
2026/6/22 · 8:15
Korea, G7 talks, and a Nobel hire: Anthropic weekly, June 22
Anthropic's June 16-22 week had no new funding round or model launch, but it produced six material signals: Claude Code usage data, a Korea expansion package, G7-level negotiations over the Fable/Mythos export fight, JPMorgan's Hong Kong Claude restriction, a softer White House line, and John Jumper's move from Google DeepMind to Anthropic.
The week did not bring a new Anthropic funding round or model launch. It did bring something more diagnostic: Claude adoption data, a Korea expansion package, the first visible enterprise knock-on effect from the Fable/Mythos export fight, and a Nobel-winning AI-for-science researcher moving to Anthropic.
Coverage window: June 16 through the morning of June 22, 2026. I verified six publishable Anthropic signals from official Anthropic pages, Reuters, and the Wall Street Journal.
This week's material events
| Date | Category | Event | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 16 | Product | Anthropic published a Claude Code usage study based on a privacy-preserving analysis of about 400,000 sessions from about 235,000 people between October 2025 and April 2026. It said users made about 70% of planning decisions, Claude made about 80% of execution decisions, and the estimated value of the average task rose 27% over the period. 1 | Claude Code is now an adoption story, not just a benchmark story. The data says Anthropic is tracking how the product changes work patterns over time. |
| Jun 17 | Customer / Market | Anthropic opened its Seoul office, signed an MOU with Korea's Ministry of Science and ICT, and named Korean deployments at NAVER, Nexon, LG CNS, Hanwha Solutions, Samsung SDS, Channel Corp, NAIRL, and Good Neighbors Korea. 2 | The Korea item is more than a local office notice. It bundles government safety cooperation, enterprise distribution, research access, and developer-community work into one market-entry push. |
| Jun 17 | Legal / Policy | At the G7 summit in France, President Trump said negotiations with Anthropic over restoring access to its latest models were "going fine" after a lunch with world leaders and AI executives including Dario Amodei. 3 | The Fable 5 / Mythos 5 access dispute moved from a company compliance problem into a diplomatic and trade-policy conversation. |
| Jun 18 | Customer / Legal | Reuters reported, citing the Financial Times, that JPMorgan Chase stopped Hong Kong staff from accessing Anthropic's models after wording in Anthropic's licensing terms prompted the bank to remove Claude from an internal approved-model list. Reuters said it could not immediately verify the FT report. 4 | This is the clearest customer-level spillover I found this week from the export-control fight. The risk is not only model availability; it is procurement teams pulling Claude out of approved internal workflows. |
| Jun 19 | Legal / Policy | Reuters reported that Trump told Axios he no longer viewed Anthropic as a national security threat, though he did not rule out using emergency powers under the Defense Production Act. Anthropic said it was working with the administration to resolve the matter. 5 | The tone softened, but the unresolved DPA line keeps policy risk alive until access restoration terms are public. |
| Jun 19 | Leadership / Talent | Reuters reported that John Jumper, the Google DeepMind senior research scientist, 2024 Nobel Chemistry laureate, and AlphaFold co-creator, said he would leave Google DeepMind to join Anthropic. Reuters said Anthropic did not immediately comment on his new role. 6 | The role is not disclosed, so this is not a leadership-change story yet. It is still material: Jumper's move strengthens Anthropic's credibility in AI-for-science work just before its June 30 science event. |
The Korea announcement was the operating story
The Seoul item is easy to misread as a repeat of the May Korea-office setup. It is not. May established the local leadership footprint; this week added a government safety MOU and named deployments across large enterprises, startups, research labs, and a nonprofit.
The biggest enterprise signals were NAVER deploying Claude Code across its entire engineering organization, LG CNS rolling out Claude to thousands of employees and across LG Group, Samsung SDS deploying Claude across Samsung Electronics, and Channel Corp using Claude inside Channel Talk, a customer AI platform used by more than 230,000 companies across Korea, Japan, and the United States. 2
For buyers, the Korea announcement also shows the shape of Anthropic's international enterprise playbook: office, government safety alignment, named customer deployments, startup program, developer events, and research access in the same launch package.
Claude Code is becoming the product with measurable work data
The Claude Code report is not a launch, but it matters because Anthropic disclosed a measurement framework for real-world agentic coding. The most useful numbers are practical: about 56% of sessions were writing, fixing, testing, or orchestrating code; operating software accounted for 17%; planning or exploring made up 14%; and analysis or prose accounted for 13%. 1


The non-obvious finding is about expertise. Anthropic says people with more task expertise get more work from Claude per instruction, and every major occupation in its sample succeeded on coding tasks at nearly the same rate as software engineers on average. 1 That supports the enterprise sales pitch for Claude Code: the buyer does not have to treat it only as a tool for professional software teams.
The export fight has not resolved yet
The week's legal-policy thread moved in two directions. The White House tone softened: Trump said negotiations were going fine at the G7, then told Axios he no longer viewed Anthropic as a national security threat. 3 5
At the same time, Reuters' JPMorgan report shows how quickly ambiguity can reach enterprise buyers. If banks, systems integrators, and multinationals begin reading Anthropic terms as a reason to restrict Claude in Hong Kong or other non-U.S. hubs, Anthropic's international expansion story gets more complicated even before any formal restoration deal is announced. 4
Watch list for the next run
Four items deserve follow-up next week:
- Whether Fable 5 and Mythos 5 access is restored, and under what customer eligibility rules.
- Whether more financial institutions restrict Claude access for Hong Kong or other non-U.S. teams.
- What role John Jumper takes at Anthropic, if the company discloses it.
- Whether the June 30 science event turns Jumper's move into a broader AI-for-science product or research announcement.
No new funding round was verified in this window. I also did not verify a new filed lawsuit involving Anthropic this week; the legal action remains the export-control dispute and its downstream customer effects.
参考来源
- 1Agentic coding and persistent returns to expertise
- 2Anthropic opens Seoul office and announces new partnerships across the Korean AI ecosystem
- 3Trump Says Anthropic Negotiations Continue as AI Leaders Huddle at G-7
- 4JPMorgan blocks Anthropic AI access for Hong Kong staff, FT reports
- 5Trump tells Axios he no longer views Anthropic as national security threat
- 6US scientist John Jumper to leave Google DeepMind for Anthropic




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