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Morning Brew

Queensboro

Good morning. We interrupt your caffeinated sunrise sip session to announce that Morning Brew’s very own Dan Toomey was recently a contestant on a reality show that you can watch right now.

That’s right, Dan’s botched attempts at getting on Love Island instead landed him a spot on The Getaway—a new find-the-snitch series from Nebula where he and five other video creators were carted across the deserts of the American West in a vintage VW hippie van that, they were told, was a complete fire hazard.

With a Nebula subscription, you can watch D̶a̶n̶ ̶c̶r̶y̶ ̶o̶n̶ ̶c̶a̶m̶e̶r̶a episodes of The Getaway each week as they come out. Catch the first episode here on Nebula’s website.

—Molly Liebergall, Cassandra Cassidy, Matty Merritt, Abby Rubenstein, Neal Freyman

MARKETS

Nasdaq

18,283.41

S&P

5,584.54

Dow

39,753.75

10-Year

4.193%

Bitcoin

$57,521.11

Tesla

$241.03

Data is provided by

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: The market suffered a Big Tech hangover yesterday, with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq dropping from record highs as good news on inflation got everyone’s hopes up for an interest rate cut soon. Investors pulled back from the Magnificent Seven by the most in almost a year, turning to smaller stocks and housing-related companies instead.
  • Stock spotlight: Tesla plunged after Bloomberg reported that the company is delaying its robotaxi prototype reveal—hyped by CEO Elon Musk—from August to October.
 

ECONOMY

Prices finally fell after 4 years of sticker hikes

Long receipt angling down Francis Scialabba

For the first time since May 2020, the average cost of goods and services in the US made like a remote worker with wanderlust and dipped last month, the Labor Department reported yesterday, bolstering confidence that inflation is easing.

Carried by softening gas and rent prices, the consumer price index (CPI) decreased 0.1% in June, beating economists’ forecasts of a 0.1% monthly increase.

  • That dip brought down the annual CPI, which also beat expectations, to record a 3% year over year gain in June—a one-year price growth low and a rate last seen in early 2021.
  • Average gas prices fell 3.8% in June, after dropping 3.6% in May.
  • Shelter prices, which account for about one-third of the CPI, only rose 0.2% in June as rents cooled. It was the category’s smallest monthly rise in three years.

If you’re thinking 0.1% doesn’t sound like much…you’re not wrong. After four inflationary years, overall CPI has risen ~20%, CNN reported, and it shows in American shoppers’ weary wallets. PepsiCo reported a drop in US sales this week, indicating a potential pullback in snack spending after years of price hikes.

But it might be enough

Yesterday’s inflation numbers were music to economists’ ears as Jerome Powell tries to pull off a tricky balancing act with interest rates.

It appears the Fed’s interest rate hikes have worked to significantly ease inflation from a peak annual CPI of 9.1% in June 2022. The Fed has kept the federal funds rate at a record high of 5.25%–5.50% for a year now, but holding off on cuts for too long risks squeezing the economy and worsening unemployment, which reached a 2.5-year high of 4.1% in June from 4% in May.

Looking ahead…after two straight months of easing inflation, financial markets broadly upped the odds that the Fed will finally cut interest rates in September from 50%–75% to 85%–89%.—ML

   

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WORLD

Tour de headlines

President Joe Biden MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images

Biden insists he’ll keep running at high-stakes press conference. Despite growing calls from fellow Democratic lawmakers and major donors (George Clooney included) to step aside after he faltered in a debate with Donald Trump, President Joe Biden insisted while fielding questions from reporters yesterday that he won’t drop out of the presidential race unless polls show “there’s no way you can win.” But with all eyes on him at the NATO summit, Biden continued to stumble—earlier in the day, he referred to Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky as “President Putin,” and during the press conference, he mixed up the name of VP Kamala Harris with Trump.

Pfizer bets on daily weight loss pill. As drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound that help people slim down have enlarged its competitors’ bottom lines, Pfizer has struggled to keep up. But now it’s moving forward with the development of a once-daily version of its weight loss pill, danuglipron, saying data from an early study was “encouraging.” The decision comes after the pharma company abandoned a twice-daily form of the medicine when side effects caused patients to ditch the drug in a mid-stage study. If the one-a-day version works, Pfizer hopes that offering a pill rather than an injection will give it an edge in a market expected to grow to $130 billion, though others are also trying to develop pills.

The Shining actress Shelley Duvall has died at age 75. Duvall, the wide-eyed star who dodged Jack Nicholson’s ax in the Kubrick film and acted in seven of director Robert Altman’s movies, most notably Nashville, died of complications from diabetes. Texas-born Duvall was discovered by Altman as a junior college student and became an icon of ’70s cinema before mostly retiring from acting in the mid-1990s and returning to her home state. A 2016 episode of Dr. Phil, which was criticized as exploitative, brought her back into the spotlight by addressing her struggle with mental illness. More recently, she returned to the horror genre with the indie film The Forest Hills.

AVIATION

Clear skies, full planes, airlines can lose

View of a Delta plane from inside an airport Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

It doesn’t matter that there’s no room left in overhead bins. Delta, the most profitable US airline, isn’t seeing soaring profits despite peak air travel this summer. The airline reported disappointing Q2 profits yesterday, showing that the industry is struggling to find equilibrium.

The airline fell short of analysts’ expectations, posting a ~$1.3 billion profit in the last quarter, a 29% decline from a year earlier. But it’s not because no one is flying: The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) reported a record daily traveler count of 3 million people the Sunday after July Fourth.

How does that work? Supply and demand. After the pandemic, airlines worked overtime to meet demand by bulking up—they bought planes, hired staff, and added flight options. Now, they’re stuck with an oversupply, forcing them to offer discounts to fill empty seats, further squeezing profits already hurt by high labor and fuel costs.

Zoom out: While Delta’s issues won’t take away your in-flight Biscoff cookie and ginger ale, the problems it’s facing are worrying for other airlines that don’t have the same cushion. Delta gets more than half its revenue from loyalty and first-class tickets, but budget airlines are strained as their already-cheap ticket prices are pushed even lower.—CC

   

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ENTERTAINMENT

The Mirage is offloading $1.6m in prizes before closing

The Mirage sign and hotel from The Strip. AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/Getty Images

As the Mirage Hotel & Casino winds down its front yard volcano and rehomes over 450 fish, it also needs to offload $1.6 million in prizes before officially closing its doors on July 17.

Nevada law requires casinos to pay out their progressive jackpots to players before shuttering, so the legendary resort promised payouts of $200,000 between Tuesday and Thursday and will up the value to $250,000 on Friday and Saturday. This has reportedly led to hourslong waits for slot machines since the casino said the machines will pay out $1.2 million. The remaining $400,000 will be disbursed via table games.

Farewell to an icon. The Mirage opened in 1989, spurring the rest of the Las Vegas Strip to mirror its gaudy image. The resort housed the legendary Siegfried & Roy magic show for 13 years and was featured in the 1997 Chevy Chase comedy movie Vegas Vacation. Originally costing $630 million to construct, The Mirage was sold for almost $1.1 billion to Hard Rock International two years ago.

Makeover incoming: A new resort, the Hard Rock Las Vegas, will open where the Mirage sits in 2027 after major renovations.—MM

   

STAT

Prime number

Shoppers at Costco VIEW press/Getty Images

Bad news if you’re someone who relies on snagging cheap gas, store-brand booze, gold bars, and a year’s supply of toilet paper all in one location: Costco is raising its membership fees for the first time in seven years. As of September, the cost of an annual membership will jump $5 to $65 in the US and Canada. High rollers will have to pay $130 for their Executive Membership, which is $10 more than the current price—but they’ll be eligible to earn more rewards. The retailer says the fee hike will impact 52 million memberships as the warehouse chain cracks down on card-sharing, since the dues represent a chunk of business. Fees generated $1.12 billion in revenue last quarter. But fear not, bargain hunters: A hot dog will still set you back just $1.50.

NEWS

What else is brewing

  • The US and Germany foiled a Russian plot to assassinate the CEO of a German arms manufacturer that’s been supplying Ukraine, intelligence officials said.
  • Apple made a deal with EU antitrust regulators that will allow competitors to use its tap-and-go payments technology, resolving a yearslong investigation.
  • MicroStrategy, the largest corporate holder of bitcoin, is planning a 10-for-1 stock split.
  • The IRS said it has collected $1 billion in back taxes from wealthy taxpayers who were cheating the system.
  • Dax Shepard made an $80 million deal with Amazon to distribute his popular podcast, Armchair Expert, plus merch and new shows.
  • The lavish wedding of the son of Asia’s richest man, Mukesh Ambani, begins today. If that sounds familiar, it’s because they’ve been having over-the-top pre-wedding celebrations featuring famous guests and performers for months.

QUIZ

Quiza America

"Quiz" text surrounded by A, B, C, and D multiple choice answers on a purple and teal gradient background

The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew’s Weekly News Quiz has been compared to whenever this heat wave will end.

It’s that satisfying. Ace the quiz.

RECS

Friday to-do list

Guess some letters: The NYT has opened up the Wordle archive so you can play past games.

Hold your phone better: Tips for keeping your screen time from physically hurting you.

Read like a star: How celebrity book clubs work—and what they mean for the publishing industry.

Too pretty to drink: The World Latte Art Championship winners put your local barista to shame.

Invest: The future of power transfer is wireless—WiGL gets you that. Join the company that has raised over $12m via crowdfunding.*

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GAMES

The puzzle section

Decipher: Friday already? That means another Decipher is waiting for you to complete. Play it here.

Friday puzzle

There are three common one-syllable words that become three-syllable words by adding just one letter. How many can you name?

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ANSWER

Rode → rodeo

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Are → area

Word of the Day

Today’s Word of the Day is: disbursed, meaning “to pay out, especially from a fund.” Thanks to Tina from Pittsburgh for doling out the suggestion. Submit another Word of the Day here.

✳︎ A Note From Wigl

This Reg CF offering is made available through PicMii Crowdfunding, LLC. This investment is speculative and illiquid and involves a high degree of risk, including the possible loss of your entire investment. Please find more information at https://www.picmiicrowdfunding.com/deal/wigl/.

         
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