â¦and permanent daylight-saving time could be coming [Disclosures]( A Tennessee town near Dollywood, which is building more housing for theme park employees [George Rose/Getty Images] Yesterdayâs Market Moves Dow Jones
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$41,170 (+4.78%) Dow Jones
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$41,170 (+4.78%) Hey Snackers, Enjoy your unblemished bracket while you can: the opening round of March Madness kicks off this afternoon. BTW: the odds of acing a bracket? Roughly [1 in 9 quintillion](. Gâluck. Stocks rallied after the Fed raised interest rates by a quarter point â and signaled that up to six more hikes could be in the works this year to check inflation. Ukrainian President Zelensky addressed the US Congress yesterday, invoking Pearl Harbor and 9/11 as he pleaded for more help defending against Russia. The White House is sending Ukraine an additional $800M in aid, for a total of $2B so far. Bright Daylight-saving time could become permanent, but the economics are a mixed bag Bipartisanship lives⦠Hold your clocks: This week, senators made a unanimous vote: to make daylight-saving time permanent (starting next year). Now the bill heads to the House, where its fate is uncertain. President Biden hasnât weighed in over whether heâll sign it. - Oven clock, still wrong: Nearly half of US states already [passed]( laws to make DST (the âspring forwardâ period weâre in now) permanent if Congress allows it. (FYI: Arizona and Hawaii are the only states that donât observe DST.)
- Ripples: The outcome has implications on everything from productivity and mental health to retail revenue. Walking on sunshine⦠In the 1900s, a British architect first [floated]( the idea of shifting clocks so that summer days could be longer. But it wasn't until WWI that it caught on: Germany was the first to adopt DST, touting its "energy-saving" benefits. The UK, France, and the US followed. But messing with the clocks has consequences: - Closing time: For retailers, when the clocks turn back so do profits. Some studies have found that shoppers spend nearly 4% less in the month following DST.
- In the spring: By one account, losing an hour of sleep adds up to nearly half a billion dollars in lost productivity.
- In the fall: Studies also found that SAT [scores]( dropped 2% when taken after the time change â and the extra hour of darkness can increase depression by more than 10%. THE TAKEAWAY Lighter later has pros and cons⦠70% of Americans say they hate changing the clock. But weâve been here before: during the energy crisis of [1973]( the US made DST [permanent]( hoping it would save energy (later sunset = less need for electricity). But after pre-sunrise car accidents increased and energy savings werenât huge, Congress [nixed]( it nine months later. Fifty years on, itâs popular to want a single time system â but thereâs [disagreement]( over which one. Pow Vail Resorts vows to build more worker housing as WFH hot spots become the new company towns No room at the inn⦠Resorts have a new customer: their own employees. Itâs so hard for mountain residents to find affordable housing that resorts are building their own apartments for workers. Publicly listed ski biz [Vail Resorts]( [said]( yesterday that it plans to âaggressivelyâ build affordable housing for its lift operators and other employees. The ski biz is also bumping wages for hourly workers by 30%. - Ski bum-mer: Vail already had 7K corporate beds across its 37 mountains. But after rent prices in many ski towns [spiked]( 20%+ during the pandemic, it needs more. Ultrawealthy Aspen, Colorado, has 3K affordable housing [units]( in a town of 7.5K â including hundreds owned by Aspen Ski Co.
- Not just the slopes: An auto-shop owner in Breckenridge [built]( apartments on top of his garage. Employers in FL, WI, and TN have also developed staff housing. Last resort⦠In the past two years, high-earning remote workers have ditched big cities for the mountains, beach towns, lakeside spots, and other desirable WFH destinations. The result: rental prices in attractive locales have soared, pricing out the lower-paid service workers who keep those economies humming. - From mountains to sea: Colorado ski town Crested Butte [declared]( a housing emergency in June, and rents in warmer resort hotspots in Hilton Head, SC, and Orlando, FL, surged 24% in the past year. THE TAKEAWAY Not all services work on Zoom⦠Many companies are [offering]( remote options to keep workers through the Great Resignation. But hospitality businesses like Vail need IRL staff. So Vailâs becoming a landlord to hold on to talent, not to create a new revenue stream. Itâs a throwback to the early 1900s, when big employers like [Hershey]( Steinway, and Kohler built entire âcompany townsâ to house workers, though with [mixed results](. What else we're Snackin' - [Reshuffle]( [Starbucks]( CEO Kevin Johnson is retiring after five years on the job, and former chief exec Howard Schultz is filling in temporarily. Itâs the third time Schultz will run the coffee colossus.
- [Go]( EU regulators greenlighted [Amazonâs]( multibillion-dollar purchase of MGM, the movie studio behind James Bond. Now itâs in the hands of the FTC, which must thumbs up or challenge the deal on antitrust grounds within days.
- [Ring]( 5G phones are the norm now, officially making up more than half of global cell sales thanks largely to iPhone sales. 5G optimists say the tech will enable autonomous driving, factory automation, and the Internet of Things.
- [Charge]( [Mercedes-Benz]( is opening a $1B EV battery plant near its Alabama factory, which the German lux giant will retool to make electric SUVs, the latest in a wave of EV investments in Southern states.
- [Logan]( Bernard Arnault, the 73-year-old billionaire chief of [LVMH]( raised the companyâs CEO age limit to 80 from 70 so that he stays in charge. The move appears to be teeing up a âSuccessionâ-like showdown among his five kids. ðª Thanks for Snacking with us! Want to share the Snacks? Invite your friends to sign up [here](. The Snacks Daily Podcast He didnât show up as an avatar, but Mark Zuckerberg still made a splash at SXSW when he announced Instagram is getting into NFTs. [Tune in]( to hear why centralized platforms are snatching up decentralized assets. Snack Fact Of the Day [The Chicago River is dyed shamrock green for St. Patrickâs Day using a powder derived from vegetables. The exact recipeâs a tightly held secret]( Thursday - Weekly jobless claims
- St. Patrickâs Day
- Earnings expected from: Accenture, FedEx, Dollar General, Warby Parker, and Scholastic Authors of this Snacks own: shares of Starbucks, and Amazon ID: 2084282 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](
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