⦠and Broadcom broadens its wings [Disclosures]( At $30M an ep, weâd be smiling too (Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Netflix) Yesterdayâs Market Moves Dow Jones
32,637 (+1.61%) S&P 500
4,057 (+1.99%) Nasdaq
11,740 (+2.68%) Bitcoin
$29,159 (-0.55%) Dow Jones
32,637 (+1.61%) S&P 500
4,057 (+1.99%)
Nasdaq
11,740 (+2.68%) Bitcoin
$29,159 (-0.55%) Hey Snackers, Not even the business luminaries at Davos were spared from inflation. On the [menu]( at the World Economic Forum, which just wrapped up in Switzerland: a $51 burrito and a $22 side of fries. Stocks [rose]( for a fifth straight day on the back of retail earnings that werenât as dire as expected, putting the S&P 500 and Nasdaq on track to end their seven-week losing streaks. Ta-dum Netflix quadrupled down on âStranger Things,â which may make it harder to find its next âSquid Gameâ Dialing it up to Eleven⦠Grab some popcorn: the fourth season of one of [Netflixâs]( OG hits, âStranger Things,â drops today. But the premiere comes at a strange time for the streamer, which is trying to reverse its first subscriber [loss]( in more than a decade. - Monster-sized marketing: Netflix [transformed]( 15 global landmarks â like the Empire State Building and a Polish castle â into giant âSTâ ads.
- Big budget: Each of the nine âSTâ episodes this season reportedly cost $30M to produce â more than the combined annual salaries of all 150 employees Netflix laid off this month. Itâs been 36 weeks since âSquid Gameâ⦠and Netflix is desperate for another huge hit. Itâs lost nearly 70% of its market cap this year. To reverse its stock slide, Netflix has started cutting costs by laying off staff and telling employees to curb spending â and even [starting]( work on a free ad-supported tier. But thereâs one place Netflix still isnât skimping: content. - Still king: Last year Netflix made 500 originals. This year it plans fewer, but still aims to spend $20B on content (an increase over â21). Translation: hit shows get more $$, but you get fewer new shows to binge. THE TAKEAWAY Cutting costs comes with a cost⦠Splurging on content is in Netflixâs DNA: it became the top streamer by bankrolling hits like âThe Crownâ ($520M and counting). But now itâs in a predicament: it needs to cut costs to compete with faster-growing rivals like [HBO]( and [Apple]( â and it canât afford to turn off its content firehose. Doubling down on existing shows could cost Netflix to miss out on its next surprise hit. âSquid Game,â Netflixâs most-watched show ever, cost 1/12th of one episode of âStranger Things.â Cloudy Broadcom gets into the lucrative world of enterprise software with its VMware acquisition â if regulators donât step in first Mega-deal alert⦠Yesterday, chipmaker [Broadcom]( confirmed plans to buy software developer [VMware]( for $61B â what would be the third-largest tech deal in history and one of the biggest overall deals of the year. Refresher: VMware was one of the pioneers of early cloud-computing tech for big biz (aka: the $672B enterprise market), and was spun off last year by its former owner, [Dell](. Whatâs on the table: - Broadcom expands its mostly chip-based portfolio by [tripling]( its software biz, which the company has been growing through smaller acquisitions. VMware also gives Bâcom a foothold in the boring-sounding but lucrative world of corporate data centers.
- VMware partners with all the big cloud providers, like [Google]( [Microsoft]( and [Amazon]( meaning Broadcom becomes a more integral part of the âplumbingâ of the modern internet. Broadcomâs bag of chips⦠has a lot of variety. From WiFi and Bluetooth to powering appliances, Broadcomâs semiconductors play a crucial component in connecting most of your everyday gadgets. But in the past year the global chip shortage has forced the company to limit how many orders it can fill, sacrificing [sales](. Enterprise software is an attractive way for Bâcom to diversify because itâs a strong market filled with deep-pocketed customers that provide recurring revenue streams. THE TAKEAWAY Nothingâs done till itâs done⦠Broadcom tried to buy rival chipmaker [Qualcomm]( in 2018 but was blocked by the Trump administration on antitrust and national-security grounds. Even though VMware isnât a direct rival, the Biden administration has been skeptical of big corporate tie-ups: it recently sued to block a different chip merger between [Nvidia]( and Arm, which led to the dealâs collapse. What else we're Snackin' - [Chicken]( [Costco]( brought in $1B more than expected in sales last quarter, as members flocked to its cheaper gas prices and then stuck around to shop. But those revenues didnât translate into better-than-expected profit.
- [Bargain]( Middle-class shoppers are going deal-hunting down-market. Thatâs the earnings story from [Dollar Tree]( and [Dollar General](. Both chains boosted their outlooks, as they tend to outperform when the economy stalls.
- [Drill]( The UK is hitting oil companies like [BP]( and [Shell]( with a 25% âwindfall taxâ meant to help consumers with soaring energy prices. Critics say the tax will discourage investment and lead to even higher prices.
- [Fly]( Jack Dorsey stepped down from [Twitterâs]( board (as planned ever since he left the CEO gig). Heâs reportedly been talking to Elon about rolling his ownership stake into the takeover bid (which is still on, BTW).
- [TKO]( Justin Timberlake sold his music catalog for $100M to a [Blackstone]( management firm. JT is the latest (and one of the youngest) musicians to sell his body of work in a hot market for streaming rights. ðª Thanks for Snacking with us! Want to share the Snacks? Invite your friends to sign up [here](. Snack Fact Of the Day The end of May was chosen for Memorial Day because thereâd be enough flowers in bloom to decorate soldiersâ graves [Read more]( Friday - Earnings expected from: Big Lots, Pinduoduo, and Canopy Growth Authors of this Snacks own shares of Amazon, Apple, Canopy Growth, Google, Microsoft, Netflix, and Twitter ID: 2221138 Robinhood Snacks newsletters 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](