Hi, today we're exploring: (1) Meta's battle against inappropriate content, (2) Abercrombie's fashionable fortunes, (3) America's unleased offices. Today's Topics Good morning! One small step for man, one giant wait for mankind... NASA has delayed the first human moon landing in over 50 years [until 2026](. Today we're exploring: - Unwanted: Meta's battle with inappropriate content is never-ending.
- Abercrombie and rich: The retailer's revival continues at full steam.
- Pretty vacant: Nearly 20% of America's offices are lying unused. Have feedback for us? Just hit reply â we'd love to hear from you! [Read this on the web instead]( Metaâs added measures Meta [announced yesterday]( that it will introduce a range of new restrictions and policies to improve teensâ experience on Facebook and Instagram, aimed at ensuring the content that its youngest members view is âsafe and age-appropriateâ. The measures will see all under-18s on the platforms placed under the strictest content control settings, filtering out posts that Meta deems potentially damaging to younger users. Blind spots The changes will be rolled out in the coming months, though some parents may feel itâs too little too late, as [legal]( [scrutiny]( [builds]( regarding the social media giant's harmful effects on minors. Indeed, despite Metaâs efforts, violent & graphic content and suicide & self-injury content â 2 key areas that will be tackled by the new restrictions â continue to proliferate on Instagram and Facebook. Since the end of 2019, Meta has been forced to add warnings to, partially cover, or completely remove over 420 million graphic and violent posts from these platforms, while itâs actioned ~150m pieces of suicide and self-injury content over the same period. However, managing what gets shared on its platforms doesn't come cheap. The tech giant [reportedly spent]( some $5 billion on safety and security in 2021 alone (including counter-terrorism and law enforcement) â more than rival Snapchat made in total revenue over the last year. Teenage dreams Last summer, [we explored]( how Abercrombie & Fitch â once the aspirational brand for an entire generation of teenagers â was trying to turn its struggling sales around. Out was the previous strategy, which included only targeting the âgood-looking, cool kidsâ (per the companyâs [former CEO]( in is a revamped A&F, focused on broadening its appeal beyond just T-shirts and jeans for a select crowd. That strategy is working. Indeed, A&F reported [on]( that it had sold more than expected over the crucial Christmas and holiday season, with its ranges finding success among female and Gen Z customers. The company now expects to grow its revenue 14-15% for 2023. The news sent A&F stock up 6% on the day, building on what has already been a white-hot 12 months for the fashion brand, having seen its shares rise 238% â even more than the 234% rise that Nvidia investors have enjoyed throughout the AI boom. Perhaps most impressive, though, is that A&F has managed to reverse its revenues while keeping an eye on the bottom line â its latest financials reveal an operating profit of $138m, nearly 8x what the company managed in the same quarter 1 year ago. Pretty vacant The push from corporate execs to get employees back into the office hasnât yet translated into queues at the watercooler... new data from Moodyâs Analytics has revealed that nearly 20% of all office space across major US cities was unleased at the end of 2023, a higher share than any previous year [on record](. Moodyâs has been running the emptiness temperature check every year since 1979, with notable peaks in the mid-to-late 80s and early 90s â the only other times when the vacancy rate crept above the 19% mark. In 1991, 19.3% of offices were vacant following the commercial building boom of the 80s, when a perfect storm of generous lenders and eager developers yielded a supply of office space that, at least for a stretch, massively [outstripped demand](. While that gap was eventually closed in the decade that followed, the current spike appears more down to the cultural shift in how we work, rather than any cyclical economic or construction factors. Zooming in: The 19.6% average figure masks a lot of variation across America â San Franciscoâs vacancy rate, for example, was [reported]( to be as high as 35.9% in December. More Data ⢠Earnings call mentions of the phrase âgenerational opportunityâ are up 3,800% since 2018 â one among a long list of interesting numbers [from Harperâs](. ⢠A [live feed]( of all the biggest new tech product announcements from CES 2024, including robot projectors, foldable monitors, and transparent TVs. ⢠China likely dethroned Japan as the world's top exporter of cars, shifting more than 3.8 million vehicles [according to data]( from the CPCA. ⢠Caffeine rush: Starbucks will need to open a store every 3 days to reach its 1,000 branch goal in India [by 2025](. Hi-Viz ⢠If your New Year's goals need a kickstart, explore [NPRâs resolution planner]( featuring expert guidance. Quick cut: Which new viral sensation is sending [Target shoppers]( into frenzy, while driving Google Search volumes above peaks seen for the ~130-year-old NHL Championship of the same name? [Answer below]. [Answer here](. Thanks for stopping by!
Have some [feedback](mailto:daily@chartr.co?subject=Feedback&body=Hi%2C%0A%0AI%20like%20the%20newsletters%2C%20but%20I%20had%20a%20thought%20for%20you...) or want to [sponsor]( this newsletter? Not a subscriber? Sign up for free below. [Subscribe]( Copyright © 2024 CHARTR LIMITED, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website. Our mailing address is: CHARTR LIMITED 231 Vauxhall Bridge RoadLondon, SW1V 1AD
United Kingdom
[Add us to your address book]( Don't want charts in your inbox anymore? Break our hearts and [unsubscribe](.