â¦and DeFiâs âcode is lawâ goes on trial ð Inflation ick (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) J-Pow gets another curveball Yesterday's market moves Dow Jones 38,459 (-0.01%) S&P 500 5,199 (+0.74%) Nasdaq 16,442 (+1.68%) Bitcoin $70,136 (-0.71%) Dow Jones 38,459 (-0.01%) S&P 500 5,199 (+0.74%) Nasdaq 16,442 (+1.68%) Bitcoin $70,136 (-0.71%) Hey Snackers, [Mattel]( made a less competitive version of [Scrabble]( for Gen Z and anyone else whoâs âa little intimidatedâ by the classic game. Millennialsâ reaction: * flips board over and storms out *. Tech stocks helped reboot markets into the green yesterday. After a hot inflation report, investors were soothed by news that producer prices rose less than expected last month. ð
Miss Quizality: Our weekly quiz is taking off its glasses and letting down its ponytail with a fresh makeover. [Check out]( the new lewk and see if you can ace it. Try the first Q: - The creators of which [YouTube]( channel scored a $100M+ private-equity investment? ([Check your answer](.) CHILLY [Hot rate-cut summer hype wanes as stubborn inflation crushes June hopes]( Thatâs hot⦠not in a âSimple Lifeâ way. US consumer prices came in [hotter]( than expected for a third month straight. Investors got the inflation ick after learning that March prices were up 3.5% from a year earlier, meaning the pace of inflation picked up. After the bummer report, traders slashed their bets on a June interest-rate cut. Itâs all a [blow]( for President Biden with the big election looming and prices being a key issue. Highlights from the March Consumer Price Index: - Gas and housing accounted for more than half of the inflation surge. Energy prices popped 1%+ over the month â with shelter up nearly 6% from a year ago (#RentAnxiety).
- Proteins â¬ï¸: The index for meats, poultry, fish, and eggs rose nearly 1% in March, fueled by a 4.6% surge in egg prices (bird fluâs back).
- Sweets â¬ï¸: You might wanna swap your omelet for a pastry. The prices of bakery goods and cereal fell, and butter was down a whopping 5%. So long, hot rate-cut summer⦠we hardly knew ye. Inflation had been cooling for a while, which gave investors hope for June rate cuts. At the Fedâs meeting last month, most officials maintained their forecast of three cuts this year, and tradersâ bets on a June cut rose to odds of 75%. But after the CPI came out, traders on Wednesday were pricing in just two rate cuts this year, starting in September instead of June. They even priced in a 13% chance for no cuts at all in 2024. Expectations shifted yesterday after some welcome news: - US producer prices (aka: wholesale) rose less than expected last month â though it was the biggest gain in a year.
- Still, it was enough to make traders bet that the US central bank could start easing rates in late July, with equal likelihood of a July vs. September cut. The Takeaway Investors hate uncertainty⦠The Fed needs to see consistent cooling in the economy and inflation to start cutting, but recent data has been muddling perceived progress. Job growth and inflation both accelerated last month, casting doubt over the summer-cuts forecast. The Fed has kept rates steady â at their highest level in 20+ years â since last July. MANGO [Cryptoâs âcode is lawâ ethos gets put on trial as the spotlight shines on DeFi]( Fruit of a poisoned trade?⦠A trial kicked off in New York this week that tackles a core premise underpinning the multibillion-dollar [decentralized finance]( market. Prosecutors allege that crypto trader Avraham Eisenberg committed fraud by [manipulating]( futures contracts to steal $110M from the Mango Markets decentralized exchange (DEX) in 2022. The trial has sparked a debate around âsmart contracts,â the code powering trading programs on blockchains like [ethereum]( and [solana](. Eisenbergâs lawyer argues that because the solana smart contract behind Mango let him make the trades, heâs in the clear. Meet âcode is law.â - Code is law = the idea that any trade that a smart contract technically allows is OK. This idea has long been at the core of DeFi.
- But also, maybe itâs not⦠Regulators donât appear convinced, and Eisenbergâs trial looks to be the first time the argumentâs been brought before a criminal jury. Clouds rollinâ in⦠on DeFi summer. Decentralized finance is a fundamental part of what distinguishes crypto from traditional markets. Itâs an umbrella term covering the trade of digital assets (like: ethereum, NFTs, dog-themed tokens) without a third party like a brokerage. Things had been looking up for the industry. Decentralized exchange volumes hit a record $267B last month, and [Uniswap](, the largest DEX on ethereum, just passed $2T in cumulative trading volume. But DeFiâs under threat. The Takeaway You canât always choose your champions⦠While the Mango Market case is about whether Eisenberg committed fraud, a verdict has the potential to either embolden DeFi traders or chill the market. The timingâs rough. On Wednesday, as Eisenbergâs trial called into question the rules of the DeFi game, Uniswapâs CEO said his exchange received a Wells notice from the SEC, suggesting the regulator is prepping a lawsuit. Uniswap said the SECâs notice focused on whether the company conducted unregistered sales of securities. STAYINâ [The Crypto Catch-Upâ¦]( ð¤ Techy⦠[Bitcoin]( miners cranked their rigs up ahead of this monthâs halving, a pre-programed event thatâll see their rewards get cut by 50%. As of Wednesday, miners were [generating]( record computing power in hope of stocking up on BTC. ð Policy⦠Despite some industry optimism, the CEO of investment firm VanEck said that he expects the SEC will reject [applications]( for spot ethereum ETFs next month. VanEck attracted $629M into its spot bitcoin ETF after the SECâs approval this year. ð¶ï¸ Spicy⦠Nearly a third of consumers [surveyed]( last month by [Deutsche Bank]( said they expect BTC to fall below $20K by yearâs end. Still, they donât think cryptoâs going anywhere: less than 1% said they think the techâs âjust a fad.â What else we're Snackin' - [Overdue](: The US credit-card-delinquency rate hit its highest level on record, with 3.5% of balances past due. 11% of debtors only made minimum payments as consumers struggled with inflated living costs.
- [Grounded](: [Lufthansa]( paused flights to and from Iranâs capital, Tehran, after the US warned Iran or its proxies might attack Israel in response to a strike on an Iranian diplomatic building in Syria.
- [Essay](: Plagiarism-detection software co Turnitin said that students submitted as many as 22M papers in the past year that mayâve used genAI. AIâs use in the classroom is being debated in school districts.
- [HeyDJ](: [Spotify]( is said to be building DIY song-remixing features thatâll let listeners speed up, mash up, and edit tunes. The move could win back ears from TikTok, where user-manipulated jams are popular.
- [Especial](: [Constellation Brands](â beer sales foamed up 11% in Q1 while its wine and spirit sales fell. Hoppy hype was driven by Constellationâs Mexican brands, especially Modelo and Pacifico. Snack Fact of the Day d[Last weekendâs WrestleMania 40 was the WWEâs highest grossing event ever]( Friday - Earnings expected from Citigroup, Progressive, BlackRock, Wells Fargo, and JPMorgan Chase Authors of this Snacks own bitcoin, ethereum, and uniswap and shares of: Alphabet [Instagram]( [Twitter]( [Sherwood Logo](sherwood.news) 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 Standards]( [Contact Us](mailto:hellosnacks@sherwood.news) [Advertise With Us](mailto:advertising@sherwoodmedia.com) [Unsubscribe]( [Privacy Policy](