â¦and Taco Bellâs Mexican Pizza quarter (feat. Pete Davidson) [Disclosures]( Let the good times roll (Spencer Platt/Getty Images) Yesterdayâs Market Moves Dow Jones
33,949 (-0.61%) S&P 500
4,118 (-1.11%) Nasdaq
11,911 (-1.68%) Bitcoin
$22,940 (-1.32%) Dow Jones
33,949 (-0.61%) S&P 500
4,118 (-1.11%)
Nasdaq
11,911 (-1.68%) Bitcoin
$22,940 (-1.32%) Hey Snackers, A Manhattan jury awarded Hermès $133K in trademark-infringement damages after [concluding]( that an artist's MetaBirkin NFTs (think: digital versions of the pricey bags) are more like commodities than actual art. Nobody tell Andy Warhol. Stocks fell after a mixed bag of earnings. So far, 42 companies in the S&P 500 have issued negative earnings guidance for the first quarter â a historically high share. Hail Uber reports record revenue as the return to the office tees up the ride-hail biz for gains 5 stars⦠[Uber]( reported a record $8.6B in quarterly revenue, with CEO Dara Khosrowshahi [saying]( it was the company's strongest quarter ever. That record represents a 49% jump on the year and was made possible by 131M customers hailing 2.1B rides â up from 1.7B a year earlier. Driving the growth: - Folks: Uber's rides biz, which makes up nearly half its total sales, was the fastest-growing unit last quarter with stretch-limo-sized 82% growth from last year.
- Freight: Uberâs freight biz, which connects semitruck drivers with high-volume loads (like trucks full of Pepsi), did $1.5B in revenue, up 43% from last year.
- Fries: Its Eats delivery unit grew 21% from last year â a slower pace than during pandemic boom times, when it overtook Uberâs rides division.
- Flyers: Uber also got a boost from recently introduced [in-app ads]( (think: beer promo as you book your ride to the bar). Pass the AUX cord⦠With Uber setting records, investors are all ears for [Lyft's]( earnings, scheduled for today. The smaller of the two ride-hail whales, Lyft has long focused on moving people (instead of people plus Happy Meals). Lyftâs expected to have grown revenue by 19% from last year, to $1.1B+. But the fact that its prices were typically 10% higher than Uber's could have hurt bookings as people price-toggled between apps. THE TAKEAWAY Diversification can come in clutch⦠With the return to the office picking up steam â US offices passed the 50%-occupancy mark last week â Lyft's ride-centric biz could be primed for gains. Though Lyft could benefit from the same ride boom lifting Uber, its hyper focus on passengers could be a double-edged sword. Recall: Lyft got hit extra hard during the pandemic as ride-hail volumes plunged, while Uber had its food-delivery biz to fall back on. KenTaco Taco Bellâs parent outperformed on Mexican Pizza, Pete Davidson, and the new buzzword: âvalueâ Mexican Pizza and Pete Davidson⦠the secret ingredients to Taco Bellâs strong quarter. [Yum Brands]( â which owns Taco Bell, KFC, and Pizza Hut (#KenTacoHut) â delivered expectation-beating sales and profit yesterday, largely driven by its shining star, T. Bell. Covid lockdowns weighed on Pizza Hut and KFC sales in China (KFCâs largest market). But same-store sales at US Taco Bells grew 11%. Some viral hits driving demand: - Tortilla triumph: Execs said Taco Bell sold a whopping 45M Mexican Pizzas during the four months that the culinary creation was available last year (Dolly Parton is a [fan](.
- Breakfast with Pete: Taco Bellâs breakfast biz is making a comeback as people return to offices, and an ad featuring [Pete Davidson]( generated breakfast buzz. A mixed (takeout) bag... Pizza Hut had a solid quarter as consumers recovered from â[pizza fatigue]( after over-ordering during lockdowns. The Hut also got a boost from demand on delivery platforms and cheaper pizza-novations like Melts, which attracted folks with lower incomes. Some other fast-eating results: - Burrito bust: [Chipotle]( disappointed as transactions fell for the second straight quarter. Itâs hiked prices a lot, but says it hasnât seen backlash to its inflated bowls.
- McWin: [McDonaldâs]( had strong earnings last quarter after lowering prices, as consumers [returned]( for its affordable staples. THE TAKEAWAY âValueâ has become more valuable⦠because both high and low-income consumers are trading down for better deals. While Yum hiked some prices, it kept a mix of affordable items. Yumâs CEO said, âWeâre winning because of value.â But Chipotleâs relatively pricey bowls mayâve unwhetted some appetites. Now even it says it doesnât have plans for more hikes this year. What else we're Snackin' - [Unplus]( [Disney]( beat expectations thanks to strong spending at its theme parks and resorts, but Disney+ had its first decline in subs. Also: Disneyâs cutting 7K jobs as part of a huge cost slashing.
- [Botted]( [Google]( shares fell 8% yesterday after it showed off its new ChatGPT rival (dubbed: Bard) at an AI event. A day earlier, [Microsoft]( flaunted its new ChatGPT-powered Bing as the chatbot battle intensifies.
- [Advil]( [CVS]( topped estimates, thanks to strong growth in its healthcare division and solid retail sales (cough: more cold and flu meds). It also said itâs buying primary-care-clinic operator [Oak Street Health]( for $10.6B.
- [Noflix]( [Netflix]( said its long-promised crackdown on password mooching will kick off in four countries ahead of a US rollout next month. The streamerâs trying to win back $$ from the 100M+ account-sharing households.
- [BlockchAIn]( AI is the new buzzword, and crypto investors want in. An index of 73 cryptocurrencies with (tenuous) links to AI outperformed the broader crypto market, up 87% in the past week. ðª Thanks for Snacking with us! Want to share the Snacks? Invite your friends to sign up [here](. Snack Fact Of the Day Washington, DC, has more tech-job openings than Silicon Valley [Read more]( Thursday - Earnings expected from Pepsi, AbbVie, Hilton, Canopy Growth, Toyota, Phillip Morris, AstraZeneca, Ralph Lauren, Duke Energy, Kellogg, and Warner Music Group Authors of this Snacks own shares: of Disney, CVS, Google, Uber, Microsoft, and Yum Brands ID: 2729780 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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