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🛍️ Holiday-spending conundrum

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Mon, Dec 5, 2022 12:08 PM

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…from Amazon to Walmart, holiday shopping is sweet ? Charging it to the credit card ? Last

…from Amazon to Walmart, holiday shopping is sweet (so far) [Disclosures](   Charging it to the credit card (Davide Bonaldo/Getty Images)   Last Week’s Market Moves   Dow Jones 34,430 (+0.24%) S&P 500 4,072 (+1.13%) Nasdaq 11,462 (+2.09%) Bitcoin $17,064 (+3.43%) Dow Jones 34,430 (+0.24%) S&P 500 4,072 (+1.13%) Nasdaq 11,462 (+2.09%) Bitcoin $17,064 (+3.43%) Hey Snackers, New job posting alert: Chief Rodent Officer. NYC Mayor Eric Adams is [seeking]( a “somewhat bloodthirsty” person to lead the city’s battle against millions of rats. The director of rodent mitigation could earn up to $170K/year. In the corporate rat race, that’s serious cheese. Stocks rose for the week after the Fed indicated it’s on track to hike rates by half a percentage point in December, a cooldown from the last four “jumbo” hikes of 75 bps. On Friday, the November jobs report showed stronger-than-expected hiring and wage growth. Btw... Do you want to start getting Snacks daily? Or prefer to unsubscribe? Manage your subscription preferences [here](. Spree Holiday shopping is sweet so far, but the spending spree could be a double-edged sword Crossing off the Xmas list… one Paw Patrol toy at a time. A record 197M Americans shopped between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday, up 10% from last year. Spending hit $9.5B as folks splurged on everything from new MacBooks to Dyson Airwraps to “Encanto” dolls. - [Amazon]( said it sold “hundreds of millions” of items between Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday in its biggest Thanksgiving holiday weekend ever. - [Walmart]( saw a 5% dip in store traffic, but its online searches for Black Friday discounts nearly 5X’d from last year. - Overall, holiday spend is forecast to grow between 6% and 8% this year — slower than last year, but still above historical averages. The consumer’s alive and well… but the clock is ticking. Investors keep a close eye on consumer spending because it makes up two-thirds of US GDP. In October, spending growth accelerated from September as inflation cooled slightly. Americans splurged on new cars, furniture, makeup, and eating out — a sign that discretionary spending’s still hot. But as inflation-adjusted “real wages” dip, shoppers are racking up debt to keep splurging: - IOUs up: US credit-card balances jumped 15% in Q3, the biggest year-over-year spike in over two decades. Meanwhile… - Savings down: Americans are stashing cash at the lowest rate since 2005 and dipping into pandemic savings to fund their lifestyles. THE TAKEAWAY Spending is a double-edged sword… It’s typically good for the economy, but it can exacerbate inflation (bad for the economy). Inflation is cooling, yet sustained levels of high spending could spell more trouble ahead. Last month, the US added a whopping 263K jobs while wages spiked. A hot labor market, coupled with high spending, could compel the Fed to keep hiking rates. With economists forecasting a 2023 recession, Americans could enter the next downturn with a lot less cash cushion than they had during the pandemic. Events Coming up this week... Khakis < stretchy chinos… As workers return to offices, they’re keeping their clothes casual. That benefits legging legend [Lululemon]( which has been expanding its work-leisure offerings for years. Lulu thrived in the pandemic as loungewear became the norm everywhere. The good times stretched on in the September quarter as Lulu’s sales and profits beat expectations (again). Lulu also boosted its outlook in September, but we’ll see whether shoppers are still splurging on lavishly priced Lulu fits when it reports Thursday. Tomato bisque FTW... While the market has tanked, [Campbell Soup]( stock is up 25% this year. The 153-year-old canned-soup icon has been on a pandemic streak ever since people started hoarding its pantry staples (snacks like Goldfish and Snyder’s make up over half its sales). In Campbell’s last reported quarter, sales were up 6% — impressive considering its soup sales had fallen for eight of the nine years up to 2020. Big food companies like [Kellogg]( [Pepsi]( and [Kraft]( have also outperformed. We’ll see if Campbell’s soup is still hot when it reports Wednesday. Zoom Out Stories we’re watching... Yellen from the mountaintops… for tougher crypto regs. Last week Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said that FTX's collapse — and the loss of billions in customer funds — made crypto regulation urgent. Last week the Senate held a hearing on FTX with Rostin Behnam, chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, who testified that his agency needs Congress to give it power to prevent future crypto calamities. The twist: Behnam's pushing for a bill (the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act) once promoted by then-FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. Yes cap… On Friday, EU countries agreed to cap the price of Russian crude at $60/barrel. The cap sets a max purchasing price on Russian oil to hurt the Kremlin’s income, which is fueling its war on Ukraine. As of today, the EU will also ban seaborne imports of Russian oil (though pipelines will keep flowing). The cap might not be very effective, though, since China and India, the biggest buyers of Russian oil, don’t seem inclined to support it. Meanwhile, Russia has said it won’t sell oil to countries who implement a cap. That could exacerbate the winter energy crunch. ICYMI Last week's highlights... - [Flix]( [Netflix]( reportedly plans to expand its Preview Club to boost engagement by letting viewers shape content before it goes live. The streamer added humor to “Don’t Look Up” based on (pre)viewers’ feedback. - [Sublet]( [Airbnb]( teamed up with landlords to boost the supply of (legally) Airbnb-able apartments, which it’s short on. No more need to tell your neighbors — ahem — “those are just my French cousins.” - [Blue]( As [Twitter]( tries to diversify beyond ad revenue with subs, Elon Musk criticized Apple’s 30% “app tax,” joining critics like Epic Games and [Spotify](. But antagonizing Apple could have consequences. What else we're Snackin' - [Sick]( President Biden signed legislation to avert a rail strike. The sticking point had been paid sick days. Railroad operators' refusal to grant them is due partly to industry changes like worker cuts. - [Zero]( China started loosening some of its strict zero-Covid policies after a rare wave of mass protests to the disruptive rules. Major cities like Shanghai and Hangzhou scrapped PCR testing requirements for entry into public venues like parks and subways. - [Finklept]( A congressional probe says several fintechs helped push through sketchy applications to the $800B pandemic Paycheck Protection Program, likely contributing to as much as $4B in PPP fraud. Want your Snacks daily? The Daily Newsletter Get fresh takes on financial news every week day. Try a sample: 🍿 [Netflix’s sneak-peek strategy]( • Dec 2, 2022 🏢 [Airbnb's sublease play]( • Dec 1, 2022 🐦 [Elon’s Apple beef]( • Nov 30, 2022 [Subscribe to the Daily]( Snack Fact Of the Day When adjusted for inflation, global wages have fallen this year for the first time on record [Read more]( This Week - Monday: Earnings expected from GitLab - Tuesday: Earnings expected from AutoZone, MongoDB, HealthEquity, Toll Brothers, Dave & Buster’s, and Stitch Fix - Wednesday: Earnings expected from Campbell Soup and The Duckhorn Portfolio - Thursday: Jobless claims. Earnings expected from Costco, Broadcom, Lululemon, Chewy, Vail Resorts, DocuSign, and National Beverage - Friday: Earnings expected from Oracle and Johnson Outdoors Authors of this Snacks own: shares of Amazon, Netflix, Spotify, and Walmart ID: 2621840 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]( To unsubscribe from all commercial emails, click [here](

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