â¦âreopening maniaâ is happening, but prices are poisoning the return [Disclosures]( What do you mean âno vax card requiredâ? [SolStock/E+ via Getty Images] Last Weekâs Market Moves Dow Jones
34,079 (-1.90%) S&P 500
4,349 (-1.58%) Nasdaq
13,548 (-1.76%) Bitcoin
$39,959 (-5.76%) Dow Jones
34,079 (-1.90%) S&P 500
4,349 (-1.58%)
Nasdaq
13,548 (-1.76%) Bitcoin
$39,959 (-5.76%) Hey Snackers, Happy Twosday, 2-22-22. Something else that looks identical: TikTok influencers are [cloning]( their cats and dogs for $50K by sending furry DNA to pet-cloning company ViaGen Pets (same one that cloned Barbra Streisandâs beloved Sammie). Stocks fell last week amid worries that Russia was preparing to invade Ukraine. Yesterday, Russian President Vladimir Putin [ordered]( "peacekeeping" troops into a pair of breakaway regions of eastern Ukraine after recognizing their independence, in a major escalation of tensions that sent global stocks down and oil up heading into a shortened trading week. Want to start getting Snacks daily? Or prefer to unsubscribe? Manage your subscription preferences [here](. Endgame "Reopening mania" is building, but there's a dark cloud over it â and your wallet feels it Feels so normal, it's abnormal... walking to the restaurant bathroom unmasked. We thought "back to normal" was happening this winter, until Omicron. But now that cases have waned and proved less severe, a national reopening mania has started... for real. Anticipation is growing: - Restrictions are falling daily. Half of US states have [ditched]( mask mandates over the past month, and even the CDC wants to give people [a break](. Lots of Super Bowl fans were unmasked at a sold-out stadium, and Coachella and Stagecoach say they wonât have Covid-related restrictions when their festivals return in April.
- Spending is up. January saw the strongest monthly gain in retail sales since March 2020, when the first stimulus checks hit. Retail sales were up 4% from December.
- Travel is rebounding, and [Marriott]( [Hilton]( and [Airbnb]( [expect]( global travel to surpass pre-Covid levels this year. But there's a dark cloud... over reopening. Consumer prices were up 7.5% in January from a year earlier, the fastest increase in 40 years. While retail sales jumped, itâs [partly]( due to higher prices â not more purchases. Wages are rising, but pay bumps [haven't]( kept up with inflation. - Consumers are feeling it â especially low-income Americans. Food prices are up 7% from a year ago, and gas is up 40%. [Walmart]( the consumer bellwether, [says]( shoppers are on edge about grocery bills. Meanwhile, consumer sentiment is at a decade [low](.
- Companies are passing on rising costs to consumers, as inflation starts to dent profits. Still: Profit at the 500 largest companies were up 50% last year as consumers [proved willing]( to pay more. [Coke]( [Pepsi]( and [Procter & Gamble]( reported [strong sales]( despite upping prices. THE TAKEAWAY Prices are spoiling the party⦠Literally: booze giant [Constellation]( [wants]( to raise prices as much as buyers can absorb. But thereâs medicine in sight. Last summer, the Fed wasnât expected to raise rates until next year. Now at least three hikes are expected this year. Rising rates could hurt stocks and spending short term, but help consumers and the economy long term by curbing inflation. Zoom Out Stories weâre watching⦠House of Gucci... Lux brands took a hit when lockdowns curbed the need for Balenciaga sneaks and Prada bucket hats. Last year, Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent owner Kering had a record $20B comeback. Gucci sales jumped 30% last quarter thanks to big marketing and huge China demand. Luxe giants like Kering and [LVMH]( are well positioned as prices rise: their customers are less price sensitive, and higher prices = #exclusivity. Now lux brands are looking to the metaverse. Last year, a Gucci digi-purse sold on [Roblox]( for nearly 20% more than the leather version. [Google]( searched... its soul. Digital ad giants are nervous. Last week Google said it would [stop]( advertisers from tracking Android users, after [Apple]( made a similar [move]( last year. Since Android phones make up 70% of global smartphones, the change could cut into sales at [Twitter]( [Snap]( [Pinterest]( and [Meta](. This year Meta [expects]( to lose $10B in ad revenue from Appleâs update, and its stock has fallen 45% from its September peak. Meta has told investors to stay tuned for its meta investments, but they may take a while to offset slowing ad sales. Events Coming up this week... Extreme makeover, pro edition⦠Home-improvement chains saw monster sales during the pandemic as we spent weekends building [Zoom]( home offices. Now the experts are taking over. [Home Depot's]( pro biz (think: drywall, drill [rentals]( has topped DIY as homeowners outsource their paint jobs to contractors (who spend more $$ than DIYers). Last quarter, rival [Lowe's]( [raised]( its sales forecast, partially thanks to a 16% spike in pro sales. Weâll see if it can keep boosting the bottom line for Loweâs and the Depot when they report this week. Market vax-uration⦠Biotech newcomer [Modernaâs]( looking for its next move. The company used its novel mRNA âplatformâ to quickly make a Covid vax, and [sold]( an estimated $15B+ of jabs last year. But Modernaâs biz is vulnerable since it makes only one product, and sales growth is slowing as vax rates plateau. Shares are down 70% from their September peak, and now Modernaâs spending billions to boost production abroad and add potential blockbuster HIV and flu drugs to its pipeline. Weâll see how those investments are tracking when Moderna reports on Thursday. ICYMI Last week's highlights... - [Chipper]( Good news re: your back-ordered laptop. Last week [Intel]( said it was buying Israeli chip maker [Tower]( for $5.4B to boost production. Chip and EV giants have pledged billions to revamp US manufacturing.
- [Ripe]( Avocados are about to cost more green: avo prices are [rising]( after the US banned imports from Mexico when a US food inspector was threatened amid cartel chaos. Mexico supplies 80% of the USâs avocados.
- [Burbs]( Auntie Anneâs for lunch: Sales at [Simon Property Group]( the largest mall owner in the US, have surpassed pre-pandemic levels. But retail in cities isnât seeing the same rebound. What else we're Snackin' - [Rollie]( It isnât just NFTs: sales of vintage watches boomed in the past year as #YOLO-minded consumers splurged on Instagrammable IRL collectibles like grandpaâs classic Submariner.
- [Mac]( A tasty way to keep an eye on inflation: The Big Mac Index has measured burger prices since 1986. Today in the US the sammie costs double what it did in 2004. FYI: A Big Mac in Switzerland is now $7.
- [Dig]( As shipping containers pile up, the US is finding new ways to navigate the supply-chain crisis. Like: using wartime air bases and digging 50 feet into the Mississippi River to make room for cargo ships. ðª Want to start Snacking daily? Sign up [here]( for our daily market newsletter. The Snacks Daily Podcast Stationery startup Papier just raised $50M so that you can ditch your Notes app for a notepad. [Tune in]( to hear how Papier is betting on an analog revolution in the age of screen fatigue. Snack Fact Of the Day [There were no statues honoring Black people in the US until 1974]( This Week - Monday: Presidentsâ Day.
- Tuesday: Earnings expected from: Home Depot, HSBC, Medtronic, Caesars Entertainment, and Macyâs
- Wednesday: Earnings expected from: Loweâs, TJX, eBay, Public Storage, Molson Coors, Monday.com, Toll Brothers, and Hertz
- Thursday: Weekly jobless claims. Earnings expected from: Intuit, Moderna, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Block, Keurig Dr Pepper, Coinbase, Monster Beverage, Planet Fitness, Etsy, and Discovery
- Friday: Earnings expected from: Liberty Media and Starwood Property Trust
- The weekend: Earnings expected from Berkshire Hathaway on Saturday. World Pistachio Day on Saturday. Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday. Authors of this Snacks own shares of: Google, Snap, Moderna, Twitter, Apple, and Block ID: 2048619 Robinhood Snacks newsletters and podcasts reflect the opinions of only the authors who are associated persons of Robinhood Financial LLC (Member [SIPC]( and do not reflect the views of Robinhood Markets, Inc. or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates. They are for informational purposes only, and are not a recommendation of an investment strategy or to buy or sell any security, digital asset (cryptocurrency, etc) in any account. They are also not research reports and are not intended to serve as the basis for any investment decision. Any third-party information provided therein does not reflect the views of Robinhood Markets, Inc., Robinhood Financial LLC, or any of their subsidiaries or affiliates. All investments involve risk including the loss of principal and past performance does not guarantee future results. [Robinhood Terms and Conditions]( ⢠[Disclosure Library]( ⢠[Our Editorial Principles]( ⢠[Contact Us]( ⢠[FAQ](
[Manage Your Subscription Preferences]( To unsubscribe from all commercial emails, click [here](