In this edition, Warsh’s era at the Fed begins, and Netflix makes a gentle foray into M&A.͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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June 16, 2026
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  1. Warsh era begins
  2. Another Netflix miss
  3. Anthropic’s moral high ground
  4. Hormuz’s kill switch
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First Word
Citadel for everyone.

What exactly does Citadel do to make all that money? The answer is … whatever, just a little better than the next firm, never for too long, arriving early to trends and leaving by the time the crowd shows up.

The success of Citadel, which manages $68 billion in its hedge fund and has a huge securities-trading operation, has always been hard to pin on any one thing, as The New Yorker’s Gary Sernovitz teases out in a profile out this week that observed how Griffin fits none of Wall Street’s archetypes. He wasn’t enough of a math whiz to be a quant, though he did program his Harvard dorm-room computer to trade convertible bonds. He’s not a stock-picker, though he expects analysts to be Wall Street’s experts on the stocks they cover. He doesn’t have George Soros’ “iron stomach” or Warren Buffett’s hands-off management style.

“It’s not about a portfolio, it’s about a business that can recreate great portfolios again and again,” an early Citadel partner told Sernovitz. That Griffin has done it while churning through staff is a small marvel: The intelligence he’s built up over the years now lives in the firm, not in any one head that might walk out the door.

Compounding capital may be hard but it’s straightforward — invest a dollar so it turns into more dollars, then do it again. Compounding knowledge is more complex. People leave, culture erodes, the playbook changes faster than management can rewrite it, and so the edge slips to newcomers.

Satya Nadella thinks AI will change that. “The future of the firm is the ability to compound that learning,” the Microsoft CEO wrote in a buzzy X post over the weekend (Sixty-four million views and counting, for what qualifies these days as long-form, I guess). His argument is that if companies own the fruits of their “learning loops” that incorporate this institutional knowledge into their systems, rather than into best-practices manuals that nobody reads anyway, they can finally compound intelligence the way Griffin has.

AI models, of course, want to capture that compounding for themselves. Nadella is talking his own book — Microsoft has no frontier model of its own and, in the middle of a messy uncoupling from OpenAI, is positioning itself as the enabler of the learning loop rather than the model underneath.

But if he’s right, expect the spoils of AI to look different from the last technological step change it usually gets compared to: The internet punished pioneers like Netscape, AltaVista, AOL, and MySpace, while rewarding fast followers. If intelligence compounds as Nadella predicts, this time there will be a real first-mover advantage that didn’t exist in the internet era.

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1

Fed’s Warsh era dawns

A chart showing the number of dissenting Fed votes.

The Federal Reserve’s Warsh era starts this week when the new chair helms his first meeting. Investors are bracing for a fight.

Warsh has long said the Fed should reveal less about its thinking on interest rates and the economy, arguing that peeling back the curtain on one of the world’s most powerful institutions invites more questions than it answers. “More thinking, less talking,” he said last year. He doubts the usefulness of Fed officials opining, as captured in the formal “dot plot,” on where interest rates are heading. (His predecessor, Jerome Powell, didn’t love it, either, but was reluctant to do away with a metric investors counted on.)

But as Warsh tries to take the Fed’s deliberations private, the same is unlikely to hold for the fractious group who work with — not for — him. Even with the departure of Stephen Miran, the loudest dissenting voice over the past year, Warsh faces critics inside the bank who are likely to push for rate moves in both directions. Warsh told senators at his confirmation hearing that the Fed needed “a good family fight.” He’s certain to get it.

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Semafor Exclusive
2

Netflix wades into the M&A game

A Netflix logo.
Francis Mascarenhas/File Photo/Reuters

Netflix is losing its allergy to M&A. Now it just needs to land a deal.

The company, which long preferred to build internally rather than sully its hands in takeover auctions, failed last year in a bid for Warner Bros. Discovery. This week, Netflix bowed out of its pursuit of Roku, according to people involved in the sale process. It is one of a number of media companies interested in buying Lionsgate Studios, the people said, though has not put in a formal indication of interest (neither has anyone else, according to a person familiar with the matter.)

Co-CEO Ted Sarandos may see value in swinging and missing; the Warner pursuit “really built our M&A muscle,” he said in April after a very public loss. But the challenge with pursuing transformational deals is that it can sow doubt in investors’ minds about the status quo.

Netflix shares fell 3% after we wrote about Netflix’s interest in Lionsgate, while Lionsgate shares rose 15%. Lionsgate and Roku declined to comment. A Netflix spokesperson declined to comment, but provided a statement after the story was published: “Netflix did not make a bid for Roku.”

— Rohan Goswami

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3

A harder sell for Anthropic’s IPO

Dario Amodei.
Courtesy of Anthropic

It’s hard to float a near-$1 trillion IPO if one of your key products isn’t even on the market. The looming public offering is adding to the pressure on Anthropic, whose staff members flocked to DC this week to triage with US government officials that imposed export controls on one of the company’s most powerful models on Friday.

Anthropic had brushed off the White House’s concerns that guardrails on its Fable 5 model could be circumvented, adding to the string of fights the AI lab has gotten into with the White House. Most of those conflicts have bolstered the company’s safety-first reputation with the engineers and tech workers it’s fighting to recruit, including its decision to push back against the Pentagon’s use of AI for autonomous weapons. But IPOs are about storytelling, and Anthropic will have to figure out how to balance the “trust us, we’re the good guys” mantra with its ability to get along with the US government.

“The truth is that no AI model has ever avoided being jailbroken,” Semafor’s Reed Albergotti wrote last week. But arguing, as a group of AI experts pleading Anthropic’s case to the White House did, that Fable is “not uniquely good” at finding and exploiting holes in code risks ceding the moral high ground.

— Liz Rappaport

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4

Hormuz will never be the same

Ships waiting in the Strait of Hormuz.
Stringer/Reuters

The US-Iran deal may put tankers back on the water, but the global energy trade will never be the same, Semafor’s Tim McDonnell writes.

Oil prices will likely ease — Goldman Sachs lowered its fourth-quarter Brent forecast from $90 to $80 per barrel on Monday — but the danger hasn’t passed. Even if a US-Iran ceasefire holds, it will take months to clear out trapped ships, bring in new empty ones, and rebuild damaged facilities.

Either way, the Strait of Hormuz won’t be open in the same way again. Iran has proven it can close the crucial waterway and may even emerge from these talks with the long-term ability to exact fees for transit through it. Washington is no longer the guarantor of global energy security, and it’s unclear whether the US’ energy dominance still serves a useful geopolitical function — or if it’s just made President Donald Trump’s foreign policy adventures a little less painful for American voters.

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Semafor at Cannes
Semafor at Cannes graphic.

On Thursday, June 25 at Google Beach in Cannes, Semafor Editor-in-Chief Ben Smith and Media Editor Max Tani will sit down with Alex Cooper, host of Call Her Daddy and founder of Unwell, for a special live taping of Mixed Signals. The conversation will examine the radical changes in media right now through the lens of one of the industry’s most influential creators and entrepreneurs.

June 25 | Cannes | Request Invite

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Buy/Sell

➚ BUY: Assists. The US men’s soccer team stormed into the World Cup with a 4-1 win aided by an unlikely source. A “significant” gift from Ken Griffin is helping to pay its coach.

➘ SELL: Goals. A Polymarket trader lost nearly $1 million after Cape Verde stunned Spain in a scoreless draw. No. 2 Spain was heavily favored over the 67th-ranked island nation making its World Cup debut.

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The Tape

Companies & Deals

  • All valuations are local: DeepSeek officially became China’s most valuable AI company, but a $50 billion valuation wouldn’t crack the top 10 in the US, including private startups and big hyperscalers.
  • A humble offering: Nvidia joined the AI borrowing binge with its first bond sale since 2021. Tech companies are taking advantage of money flowing into high-grade debt funds.
  • Let’s double click on that: SpaceX exercised its option to buy Cursor for $60 billion, using its newly listed shares as currency in its race to catch up in AI coding tools.
  • Airing of grievances: Airbnb founder and CEO Brian Chesky took to X replies to defend his company’s tepid stock market performance. “We anticipate better times ahead,” he wrote.

Markets

  • Gray area: A wave of regulation is washing over Europe and Asia, where countries including Spain, Indonesia, and India are blocking access to and implementing measures on Kalshi and Polymarket as governments struggle to decide whether they’re gambling sites or financial derivatives.
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Semafor Spotlight

Mohammed’s View: The region will struggle to contain Iran’s influence without inflaming renewed Sunni-Shia tensions, even if peace prevails. →

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