â¦and Amazonâs Roomba-quisition gets anti-trusted [Disclosures]( Springinâ for spring break (Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) Yesterdayâs Market Moves Dow Jones
34,030 (+1.14%) S&P 500
4,146 (+1.33%) Nasdaq
12,166 (+1.99%) Bitcoin
$30,316 (+1.41%) Dow Jones
34,030 (+1.14%) S&P 500
4,146 (+1.33%)
Nasdaq
12,166 (+1.99%) Bitcoin
$30,316 (+1.41%) Hey Snackers, Calling all treasure hunters: a museum in Maine [offered]( a $25K reward for the first person to find a piece of a meteor seen flying over the state last week. This one really does belong in a museum. Stocks popped yesterday, led by the techy Nasdaq, after fresh data showed that producer prices (an important contributor to inflation) cooled last month. Next up: big banks kick off earnings season with household names like [JPMorgan Chase]( and [Citi]( reporting today. Cabo Delta enjoys higher bookings as consumers splurge on âdelayed YOLOâ experiences Biscoff cookies and Coca-Cola⦠a match made in cabin. [Delta]( unloaded first-quarter earnings yesterday. The Atlanta-based carrier posted a chunkier-than-expected loss, partly driven by extra costs like raises for pilots and employee bonuses. But Delta said it saw sunnier skies ahead, and [forecast]( upbeat sales growth and profit for the spring. - Booked Italian summer (in March): Delta projected record advance summer bookings as consumers continue to prioritize travel, planning trips months in advance. - Champagne and free socks: First- and business-class sales (think: premium products) made up over half of Deltaâs revenue as $4K splurges on bed-like seats beat out economy spending. - Charge it to corporate: Delta said business-travel bookings have been rebounding, with US corporate sales in March at 85% of prepandemic levels. - Cloudy: Still, Delta, [JetBlue]( and other airlines are dialing back growth plans and routes as airport labor shortages and congestion limit capacity. Only 47 days left âtil check-in⦠Consumers are upping their travel spending, despite cutting back in other areas. While inflation has been steadily cooling, travel costs are still sky-high: US airline fares rose 4% from February to March, and are up 17% on the year. Spring break 2023 is expected to be the busiest travel season ever for airlines, and the TSA expects demand to keep soaring throughout the year. Last quarter, Deltaâs advance cash bookings were up nearly 20% from prepandemic levels, and CEO Ed Bastian said he doesnât see a pullback on the horizon. THE TAKEAWAY Delayed YOLO > YOLO⦠because everyone wants something to look forward to. Consumers are cutting back on instant-gratification buys like new iPhones and online-order clothing binges in favor of delayed-gratification experiences like summer vacays. Weâll get another window into the travel sector when [Alaska Airlines]( and [United Airlines]( report next week. Stuck Amazonâs Roomba-quisition is looking messy as the FTC continues its antitrust press Stuck under the couch⦠[Amazon]( $1.7B acquisition of Roomba-maker [iRobot]( has [gathered]( dust since it was announced last summer. Amazonâs potential fourth-largest acquisition ever is facing an investigation by the Federal Trade Commission and, as of last week, also by the UKâs antitrust regulator. Amazonâs already so dominant that regulators may be concerned about it ruling the vacuum world, too. - Small vac, big punch: In late 2021 iRobot held a whopping 62% of the robotic-vacuum market (excluding China) â a significantly larger market share than that held by previous Amazon buys like MGM and One Medical. - Privacy please: Antitrust and data-privacy experts are concerned that the acquisition might give Amazon access to Roomba customer data (picture: cameras that map homes to avoid couch run-ins). - Sputtering: iRobot shares are down 32% from Amazonâs $61/share offering. Dusting off powers⦠The FTC, under chair Lina Khan, has grown much tougher on big tech in recent years. In December, the agency sued to block [Microsoft]( $69B takeover of [Activision Blizzard]( and earlier this month ordered biotech company [Illumina]( to undo its $7B buyout of cancer-test developer Grail. The moves may be having an effect: last year, [Nvidia]( ditched plans to buy chip maker Arm in what wouldâve been the biggest semiconductor deal ever. Looking ahead, the FTC last month vowed to protect competition in the AI industry. THE TAKEAWAY Antitrust is getting even anti-er⦠and that could be bad news for tech titans. In 2017, Amazon completed its $13.7B Whole Foods buyout within three months â now, itâs eight months into trying to buy iRobot. US tech mergers and acquisitions were down last year as companies faced a tougher market and the risk of FTC lawsuits. Given the agencyâs new groove, cost-cutting companies might think twice about snatching up startups. STAKED The Crypto Catch-Up⦠ð¤ Techy⦠[Ethereum]( the second largest crypto, successfully [completed]( a major update dubbed [Shanghai](. Validators who locked up ether as collateral can finally begin to withdraw (and sell) their staked coins. About that⦠ðª Coins⦠As of yesterday, validators had [queued]( up $1.7B+ worth of staked ether to withdraw. The Shanghai update limits the # of coins which can be pulled out at once, so those who want to withdraw staked ETH have to get in line. ð¶ï¸ Spicy⦠Crypto has a reputation problem: a Pew survey [found]( that while nearly 90% of US adults have heard of cryptocurrency, two-thirds arenât confident that current ways to trade the digital assets are safe. What else we're Snackin' - [PrimeAI]( Amazon announced two large-language models â one for creating text, and one that could power search features. As tech giants speed into the AI race, data concerns are brewing. - [Delhitful]( [Apple]( is set to open its first two stores in India. 5% of iPhones are now made in the country, and Appleâs reportedly shifting some production there from China (its biggest manufacturing hub). - [Burn]( The family-owned company behind Purell is looking for a buyer (possible price tag: $3B). Gojo Industries saw hand-sanitizer demand soar during the pandemic, but demand has since plunged. - [Gucci]( [Rent the Runway]( said demand for its rented designer fits is growing, with subscribers up 8% on the year. The biz reported expectation-beating quarterly #s, though itâs still losing money. - [Myte]( TikTok-owner ByteDance is said to be offering cash payouts of up to $25K to VR-app developers. The goal: bring apps built for [Meta]( VR platform over to ByteDanceâs competing Pico headset. ðª Thanks for Snacking with us! Want to share the Snacks? Invite your friends to sign up [here](. Snack Fact Of the Day For the first time, some banks lost money for each mortgage they financed last year [Read more]( Friday - Earnings expected from UnitedHealth, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, BlackRock, and PNC Financial Authors of this Snacks own ethereum and shares of: Amazon, Apple, Delta, Alaska Airlines, Microsoft, and Nvidia ID: 2846048 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. 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