â¦and Amazonâs post-Prime Day earnings Hot world summer (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images) [Sponsored by]( Last Weekâs Market Moves Dow Jones
35,459 (+0.66%) S&P 500
4,582 (+1.01%) Nasdaq
14,317 (+2.02%) Bitcoin
$29,350 (-1.88%) Dow Jones
35,459 (+0.66%) S&P 500
4,582 (+1.01%)
Nasdaq
14,317 (+2.02%) Bitcoin
$29,350 (-1.88%) Hey Snackers, Hot on the heels of the âBarbieâ box-office success, Mattelâs raiding its toy chest. It has films [in the pipeline]( for * takes deep breath * American Girl, Barney, Polly Pocket, Hot Wheels, UNO, Rock âEm Sock âEm Robots, Magic 8 Ball, and more. MCU = Mattel Cinematic Universe. Stocks rallied last week, led by the techy Nasdaq, as investors digested a slew of earnings, expectation-beating GDP data, and another rate hike from the Fed. The US economyâs strong growth, coupled with fresh evidence of cooling inflation, boosted hopes of a â[soft landing]( This week, investors have eyes on earnings from Apple, Amazon, and other big names. Btw... Do you want to start getting Snacks daily? Or prefer to unsubscribe? Manage your subscription preferences [here](. Sizzle As Earthâs hottest month on record wraps up, heat safety takes center stage in the US Too hot to handle⦠Weâve made it to the end of what scientists say is Earthâs hottest month ever recorded (July temps may be the highest in 120K years). Over 250M people in the US faced heat indexes of at least 90F last week, putting outdoor workers at risk. 436 US workers died from heat exposure between 2011 and 2021, and fatalities are expected to rise. Last week, President Biden [announced]( actions that the Labor Dept. will take to protect workers: - Checking the thermostat: Heat-safety inspections in high-risk sectors like construction and agriculture will increase. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has already carried out 2.6K check-ins. - Cooling off: A first-ever heat hazard alert will tell employers what steps they can take to protect workers, and remind employees of their rights. H2O break not included⦠There are many federal workplace safety rules around harmful substance exposure, but there are none specifically for heat exposure. Biden directed OSHA to develop heat standards nearly two years ago, but the process for new rules is seriously slow (locking in a limit on silica exposure took 19 years). New workplace standards often face fierce opposition from companies that lose money for every paid break. OSHAâs working on a federal heat standard thatâs due for a business impact review next month. Meanwhile: - Only six states guarantee workers the right to water, rest, and shade (in CA, heat rules kick in when temps hit 80F). Last month, a TX law removed mandated water breaks for outdoor workers, while a heat protection bill failed in NY. THE TAKEAWAY Scorchers are heating up labor momentum⦠Without federal protections, heat safety has become a core issue during this âhot strike summer.â Extreme temps were a catalyst in the first-ever [Amazon]( delivery driver strike in CA last month. Installing AC in delivery vans was a key element of the deal reached between [UPS]( and its 330K unionized employees last week. As the world warms, pressure for protections will likely heat up too. Sponsored by Masterworks These everyday people are benefitting from a $45 million Banksy collection Yes, that's right THE Banksy. It may sound too good to be true, but Masterworks is already making it possible for its over 780,000 users. How does it work? Simple, Masterworks does all of the heavy lifting like finding the painting, buying it, and storing it. Its industry-leading research and acquisitions teams scour the market for the best priced works, with strong historical appreciation, by artists like [Banksy, Basquiat, and Picasso](. Then, Masterworks files each offering with the SEC so that nearly anyone can invest in highly coveted artworks for just a fraction of the price. To put it simply, you donât have to be the founder of an AI startup â or an art connoisseur â to invest with Masterworks. Shares of every offering are limited, and can sell out in minutes, but Snacks readers can [skip the waitlist with this exclusive link]( Events Coming up this week Prime Day afterglow⦠Amazon reports Thursday after what it called its biggest Prime Day ever. Those deal-palooza dollars wonât be included in Q2 #s, but itâs a positive sign for the ecomm biz, which has seen slowing growth after the lockdown boom. Amazonâs cloud growth has cooled as companies rein in tech spend, but Amazonâs trying to juice demand with â you guessed it â AI. Its ad biz has been a bright spot, growing faster than cloud in Q1. (FYI: Meta and Google reported strong ad #s last week.) Meanwhile, the FTC could rain on Primeâs parade with a major lawsuit. Come for the Sphere⦠stay for the slots? Las Vegasâ colossal casinos are feelinâ lucky. MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment are basking in a travel boom that saw visits to Sin City soar 20% last year and revenue pop in the first quarter. But casinosâ chips arenât all in on Vegas. In gambling capital Macau, where MGM has a 35-story resort, gaming revenue 6Xâd in June from a year ago as China reopened. With travel and entertainment spending on the rise, analysts expect betting behemoths will sweeten the pot when they report. Zoom out Stories weâre watching Reshoring bath bombs⦠US companies are bringing more production back to the States â aka: âreshoring.â Scented-lotion icon Bath & Body Works brought every step of production to its Ohio âbeauty park.â Reshoring has gained steam as pandemic supply snags and geopolitical tensions caused corporate shortages (+ headaches). US manufacturing jobs hit a 13-year high last year. It could be just the beginning: mentions of âreshoringâ in Q1 S&P 500 earnings were up 128%. Crumblegate comeback⦠In 2021, meal-delivery company Daily Harvest was valued at $1B+, backed by Gwyneth Paltrow, and #trending on IG. Then last year, an obscure ingredient in its âFrench Lentil + Leek Crumblesâ meal made 393 people ill (many seriously). Subscription revenue reportedly tanked and customers sued. Now, the biz says itâs âentering a new eraâ with a partnership to sell frozen meals at Kroger. Weâll see if a bruised brand like Daily Harvest can re-up credibility (while avoiding niche ingredients that slip past the FDA). ICYMI Last weekâs highlights - [GuiltTip]( âTip fatigueâ is spreading as Americans grow frustrated with tip-screen prompts everywhere (even self-checkout). Businesses far beyond restaurants are adding tip screens to keep workers without raising wages. - [Barbiecore]( âBarbieâ surpassed âSuper Mario Bros.â as the yearâs top-grossing opening-weekend flick. In a marketing campaign that seemingly knows no limits, countless brands are in on the Mattel-doll hype. - [Ship]( UPS and the Teamsters reached a tentative deal, likely averting what wouldâve been one of the largest US strikes. âHot strike summerâ is becoming âsolidarity summerâ as different unions picket together. What else we're Snackin' - [Cone]( Unilever (owner of Ben & Jerryâs, Breyers, Magnum) is seeing ice cream sales freeze despite the heat. Execs say temps are driving people past the ice cream âsweet spotâ (picture: instant melting). - [Fees]( States are passing laws to combat pesky (and often surprising) hospital bill âfacility fees.â Transparency measures could cost hospitals billions, but ease the medical-debt burden. - [IRL]( Many workers in jobs that could conceivably be replaced by AI donât feel that the tech will threaten their gigs, Pew found. Nearly a third of IT and tech workers say AI will help more than hurt them in the next 20 years. Want your Snacks daily? The Daily Newsletter Get fresh takes on financial news every week day. Try a sample: ð [Mastercardâs canna-biz crackdown]( ⢠Jul 28, 2023
ðª [Hot strike summer]( ⢠Jul 27, 2023
ð [Tip anxiety]( ⢠Jul 26, 2023 [Subscribe to the Daily]( Snack Fact Of the Day âMindful breathingâ lessons are a new requirement in NYC public schools [Read more]( This Week - Monday: Earnings expected from Avis, SoFi, and Sonoco - Tuesday: Job openings report and earnings expected from Aflac, AMD, Bloominâ Brands, British Petroleum, Caesars Entertainment, Caterpillar, Dennyâs, JetBlue, Marriott International, Merck, Molson Coors, Norwegian Cruise Line, Pfizer, Pinterest, Starbucks, Sysco, and Uber - Wednesday: ADP nonfarm employment report and earnings expected from Bausch + Lomb, Cheesecake Factory, Fastly, Garmin, Kraft Foods, MetLife, MGM Resorts, PayPal, Phillips 66, Public Storage, Robinhood, Shopify, Spirit Airlines, and TripAdvisor - Thursday: Jobless claims and earnings expected from AB InBev, Adidas, Airbnb, Amazon, Apple, Ballyâs, Block, BMW, Cigna, Coinbase, ConocoPhillips, Dolby, DraftKings, Dropbox, Eventbrite, Expedia, Hasbro, Hyatt, Kellogg, Moderna, Nintendo, Papa Johnâs, Shake Shack, Symantec, Warner Bros. Discovery, Wayfair, and Yelp - Friday: Nonfarm payrolls and earnings expected from Cinemark and Fisker Authors of this Snacks own shares of: Apple, Amazon, AB InBev, Block, Fastly, Google, Kraft Foods, Robinhood, Mattel, Moderna, Molson Coors, Starbucks, Uber, Shopify, and Norwegian Cruise Line *Advertiser Disclosure: See important disclosures at [masterworks.com/cd](. Sherwood Media, LLC produces fresh and unique perspectives on topical financial news and is a fully owned subsidiary of Robinhood Markets, Inc., and any views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the views of any other Robinhood affiliate... [See more]( [Sherwood Terms and Conditions]( ⢠[Our Editorial Principles]( ⢠[Contact Us](mailto:hellosnacks@sherwoodmedia.com) ⢠[Privacy Policy]( ⢠[Advertise with us](mailto:advertising@sherwoodmedia.com)
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