â¦and Amazonâs iRobot deal gets stuck under the antitrust couch Checkinâ the 5-team parlay (Ethan Miller/Getty Images) Yesterdayâs Market Moves Dow Jones
38,333 (+0.59%) S&P 500
4,928 (+0.76%) Nasdaq
15,628 (+1.12%) Bitcoin
$43,117 (+2.58%) Dow Jones
38,333 (+0.59%) S&P 500
4,928 (+0.76%)
Nasdaq
15,628 (+1.12%) Bitcoin
$43,117 (+2.58%) Hey Snackers, Folks are voting on [punny names]( for Minnesotaâs snowplows. Since 2020, the âName a Snowplowâ contest has christened more than a dozen of the stateâs 800 plows. Among this yearâs finalists: Beyonsleigh and Taylor Drift. Itâs raininâ 10-Ks: earnings szn is in full swing, and yesterday the S&P 500 closed at an all-time high. Nearly half of the index will have reported by Friday, with [Alphabet]( and [Microsoft]( on deck today. At its meeting tomorrow, the Fedâs expected not to budge on interest rates. Touchdown FanDuelâs parent starts trading in the US as the online sports-betting market balloons Just in time for the Super Bowl⦠FanDuel owner Flutter Entertainment got a new home team. Flutter, one of the worldâs biggest sports-betting companies, [listed]( on the NYSE yesterday in its US market debut. The Dublin-based biz owns global betting brands like Betfair, Paddy Power, PokerStars, and Sportsbet. (FYI: the gambling giant is also listed on the London Stock Exchange, where it IPOâd in 2019.) - New arena: Flutter execs say the US is a ânatural home.â FanDuel is the USâs online sports-betting leader with 40%+ market share. Now its trading in the States alongside #1 rival [DraftKings](. - High stakes: FanDuel and DraftKings control ~70% of the US online sports-betting market. While rivals like [MGM]( and [Caesars]( are smaller players, competition is heating up. Sports gamblingâs big W⦠Betting on sports has boomed in the US ever since the Supreme Court struck down a federal ban on it in 2018. The American Gaming Association projected that sports betting topped $100B last year. With mobile sports gambling now legal in over half of states, big players have gone all in with star-studded endorsements. DraftKings tapped celebs like Kevin Hart, Ludacris, and Tony Hawk for its Super Bowl ad last year. THE TAKEAWAY A bigger field can fit more players⦠US sports betting has taken off, but itâs still illegal in California and Texas, the two most populous states. It means there could still be a long runway for growth, and not just for the likes of FanDuel and DraftKings: casino owner [Penn Entertainment]( and its new ESPN-branded sportsbook aim to make up 20% of the US sports-betting market by 2027. Dusty Amazonâs $1.4B Roomba-quisition gets stuck under the antitrust couch Cliff sensors wonât save you now⦠After backlash from US and EU antitrust regulators, [Amazon]( [abandoned]( its $1.4B purchase of Roomba maker [iRobot](. The deal, announced in 2022, wouldâve been Amazonâs fourth-largest acquisition. After the news, iRobot said it would lay off nearly a third of its staff, and the stock was down 60% in the past month. Itâs just the latest deal to get clogged by antitrust scrutiny as big tech companies struggle to vacuum up smaller players. Amazon mayâve been preempting what it saw as a losing game: - Warning lights: Along with a looming EU veto, the FTC had reportedly planned to sue to block the iRobot deal. Regulators were concerned by Amazonâs potential to shut out robo-vacuum rivals through its online storefront. - Clean break: Amazon, which has to pay iRobot a $94M termination fee, has a silver lining in the failed acquisition: it wonât acquire iRobotâs recent losses ($500M since mid-2021). Swinginâ and missinâ at checkout⦠isnât typical for Amazon. iRobot wouldâve joined Amazonâs connected-home product line, which the companyâs built up over the past decade through acquisitions of camera co Blink, security co Ring, and WiFi co Eero. Not to mention other big buys like Whole Foods, MGM, and One Medical. Now Lina Khanâs FTC and the Biden admin have created a harsher M&A environment for the tech industry. THE TAKEAWAY Antitrust is tired of tech picking unripened fruit⦠Global watchdogs have grown increasingly wary of âkiller acquisitionsâ (deals where a company absorbs a potential competitor). The environment is far from the one that let Facebook snag Instagram about a decade ago. Amid regulatory scrutiny, last month [Adobe]( bailed on a $20B acquisition of Figma; last year [Meta]( sold Giphy for a $260M loss; and in 2022 [Nvidia]( ditched plans to buy chip rival [Arm](. What else we're Snackin' - [FakeOut]( X said it blocked searches for âTaylor Swiftâ after explicit AI-generated fake images of the singer went viral. The White House said Congress should take legislative action as deepfake concerns grow. - [Loss]( [3M]( said it was on track to settle 300K+ lawsuits that alleged it sold earplugs that left many wearers with hearing damage. The maker of N95s and Post-its agreed to pay $6B in the largest mass tort in US history. - [Adazon]( Amazon told Prime subscribers theyâll have to pay $3/month more if they want to keep their Prime Video ad-free. Streamers including [Netflix]( are not so gently nudging customers to more lucrative commercial-stuffed plans. - [NotGrande]( A Hong Kong judge ordered Chinese real-estate behemoth Evergrande to liquidate. The biz owes $300B+ and stopped paying its debt more than two years ago, but itâs unclear whether the ruling will hold up in mainland China. - [Oleato]( [Starbucks]( is now serving up its controversial olive-oil-infused coffee in all US stores. Premium bevs like specialty cold brews have been a sales sweet spot for Starbucks, which reports today. ðª Thanks for Snacking with us! Want to share the Snacks? Invite your friends to sign up [here](. Snack Fact Of the Day A third of all S&P 500 companies report earnings this week [Read more]( Tuesday - Earnings expected from Alphabet, Electronic Arts, GM, JetBlue, Match Group, Microsoft, Mondelez, Pfizer, and Starbucks Authors of this Snacks own shares of Alphabet, Amazon, GM, Match Group, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Starbucks 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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