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Hey, this is Alex from what's News. Thanks so much for being a listener of the show. If you're looking for more insights and tools to understand the latest headlines, consider becoming a subscriber to the Wall street journal. Visit subscribe.WSJ.com whatsnews to subscribe now. Stocks are up. Oil is down after Iran says the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping corridor, is now open. So where does that leave the US War with ir? A senior Trump administration official says there may be more talks in Pakistan on Monday. And President Trump's feud with Pope Leo is dividing American Catholics.
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Trump won with more than 50% of the Catholic vote. It's not a group he can afford to lose. And heading into the midterms, Republicans don't want to lose anyone at this point.
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It's Friday, April 17th. I'm Pierre Bienname for the Wall Street Journal, filling in for Alex Osola. This is the PM edition of what's news, the top headlines and business stories that moved the world today. We begin in Iran, whose foreign minister today said the Strait of Hormuz is now completely open to commercial ships. But President Trump said the US Naval blockade on Iranian ports would remain. There's still uncertainty for shippers in the region. They want clear assurances from Iran that it won't attack ships before resuming normal traffic through the strait. Joining me now is national security correspondent Shelby Holliday. Shelby, this is the third time you've joined us this week to talk about this conflict where things are developing quickly. Get us up to speed what's going on now in the waters around Iran.
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It's a really fluid situation. Even though Iran's foreign minister said the Strait of Hormuz is open, ships can transit freely, it's a little bit unclear if anything's actually changed. Our understanding is that Iran is still asking ships to go through its preferred route through a corridor that they've established and in some cases even charge tolls for ships to go through. And then on the US Side, nothing has changed with respect to the blockade. The US Is still maintaining this economic pressure. President Trump welcomed this announcement by Iran that the strait was open and there was some talk about clearing mines. But so far, shipping companies are nervous to move through the strait because they want more of a guarantee that hostilities have ended and that the threats do not exist.
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And the ceasefire between the two countries is set to expire Tuesday. What do we know about negotiations between these two sides?
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The highly enriched uranium, or heu, seems to be the biggest sticking point at least when you're listening to President Trump, that seems to be the one thing that he's very focused on. And he has said that the US Will go in and get what he calls the nuclear dust, Iran's remaining nuclear material so that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon. And then you also have these key issues of Iran's missile and drone stockpiles and and also their support for proxy groups. President Trump has said that he will not lift the US Blockade of Iranian ports unless Iran agrees to all of these things the US Is asking.
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That was Wall Street Journal national security correspondent Shelby Holliday. Thank you, Shelby.
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Thank you.
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Talks between the US And Iran haven't officially been scheduled, but a senior Trump administration official says they're likely to take place Monday in Pakistan. What's News and markets host Imani Moiz says hopes for a resolution to the war again lifted US Stocks today.
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The big news of today is obviously Iran declaring the Strait of Hormuz open and whether or not ships are actually passing through the waterway. Markets are seeing that as a sign that tensions in the region are thawing and we're perhaps moving closer to some sort of resolution. Investors are really looking past the war. And once you start doing that, they start seeing positive signs elsewhere. Banks reporting that consumers are strong. Tech companies saying AI demand remains strong. So there's a lot of really bullish signs for investors to push the markets higher.
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The Nasdaq rose for the 13th straight trading day, the longest winning streak since 1992. It closed up 1.5% today while the S and P closed at a record for the third time this week. The Dow today climbed 1.8% and closed at its highest level since before the war. And oil tumbled with the international benchmark Brent crude diving more than 9% to about $90 a barrel. Coming up, the White House and anthropic might be making up just as the company has a powerful new AI model on its hands. And we exclusively report that baseball's San Diego Padres are nearing a sale and it could be one for the books. That's after the break.
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President Trump has gotten into a fight with Pope Leo, a fellow American. The the Pope has publicly condemned the war in Iran and taken a few digs at the president. Yesterday he had this to say during a speech in Jesus told us, blessed
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are the peacemakers, but woe to those who manipulate religion in the very name of God for their own military, economic or political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filthy.
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Trump, meanwhile, has criticized the Pope, saying he's catering to the left and being weak on crime. He also shared and later deleted an AI generated image of himself as a Christ like figure, which also caused an uproar. The dispute is testing the loyalties of the roughly 53 million Roman Catholics in the U.S. some of whom spoke to Wall Street Journal reporter Chris Maher. Chris, what did you hear from some of the Catholics you spoke to?
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The people I spoke to, and I think this is consistent with the other reporters we found that some people were continuing to support President Trump. Others were really confused and even appalled by some of his recent criticisms of Pope Leo. One person I spoke to here in Pittsburgh was Joyce Rothermel. She's very focused on social issues within the church and has not been a fan of President Trump to begin with. And this did not change any of her views. She is, however, very supportive of Pope Leo. I'm so grateful that the Holy Father, Pope Leo, has the courage to do
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his job, which is to speak up
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on issues of morality and issues of theology in such a forthright way. Another person that we spoke to was Joseph Alessandro, and he was in the camp where Catholics feel that the Pope may be overstepping his bounds by getting into politics. They both have different views, and that's why politics should stay away from their religion. You can't mix politics with religion.
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How important are Catholic voters to Trump's coalition?
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They're pretty important. Both the president and the pope have been pretty popular among American Catholics. Trump won with more than 50% of the Catholic vote. They've complained about his social media posting sometimes this AI generated image that he posted recently, but they've been willing to look past those things in the past because he made good on some of his campaign pledges to do things like appoint Supreme Court justices who ended up overturning Roe v. Wade. It's not a group he can afford to lose. And heading into the midterms, Republicans don't want to lose anyone at this point.
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That was Wall Street Journal reporter Chris Maher. Chris, thanks so much.
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Thank you.
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The Journal has learned that Anthropic CEO Dario Amadei was scheduled to meet with White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles today in a high profile effort to ease tensions with the Trump administration. The artificial intelligence company has been fighting with the administration for months over guardrails surrounding the Pentagon's use of its Claude AI models. Anthropic's latest AI model, Mythos, is now providing a reason for peace talks. Anthropic says Mythos is so good at finding and exploiting software bugs that it could be a cybersecurity risk. So for now, Anthropic has released a preview version to companies and organizations that run critical infrastructure. And Anthropic has been briefing government officials about minimizing harms. We're exclusively reporting that the Justice Department is preparing to file an antitrust lawsuit against some of the country's biggest egg producers, including Cal Maine Foods, over allegations they coordinated pricing. The lawsuit would target companies that raised egg prices in 2024 and 2025 due to a supply shortage attributed to avian flu. The egg companies declined to comment on the possible lawsuit. They they have argued the price changes are a classic case of supply and demand, where limited supply and higher demand lead to higher prices. A consortium of French telecom companies has bid $24 billion for Altice Group's French telecommunications operations. The companies said today that they are in exclusive talks. The deal would reshape France's telecom sector, cutting the number of major operators from four to three. And it would dismantle a major part of French Israeli billionaire Patrick Drahi's once sprawling business empire. And Ford is recalling up to 1.4 million F150 pickups because the trucks can unexpectedly downshift into second gear, which could cause drivers to lose control of the vehicle. The recall affects certain 2015-2017 trucks. And finally, in sports,
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5:2 San Diego
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that's from MLB TV's stream of yesterday's game between the San Diego Padres and the Seattle Mariners. The Padres went on to win that home game, and today we're exclusively reporting that the team is nearing a deal to sell for a record price. Private equity billionaire Jose Feliciano and his wife, Kwanzaa Jones, want the Padres for about $3.9 billion. The deal is expected to be announced next week. It's the highest ever valuation for a Major League Baseball team, including hedge fund billionaire Steve Cohen's $2.4 billion purchase of the New York Mets in 2020. And that's what's news for this week. Tomorrow you can look out for our weekly markets. Wrap up what's news in markets then on Sunday we'll be discussing how Democrats and Republicans are maneuvering for position ahead of the midterms. That's in what's News Sunday? And we'll be back with our regular show on Monday morning. Today's show was produced by Danny Lewis with supervising producer Tali Arbel. Michael Laval wrote our theme music. Aisha Al Muslim is our development producer. Chris Zinsley is our deputy editor. And I'm Pierre Bienname. Thanks for listening. We all want to know what makes people tick? How will they make decisions, handle feedback and work as a team? The Predictive Index Behavioral assessment reveals how employees actually think, work and thrive, like how Marcus fits in a role with structure. And Margot's strength is collaborating with others, because when we understand each other, work just works. Take the behavioral assessment today@try.proictiveindex.com.
This episode covers major global and domestic news impacting markets, politics, and business. The centerpiece is new developments in the U.S.-Iran conflict, focusing on Iran’s declaration that the Strait of Hormuz is open, mixed signals from both countries, and the market’s bullish reaction. The show then explores President Trump’s escalating feud with Pope Leo, its implications for Catholic voters, and several major business stories, including key updates in AI, a possible antitrust case, a massive telecom merger in France, Ford’s truck recall, and a record-setting sale of the San Diego Padres.
Strait of Hormuz Declared “Open” by Iran
Iran’s Foreign Minister announces commercial shipping can resume, but ambiguity remains as Iran continues to push shipping through a preferred route, sometimes charging tolls ([01:38]).
The U.S. maintains its naval blockade on Iranian ports; no changes in its economic pressure.
"Our understanding is that Iran is still asking ships to go through its preferred route … and in some cases even charge tolls for ships to go through. And then on the US Side, nothing has changed with respect to the blockade."
— Shelby Holliday, WSJ National Security Correspondent [01:38]
Market Reaction
Ceasefire & Negotiations
The current ceasefire expires Tuesday.
Key sticking points: highly enriched uranium (HEU), Iran’s nuclear material, missile/drone stockpiles, and support for proxy groups.
President Trump insists no blockade will be lifted until all U.S. demands are met.
“President Trump … said that the U.S. will go in and get what he calls the nuclear dust, Iran’s remaining nuclear material so that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon.”
— Shelby Holliday [02:27]
Nasdaq up for the 13th consecutive day—longest streak since 1992.
S&P closes at a record for third time this week; Dow at its highest since before the war.
Brent crude oil drops over 9% to about $90/barrel ([03:53]).
"Markets are seeing that as a sign that tensions in the region are thawing … Investors are really looking past the war."
— Imani Moiz, What's News and Markets host [03:20]
Pope Leo (an American) denounces the Iran war and criticizes use of religion for political/military gain ([05:26]).
Trump retaliates, accusing the Pope of catering to the left and weakness on crime.
Trump’s now-deleted AI-generated image of himself as Christ-like further sparks outrage.
“Blessed are the peacemakers, but woe to those who manipulate religion in the very name of God for their own military, economic or political gain…”
— Pope Leo [05:26]
Show explores the split among Catholic voters.
“The people I spoke to … some were continuing to support President Trump. Others were really confused and even appalled…”
— Chris Maher, WSJ reporter [06:08]
Voters’ views reflect internal Church divisions: some support the pope’s outspoken stance, others believe he’s overstepping into politics.
Catholic voters remain crucial to Trump’s coalition:
"Trump won with more than 50% of the Catholic vote. … It's not a group he can afford to lose. And heading into the midterms, Republicans don't want to lose anyone at this point."
— Chris Maher [07:15]
Anthropic’s AI Developments & White House Tensions
Egg Industry Antitrust Lawsuit
French Telecom Merger
Ford F-150 Recall
San Diego Padres (following a home win) near a sale to Jose Feliciano (private equity) and Kwanza Jones for $3.9B—largest MLB valuation ever.
Surpasses Steve Cohen’s 2020 New York Mets purchase ($2.4B).
“The deal is expected to be announced next week. It's the highest ever valuation for a Major League Baseball team…”
— Pierre Bienaimé [09:54]
On Strait of Hormuz Uncertainty:
"It's a really fluid situation. Even though Iran's foreign minister said the Strait of Hormuz is open, ships can transit freely, it's a little bit unclear if anything's actually changed."
— Shelby Holliday [01:38]
Pope Leo’s Rebuke:
"Blessed are the peacemakers, but woe to those who manipulate religion in the very name of God..."
— Pope Leo [05:26]
On Catholic Voters' Importance:
"Trump won with more than 50% of the Catholic vote. ... It's not a group he can afford to lose."
— Chris Maher [07:15]
Clear, brisk, with WSJ’s signature focus on facts, analysis, and market impact. The hosts and correspondents stay neutral and precise, even when discussing high-stakes political and religious divisions.
This episode spotlights the interconnectedness of geopolitics, markets, and social dynamics in 2026. The declared reopening of the Strait of Hormuz creates optimism but leaves room for doubt, markets rally in anticipation of peace, and Trump’s rift with Pope Leo divides a crucial voting bloc. The show’s rapid survey of tech, legal, business, and sports headlines rounds out a dynamic snapshot of the day’s biggest movers and narratives.