â¦and the recession convo intensifies [Disclosures]( Big Tech has the cloud market on lock (Jeffrey Coolidge / Getty Images) Last Weekâs Market Moves Dow Jones
32,845 (+2.97%) S&P 500
4,130 (+4.26%) Nasdaq
12,391 (+4.70%) Bitcoin
$23,798 (+4.89%) Dow Jones
32,845 (+2.97%) S&P 500
4,130 (+4.26%)
Nasdaq
12,391 (+4.70%) Bitcoin
$23,798 (+4.89%) Hey Snackers, Call it chef-as-a-service: Wonder, a $3.5B startup, delivers gourmet chefs to your door in [Mercedes]( vans. The chefs finish cooking meals (like Bobby Flayâs rib eye) at your curb for a restaurant-fresh taste. But some suburbanites [arenât loving]( the vansâ presence. The S&P 500 surged 4% for the week and closed out its best month in nearly two years. Investors were inspired by healthier-than-expected earnings from biggies like [Apple]( and [Amazon](. Btw... Do you want to start getting Snacks daily? Or prefer to unsubscribe? Manage your subscription preferences [here](. Cloudy Cloud helped super-charge tech profits during the pandemic â but recession belt- tightening could bring demand down to earth Choose your fighter⦠OG Word Doc on your hard drive vs. [Google]( Doc in the cloud. Amazon, [Microsoft]( and Google control nearly two-thirds of all cloud spending (think: companies storing their data on other companies' servers vs. on-premises). They reported mixed results last week and have seen their stocks plunge this year as higher interest rates and slower ad spend hurt growth prospects. But cloud has been a silver lining. Last quarter: - Amazonâs AWS (the #1 cloud service) grew revenue by 33% to $19.7B, and accounted for all of the âZonâs profits as its core shopping biz continued slowing.
- Microsoftâs Intelligent cloud revenue (which make up more than a third of its sales) grew 26% thanks to corporate customers like [GM]( and [Kraft-Heinz](.
- Googleâs cloud revenue climbed 35%, but the pace of growth slowed and the cloud division lost $858M. Crank up the AWS storage⦠The pandemic drove massive corporate cloud spending as millions of Americans worked from home. Big companies leveraged their cash-flush coffers to quickly expand their cloud infrastructure to meet demand. The hot streak continued this year, with global enterprise cloud revenue up [34%]( in the first quarter. But the boom might be slowing. THE TAKEAWAY Storm clouds may be brewing⦠Investors have looked to the cloud as a profit cushion for tech companies when ad sales and consumer demand slow. But recession fears, rising costs, and slowing growth could push companies to cut and reevaluate cloud spend to boost their own profit margins. Analysts expect cloud growth to slow by [half]( in the coming years. Still, cloud giantsâ pricing power could allow them to raise costs to keep revenues afloat. In March, Google [hiked]( its cloud storage prices by as much as 50%. Zoom Out Stories weâre watching... The latest national debate⦠âRecession or nah?â Last week, we learned that the US economy shrank for a second-straight quarter (aka: the common definition of a recession). But recessions are difficult to call, and are labeled retrospectively. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), which officially determines recessions, is taking a more nuanced approach. While consumer sentiment is at a record low, the cooling job market is still fairly strong â and most earnings so far have beat expectations. Still, [most]( Americans think the US is already in a recession. Americaâs hungry for chips⦠And itâs splurging to satisfy its craving. Last week, Congress [passed]( CHIPS-Plus, a bill to boost US chip production. The US has lost global chip-making market share in recent years: Taiwanâs [TSMC]( makes 90% of the worldâs advanced chips. Meanwhile, China plans to build 31 more chip factories by 2024. Foreign reliance worsened US supply shortages, since chips are key to everything from [Ford]( cars to iPhones. CHIPS includes $52B in subsidies for US chip giants like [Lattice]( [AMD]( and [ON]( (which report this week). President Biden is expected to approve the bill within weeks. Events Coming up this week... Andy Grammer, live from the Greek⦠Earnings, live from the boardroom. Concert giant [Live Nation]( reports Thursday. The Ticketmaster-owner had its best first quarter ever this year, as artists returned to fan-packed venues. Through April, Live Nationâs bookings were up 44% from pre-pandemic levels. In May, Live Nation anticipated a record year based on concert and festival ticket demand (think: Lollapalooza). But the average resale ticket price has soared [45%]( since the start of the pandemic, when Live Nationâs biz was decimated. Weâll see if concert-flation hit â or helped â earnings. Bye bye YOLO economy⦠People are feeling less lucky this year, and casino resort companies may take a hit. US casinos had their best year ever in 2021 as cooped-up consumers returned to spend their lockdown stimmy savings. Since then, inflation has soared and savings have dried up. Casino stocks have [lagged]( behind the S&P 500 this year. People are still visiting, but theyâre not spending as much (less Blackjack, more all-you-can-eat buffet). Weâll see how the odds look when [Caesarâs]( and [MGM Resorts]( report this week. ICYMI Last week's highlights... - [Green]( Dems struck a surprise deal with Senator Manchin on a major climate and tax bill. The slimmed-down Build Back Better-esque proposal includes $60B for clean energy infrastructure and new tax credits for EV buyers.
- [Short]( [Reckitt]( is cashing in on the national baby formula shortage. The Lysol-makersâ share of the US formula market has surged from 40% to 55%. Now, regulators may loosen rules to boost competition and production.
- [Glossy]( Gen Z-fave cosmetics brand Glossier will sell its products in Sephoraâs stores and sites starting next year. A broader physical presence could be key to success as digi-storefronts get overcrowded. What else we're Snackin' - [Garbage]( A man is trying to track down a hard drive with 8K [bitcoins]( â now worth $181M â that he accidentally threw away in 2013 (whoopsie). He organized an $11M, VC-funded proposal to search his local dump.
- [Gen]( Chinaâs Gen Z is facing growing pains. Expected starting salaries for college grads have fallen 6% from last year and unemployment among 16-to-24-year-old urbanites has hit a record 19%.
- [Factory]( A Reuters investigation found that a Hyundai subsidiary in Alabama used underage workers. The sub and Hyundai denied the allegations but a former OSHA official said "consumers should be outraged." Want your Snacks daily? The Daily Newsletter Get fresh takes on financial news every week day. Try a sample: âï¸ [Build back greener]( ⢠Jul 29, 2022
ð¼ [Reckittâs formula boom]( ⢠Jul 28, 2022
âï¸ [Walmart cuts prices]( ⢠Jul 27, 2022 [Subscribe to the Daily]( Snack Fact Of the Day The Mega Millions jackpot was won in Illinois at $1.3B and is the second-largest jackpot in the gameâs 20-year history [Read more]( This Week - Monday: Earnings expected from HSBC, Activision Blizzard, ZoomInfo, Loews, ON Semiconductor, and Lattice Semiconductor
- Tuesday: Earnings expected from Avis, AMD, PayPal, BP, Ferrari, Electronic Arts, Molson Coors, Caesars Entertainment, and Uber
- Wednesday: Earnings expected from Match Group, Toyota, CVS, Regeneron, Moderna, Yum! Brands, Occidental Petroleum, Clorox, MGM Resorts, GoDaddy, The New York Times, Scotts Miracle-Gro, Hostess, and Lucid
- Thursday: Jobless claims. Earnings expected from Block, Eli Lilly, ConocoPhillips, Duke Energy, Public Storage, Monster Beverage, Warner Bros. Discovery, Live Nation, DoorDash, Kellogg, Cloudflare, Expedia, AMC, Zillow, and Dropbox
- Friday: Monthly employment numbers. Earnings expected from Goodyear Tire & Rubber Authors of this Snacks own: bitcoin and shares of Amazon, Microsoft, Google, GM, New York Times, Apple, Uber, Block, Moderna, CVS, GM, Paypal, Warner Bros. Discovery, Match Group, Molson Coors, and Ford ID: 2330113 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](
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