS data centers in the UAE and Bahrain were attacked by Iranian missiles and drones, disrupting banking, payment, and enterprise cloud services. The Middle East is the world's fastest-growing region for hyperscale data centers, with Microsoft, Google, and Oracle investing over $20 billion in the past two years.
A more hidden risk lies in helium. Qatar supplies about one-third of the world's helium, an irreplaceable gas for chip cooling and wafer processing in semiconductor manufacturing. Iran's attack on Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG facility has damaged two production lines. According to Data Centre Magazine analysis, a prolonged closure of Hormuz would take over 25% of global helium offline, threatening approximately $650 billion in AI infrastructure investment.
The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has defined this conflict as "a semiconductor problem." The Financial Times weekend edition published an article titled "How the Iran War Could Upend the AI Boom." The war is not only redrawing the energy map but also rewriting the cost structure of the AI industry.
(Sources: CNBC / Data Centre Magazine / Carnegie / Financial Times)
4| Cursor Admits Core Model is from China's Moonshot AI, License Dispute Escalates
Cursor, an AI programming tool valued at $50 billion, released Composer 2 last week, positioning it as a self-developed breakthrough. Within hours, developers on X discovered internal model identifiers directly pointing to Moonshot AI's open-source model Kimi K2.5. Cursor co-founder Aman Sanger admitted this, calling it an "oversight not to mention the Kimi base in the blog."
Moonshot AI did not accept this explanation. The pre-training lead publicly confirmed that Composer 2's tokenizer is "identical to Kimi's" and questioned the failure to comply with the license. The Kimi K2.5 license terms require products with monthly revenue exceeding $20 million to display "Kimi K2.5" in the interface. Cursor's monthly revenue is about 8 times that threshold.
Superficially, it's an open-source attribution dispute. The underlying issue is that every line of code written by Cursor's over one million daily active users is processed by an inference engine from a company backed by Alibaba and Sequoia China. At a time when the narrative of US-China AI decoupling is most intense, Silicon Valley's hottest programming tool quietly relies on a Chinese model.
(Sources: TechCrunch / Security Boulevard / Moonshot AI)
Also Worth Knowing ↓
Morgan Stanley filed an updated Bitcoin ETF registration document with the SEC, code MSBT, planned for listing on NYSE Arca. Bank of New York Mellon handles cash custody, Coinbase serves as the prime broker. The first among Wall Street's big six banks to build its own Bitcoin ETF product rather than distribute others'. (Sources: CoinDesk / SEC)
Anduril secured a $20 billion framework contract from the U.S. Army, consolidating over 120 existing orders. The company founded by Oculus creator Palmer Luckey became the Pentagon's largest new defense contractor eight years later; the contract value is double that of a similar Palantir contract. A 5 million square foot weapons factory in Ohio opens in July. (Sources: DefenseScoop / Fortune)
Bitcoin mining difficulty dropped 7.8%, miners accelerate shift to AI compute services. Producing one BTC incurs a loss of approximately $19,000; economic pressure is driving compute infrastructure migration from mining to AI inference. It's not the mining industry shrinking; it's compute power switching tracks. (Sources: The Block / CoinDesk)
Noah Smith published a long conversation record with Claude. Following Vanity Fair journalist using Claude to generate a fake interview and Bernie Sanders releasing a conversation video, AI interaction is evolving from a tool into a public literary form. (Source: Noahpinion)
Cuba's grid experienced its third nationwide blackout this month, leaving about 2 million Havana residents without power. Only 72,000 households have had power restored. The fragility of energy infrastructure exists not only in war zones. (Source: Fortune)
Dwarkesh Patel's podcast conversation with Terence Tao is online; the world's most influential living mathematician discusses how AI is changing mathematical research. Recommended by Tyler Cowen. (Source: Marginal Revolution)





