Netflix is facing lots of competition...
July 14, 2021 [View Online]( | [Sign Up]( [Daily Brew]( [The Motley Fool]( Good morning and Happy Bastille Day, though of course in France they don't call it Bastille Day but rather La Fête Nationale (the national celebration) or simply Le Quatorze Juillet (the fourteenth of July). Here at the Brew we call it a good reason to listen to French rap all day. Who's your favorite artist? MARKETS Nasdaq 14,677.65 -0.38% S&P 4,369.21 -0.35% Dow 34,888.79 -0.31% Bitcoin $32,556.42 -1.36% 10-Year 1.423% +5.7 bps PepsiCo $152.96 +2.31% *Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. [Here's what these numbers mean](. - Markets: Investors didnât have much of a [reaction]( to 1) a key report showing high inflation or 2) strong earnings numbers from blue-chip companies. One of those companies with a strong quarter, PepsiCo, rose to a record high.
- Budget: The US federal budget deficit [narrowed]( by 80% this June over last year, which reflects lower government spending and last yearâs delay in tax collection to July. Still, the budget deficit for the entirety of 2021 is expected to be the second-largest since 1945, only eclipsed by last year. ECONOMY [Inflategate Strikes Again](
[Dollar bill getting inflated by a bike pump]( Inflation is getting so bad Arizona might have to raise the price of its iced tea above $0.99. Okay, it's not that horrific yet, but consumer prices did [surge 5.4%]( in June from a year ago, the biggest increase in 13 years. What happened: As the US reopened for business, consumers swiped their credit cards with fury. Combine that with supply shortages across the economy and massive government stimulus, and you get sweeping price increases. But there are nuances The WSJâs David Harrison divided the inflation report into [four categories]( to show that price hikes arenât occurring uniformly across the economy. In some sectors... - Prices that plummeted early in the pandemic and are surging to catch up. Think airfares (24.6% annual increase in June) and hotels (16.9%).
- Prices that are booming thanks to supply shortages. Used cars are the star of this category, with their price increases accounting for more than a third of Juneâs total price hikes. Economists expect prices to return to normal levels when supply chain wrinkles are ironed out.
- Prices that will remain higher permanently. You could be paying more at restaurants over the long term thanks to an extended labor shortage and higher wages.
- Prices that arenât increasing that much. Rents are inching upward at a rate of 1.9% per month. For comparison, rents on a primary residence rose at a nearly 4% rate before the pandemic. As always with inflation stories, we must close by turning to the Fed, whose main job is to keep prices stable. Will Juneâs inflation boom change Chair Jerome Powellâs view that price hikes are transitory? Probably not. As we mentioned, the bulk of the price increases were in sectors battered by the pandemic (hospitality) or those battling supply shortages (used cars). Higher inflation might stick around a little longer than initially expected, but investors are betting more typical price growth will return, just like the handshake. + For laughs: We had some [inflation fun]( with readers on Twitter.    mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew%21&body=With%20the%20US%20Fully%20Open%20for%20Business%2C%20Inflation%20Hits%20Highest%20Rate%20in%2013%20Years%3A%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fstories%2F2021%2F07%2F13%2Fus-fully-open-business-inflation-hits-highest-rate-13-years%0A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%20%E2%80%94%20Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley%2C%20daily.%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fr%2F%3Fkid%3D4904f90a%26utm_source%3Demail_share%0A EARNINGS [Execs Say the Darndest Things](
[JPMorgan]( "[Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase](" ([CC BY 2.0]() by [jurvetson]( Two banks and a food giant turned in quarterly report cards you'd be proud to show off to your parents. Here are execs' most quotable quotes from yesterday's earnings calls. 1. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon: âTheir house value is up. Their stock value is up. Their incomes are up. Their savings are up. Their confidence is up.â Consumers are ["raring" to spend more]( this summer (great for JPMorganâs credit card biz), but the companyâs trading revenue dropped sharply in Q2 as the economy opened up. 2. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon: âObviously if there was some sort of a disruption or an economic slowdown sometime in the future, that would wear on confidence and slow that, but that doesnât seem likely.â Goldmanâs net revenue from investment banking jumped 36% annually to [$3.6 billion]( in Q2 thanks to an army of unicorns rushing to go public this year. 3. PepsiCo CFO Hugh Johnston: âThis quarter, all of a sudden people started going out.â In food service, âwe saw the business double in a relatively short period of time.â                                                                    Pepsi sales [jumped]( the most in a decade last quarter as restaurant demand for its drinks returned. However, while people are getting out more, âthey are not anywhere near where they were,â Johnston said.    mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew%21&body=JPMorgan%2C%20Goldman%20Sachs%2C%20and%20PepsiCo%20Kick%20off%20the%20Earnings%20Season%20Strong%3A%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fstories%2F2021%2F07%2F13%2Fjpmorgan-goldman-sachs-pepsico-kick-off-earnings-season-strong%0A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%20%E2%80%94%20Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley%2C%20daily.%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fr%2F%3Fkid%3D4904f90a%26utm_source%3Demail_share%0A FINTECH [Apple: You Want It? You Got It?]( Impulse purchasing could get [even easier](: Apple is working on adding a buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) feature to Apple Pay, dipping a gargantuan toe into one of retailâs fastest-growing segments, per Bloomberg. Hereâs what we know about the service, known as âApple Pay Laterâ: - Itâll offer two ways to pay: four bi-weekly, interest-free installments or a long-term monthly plan with interest.
- The service will work with any Apple Pay-enabled card, so no Apple Card is required.
- Goldman Sachs, which is already Apple Cardâs partner, has been tapped as the serviceâs lender. Whatâs the strategy? Apple currently earns a cut of every Apple Pay purchase, so the more users buy, the more it makes. And a BNPL service could lead Apple users to make more big-ticket purchases. Zoom out: If Apple does release this product, itâll be trampling on several other fintech companiesâ turf. Affirm, Klarna, PayPal, and Sezzle all offer similar layaway programs. Following the Bloomberg report, Affirm shares fell as much as 13%. Appleâs core advantage (ha), and this goes for most new arenas itâs looking to play in, is that the tech giantâs already in so many peopleâs pockets.    mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew%21&body=Apple%20Reportedly%20Working%20On%20a%20Buy-Now-Pay-Later%20Service%3A%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fstories%2F2021%2F07%2F13%2Fapple-reportedly-working-buynowpaylater-service%0A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%20%E2%80%94%20Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley%2C%20daily.%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fr%2F%3Fkid%3D4904f90a%26utm_source%3Demail_share%0A SPONSORED BY THE MOTLEY FOOL [This Kid Knows Something](#)
[The Motley Fool]( This kid knows something. And judging by the size of his smile, itâs not just whatâs on the inside of that arts and crafts box. No, this kid is smiling like his parents read him Motley Foolâs [latest stock picks](âand now heâs armed with stock market knowledge thatâll potentially put him in a good position to upgrade to a fancier pencil one day. You know, one thatâs not a log. The Motley Fool has been pickinâ winners for years. If youâd invested in Amazon in 2002 when the Fool sent a âbuy alertâ at $15.31 per share, youâd be up 22,833%. Unfortunately, you canât go back in time to invest in Amazon. Fortunately, the Fool is about to provide you with a brand new, affordable opportunity to get in early on stocks with serious growth potential. [Click here to read the Foolâs âFive Growth Stocks Under $49."]( GRAB BAG [Key Performance Indicators](
[Chart showing the best paying music streaming services] Toby Howell Stat: Peloton has the [highest artist payout rate]( of any music streaming service: 3.1 cents, compared to Spotify (.35 cents), Apple Music (0.68 cents), and YouTube (0.15 cents), according to Trichordistâs Streaming Price Bible. While its payouts are more generous, Peloton only accounts for 0.07% of global streams. Quote: âItâs time to build some new used cars.â Bloombergâs Joe Weisenthal [has the jokes]( for the boom in used car prices. Read: Jason Sudeikis is having one hell of a year. ([GQ]() Â Â Â mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew%21&body=Key%20Performance%20Indicators%3A%20July%2014%3A%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fstories%2F2021%2F07%2F13%2Fkey-performance-indicators-july-14%0A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%20%E2%80%94%20Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley%2C%20daily.%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fr%2F%3Fkid%3D4904f90a%26utm_source%3Demail_share%0A ENTERTAINMENT [Netflix, You Still Chilling?](
[HBO Max]( The 2021 Emmy nominations were released yesterday, and it looks like Netflixâs single-handed domination could soon turn into a [battle royale]( thanks to a pack of streaming toddlers. In 2018, Netflix knocked HBO off its perch as the top nominee-getter for the first time in 17 years, which symbolized the shift from cable â streaming. Netflix sat alone at the top for a while, nabbing the all-time nomination record last year with 160. But Disney+, HBO Max, and Apple TV+, all of which are less than three years old, are starting to nip at its heels with 71, 36, and 34 nominations this year, respectively. Netflix accounted for about 60% of all streaming nominations in 2020, but this year, its share is down to less than 40%. Big picture: The success of newer streamers at the Emmys may not matter for the average Netflix-and-chiller, but it reflects the fast growth of infant platforms. All the whippersnappers with strong Emmys showings revealed impressive viewership gains this year. + The more you know: The Mandalorian and The Crown topped the nominations with 24 each. Ted Lasso only got 20, but he was perfectly content with that.    mailto:?subject=Check%20out%20this%20story%20from%20Morning%20Brew%21&body=Young%20Streaming%20Platforms%20Rake%20In%202021%20Emmy%20Nominations%3A%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fstories%2F2021%2F07%2F13%2Fyoung-streaming-platforms-rake-2021-emmy-nominations%0A%0AWant%20more%20great%20content%3F%20Subscribe%20to%20Daily%20Brew%20%E2%80%94%20Delivering%20the%20latest%20business%20news%20from%20Wall%20St.%20to%20Silicon%20Valley%2C%20daily.%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.morningbrew.com%2Fdaily%2Fr%2F%3Fkid%3D4904f90a%26utm_source%3Demail_share%0A WHAT ELSE IS BREWING - [The death toll]( in the Surfside, FL, condo collapse will likely be between 95 and 99 people, officials said as they began to wrap up search-and-rescue efforts.
- [President Biden]( has recruited pop star Olivia Rodrigo to help encourage vaccinations among young people.
- [Panda Express]( is adding Beyond Meat Orange Chicken to its menu at some locations, expanding from its current veggie offerings of âsteamed white and brown rice.â
- [Boeing]( is cutting production on its 787 plane for a few weeks to fix a structural issue it identified.
- [Kraft]( and Van Leeuwen are releasing limited-edition, macaroni and cheese-flavored ice cream today. If youâre looking for a conversation starter to kick off a meeting...this could work well. SPONSORED BY THE MOTLEY FOOL If you have $1000 to invest, put it here. The Motley Fool has been identifying tech trends and analyzing how those trends could affect the stock market for decades. Take streaming, for example. The Fool was high on Netflix as early as 2004. The next potentially big thing the Fool spies on the horizon? 5G. [See which stock could benefit from the trend most here](. BREW'S BETS Arcade wars: To celebrate the 40th anniversary of Donkey Kong this month, make sure you watch the movie ([for free on YouTube]() that explores the cutthroat battle to become the king of Kong. Dream job alert: McCormick is hiring a [Director of Taco Relations](. The âresponsibilitiesâ include traveling across the country in search of the latest taco trends and helping to develop new taco recipes. You learn something new every day: Read a series of blog posts exploring [tacit knowledge]( and why itâs so important. Resale is exploding: Learn about resaleâs impact on traditional retail and sustainability at a Retail Brew event next week. [Register here](. GAMES [The Puzzle Section](#) Word search: Our new Hump Day tradition asks you to find the words prompted by the visual clues. [Try it here](. The Price Is Right Because used cars have been the biggest contributor to inflation this summer, we decided to go shopping for one on cars.com.  Here's the question: How much is a 2019 Ford F-150 XLT with 16,371 miles being sold for in Bend, Oregon? Price Is Right rulesâyou canât go over. SHARE THE BREW We think you should [share the Brew.]( Not only is it a smart thing to do for your friends, itâs also the smartest way to get showered in free Brew swag and exclusive content. Your referral count: 0 [Click to Share]( Or copy & paste your referral link to others:
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