Tuesday Nov.08, 2022

🎄 iPhone’s sad holiday

iMessage from Santa: “I might be late” (George Frey/Getty images)
iMessage from Santa: “I might be late” (George Frey/Getty images)

Hey Snackers,

Some like popcorn with butter, some like it with bitcoin: the DOJ said it had seized 50K+ bitcoin (originally stolen from dark-web market Silk Road in 2012) from an American. Part of the $1B+ stash was found hidden in a popcorn can.

Stocks closed higher yesterday ahead of today’s midterms, which could usher in a split government. Investors also have eyes on Thursday’s October consumer price #s to see if inflation is cooling as expected.

It’s here: Election Day. If you haven’t already cast your vote, here’s a handy tool to find your nearest polling place and see what’s on the ballot.

Unboxed

iPhone production is expected to take a holiday hit as China’s Covid rules continue to mess with supply

An iPhone under the Christmas tree… may be harder to come by this holiday season. Apple warned of lower iPhone shipment volumes for the year as production snags dampen its outlook. It’s reportedly expecting to churn out at least 3M fewer iPhone 14s than previously anticipated. The hardware heavyweight began selling its iPhone 14 line in September, but sales have swiftly cooled. Two reasons:

  • Underwhelming demand: Consumers aren’t splurging as much on fancy gadgets, which explains weaker demand for Apple’s pricey Pro offerings. Last month Apple reported record quarterly sales, but iPhone revenue was softer than expected.
  • Overwhelming rules: China’s zero-Covid policy has messed with Apple’s production this year. The latest snafu: the main iPhone assembly site, in Zhengzhou (aka: “iPhone City”), is under a weeklong Covid shutdown. Apple said customers should expect longer wait times.

Everybody talks… Last week there were rumors flying about when China would end its strict Covid restrictions (think: locking visitors inside Disneyland). Chinese stocks surged on speculation that authorities could lift some measures earlier than expected. The rumor mill may’ve boosted some US stocks, too, since so much production depends on China. Now investors aren’t so optimistic: on Sunday China reported its highest # of new Covid infections in six months (4.4K). Chinese health officials said they would stick with their strategy.

No one puts China in a corner… except maybe China. The world’s second-largest economy is putting blockers in front of its own growth, and fourth-quarter GDP is already hitting speed bumps as Covid rules depress demand and productivity. But the US and corporate titans like Apple can’t just brush that off as a “China problem.” Since the US imports more from China than any other country, it’s an everyone problem — that only China can tackle.

CBD

Cannabis giant Tilray bets big on boozy beverages as it waits for broad US legalization

Backup plan = beer... Cannabis companies have been waiting for US federal regulators to legalize marijuana, and now they’re having a (few) drinks while they bide their time. Yesterday Canadian cannabis giant Tilray bought NYC’s top craft brewer Montauk Brewing Co..

  • Big swigs: Montauk is sold in 6K+ stores, including Target, Whole Foods, Trader Joe's, Costco, and Walmart. It joins beer maker SweetWater and bourbon brand Breckenridge Distillery in Tilray’s growing beverage portfolio.
  • Two cans with one stone: Tilray said the purchase would boost profitability. But it serves another purpose: Tilray plans to leverage Montauk’s US distribution network (and customers) to start selling canna-beverages nationwide as soon as they’re legal.

Stuck in the weeds… Recreational cannabis is legal in 19 states and DC — and five more states are voting today on whether to greenlight it. But since cannabis still isn't federally legal, many canna-companies are struggling to build national distribution networks.

  • Impatient partners: Bud brewer AB-InBev ended a two-year partnership with Tilray this year after waiting for legalization. Meanwhile, drink giants Constellation and PBR have launched their own canna-beverages in smaller markets.
  • Placeholder products: Pot rival Canopy Growth has launched non-cannabis lines, like a skincare biz and sports-drink brand, to prep for legalization (think: eventually infusing moisturizer with CBD).

The star player is on the sidelines… While Tilray, Aurora Cannabis, and Canopy posted overall losses last quarter, Tilray’s smaller non-canna brands are already profitable — and Tilray expects positive cash flow by the end of the year (FYI: Aurora reports Thursday). But the cannabis industry’s main attraction (cough, cannabis) could spur rapid growth when it gets in the game: the market is forecast to grow from roughly $1B last year to $19B by 2028.

DEFI(NE)

Heard on the Block: “alt season”

⚾ When Little League underdogs take on Major League players…

Crypto winter has hit hard, with bitcoin down 56% this year. But analysts (and crypto Twitter) are starting to whisper about a possible "alt szn" as altcoins like dogecoin and matic have seen outsized gains relative to BTC over the past month. Possibly boosting alts: Elon Musk and Instagram NFTs.

What else we’re Snackin’

  • Fly: Mastodon, a decentralized social-media platform, just hit 1M monthly users. The ad-free crowdfunded site is being positioned as a Twitter alternative as some people ditch the blue bird post Elon.
  • Cashed: Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway swung to a $2.7B loss last quarter amid the broader market selloff. Still, the renowned holding company says quarterly losses (and gains) are “usually meaningless.”
  • BagFee: Ryanair raked in record profits over the summer as inflation-plagued Europeans turned to budget airfare. As the travel boom continues, Ryanair’s CEO says the biz could have a strong winter too.
  • Metout: Shares of Meta jumped nearly 6% on reports that it’s planning to lay off thousands of workers this week. Meta joins techy peers like Twitter and Lyft, who’ve slashed headcount to cut costs.
  • Letters: FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (aka: SBF) and Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao (aka: CZ) are beefing. CZ said he's selling $530M of FTX’s token after CoinDesk reported that SBF’s trading firm, Alameda, is largely backed by it.

Tuesday

  • Earnings expected from: Disney, Occidental Petroleum, Constellation Energy, GlobalFoundries, Norwegian Cruise Lines, Coty, AMC, Affirm, Planet Fitness, and Sweetgreen

Authors of this Snacks own: bitcoin, dogecoin, and matic and shares of Berkshire Hathaway, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Disney, Walmart, Apple, Twitter, Canopy, and Aurora

ID: 2580682

Get Your News

Subscribe and thrive

Snacks provides fresh takes on the financial news you need to start your day. Chartr provides data visualizations on business, entertainment, and society. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Latest Stories

When the chips are down

Super Micro Computer, which produces the kind of servers fueling the AI boom, declined to pre-announce earnings. This spooked investors and rattled the entire chips-producing sector. That sent Super Micro plunging 23%, and dragged down lots of their customers and suppliers down with it.

Go Deeper with Market Depth

Nasdaq TotalView powers the need-to-know data serious investors rely on.

Scuba Diving in the Wild Blue Yonder in French Polynesia
2024-04-19-norway-fund-site

Norway now has a wealth fund worth $290k+ for every citizen of the country

Wind energy

More wind power capacity was installed last year than ever before

World

Do you want to run the State Department of McDonald’s?

A couple of days ago, a tweet making fun at McDonald’s hiring a “Manager for Diplomatic Relations” went viral.

At first glance, the idea that McDonald’s, a burger franchise known for its double quarter pounders and perfectly salted fries, is expanding its diplomatic influence with policy makers in Foggy Bottom and the world at large sounds comical. But it’s actually crucial.

There are more than 40,000 McDonald’s locations spread across 115 countries around the world, and 90% of these stores are independently owned and operated franchises that pay royalties to the parent organization to operate. Tens of thousands of franchises operated by different owners with different beliefs, priorities, and values can get complicated, fast.

As we noted in Snacks in February, McDonald’s received heavy backlash from franchisees in countries including Saudi Arabia, Oman, Jordan, Kuwait, and Pakistan after McDonald’s Israel donated thousands of free meals to IDF personnel. But it wasn’t McDonald’s, as an entity, that made the donations. It was the owner of the company’s Israel franchises, who was acting under his own volition.

There are more than 40,000 McDonald’s locations spread across 115 countries around the world, and 90% of these stores are independently owned and operated franchises that pay royalties to the parent organization to operate. Tens of thousands of franchises operated by different owners with different beliefs, priorities, and values can get complicated, fast.

As we noted in Snacks in February, McDonald’s received heavy backlash from franchisees in countries including Saudi Arabia, Oman, Jordan, Kuwait, and Pakistan after McDonald’s Israel donated thousands of free meals to IDF personnel. But it wasn’t McDonald’s, as an entity, that made the donations. It was the owner of the company’s Israel franchises, who was acting under his own volition.

Nuke stocks up on AI excitement

For most of humanity, the thought of “nuclear-powered AI” sends a shiver down the spine. But the stock market is all for it! Just check out the list of top performing S&P 500 stocks this year. Just behind established AI plays — Super Micro Computer and Nvidia, you’ll find Constellation Energy, the largest operator of nuclear plants in the U.S. NRG Energy, which also operates nuclear plants, isn’t far behind. Bloomberg reports that CEO of power distributor Exelon — which spun off Constellation in 2022 — says in the Chicago area alone, AI could drive a 900% jump in demand for energy from data centers.

Tech
Rani Molla
4/19/24

China makes Apple remove WhatsApp, Threads, Signal and Telegram from app store

In its latest move to restrict foreign tech, Beijing has ordered Apple to remove a number of popular messaging apps from its app store there, including WhatsApp, Threads, Signal and Telegram.

These apps had only been available through VPNs but were popular nonetheless, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Apple said the Chinese government asked them to remove the apps in the iPhone maker’s second biggest market over “national security concerns.” Last week, China told its state-owned telecoms to phase out the use of US chips by 2027.

Apple said the Chinese government asked them to remove the apps in the iPhone maker’s second biggest market over “national security concerns.” Last week, China told its state-owned telecoms to phase out the use of US chips by 2027.

Your inbox is ready

Subscribe and thrive

Snacks provides fresh takes on the financial news you need to start your day. Chartr provides data visualizations on business, entertainment, and society. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Business
Rani Molla
4/19/24

Tesla's recall reveals just how bad Cybertruck delivery numbers have been

Thanks to a recall of Tesla’s Cybertrucks, we now know how many of them have actually been delivered: 3,878 since the EV company began releasing them to customers in November.

In its third and fourth quarter earnings report, Tesla said that its current Cybertruck production capacity was greater than 125,000 a year. Musk had previously said he expected to produce 250,000 Cybertrucks a year by 2025.

Either way, that’s a lot more than the roughly 775 it’s delivered each month so far.

The recall is over an issue with the gas pedal pad that, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says when pressed, “may dislodge, which may cause the pedal to become trapped in the interior trim above the pedal.” The cause of the issue: “unapproved” soap that the manufacturer used to aid in getting the pad on the pedal.

A Cybertruck customer this week posted a TikTok about a terrifying incident in which this happened and “held the accelerator down 100%” in his 6,000+ pound vehicle. Thanks to some quick thinking where he held down the brake and put it in park, he wasn’t injured.

This is the long-awaited Cybertruck’s second recall since it came out five months ago.

Either way, that’s a lot more than the roughly 775 it’s delivered each month so far.

The recall is over an issue with the gas pedal pad that, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says when pressed, “may dislodge, which may cause the pedal to become trapped in the interior trim above the pedal.” The cause of the issue: “unapproved” soap that the manufacturer used to aid in getting the pad on the pedal.

A Cybertruck customer this week posted a TikTok about a terrifying incident in which this happened and “held the accelerator down 100%” in his 6,000+ pound vehicle. Thanks to some quick thinking where he held down the brake and put it in park, he wasn’t injured.

This is the long-awaited Cybertruck’s second recall since it came out five months ago.

Markets

Cocoa hits $11,000

Cocoa prices are breaking records on an almost daily basis — with cocoa futures closing at (another) all-time high of $11,020 per metric ton yesterday.

That’s up 158% since the start of the year, and over 4x on the typical prices seen in 2022 — as crop production continues to fall short of demand.

Major cocoa-producing nations like the Ivory Coast and Ghana, which between them grow about two-thirds of the world’s cocoa, have seen excessive tree failure due to disease, changing weather patterns, and hot, dry conditions causing devastating droughts.

As such, consumers are starting to see the effects of the largest cocoa supply deficit in over 60 years: “shrinkflation” and reduced-cocoa recipes might soon hit your favorite chocolate bars, and Hershey stock was recently downgraded. Unfortunately, the worst may still be yet to come: the International Cocoa Organization expects production to lag behind demand by 374,000 tons for the 2023-24 season.

Cocoa prices

Major cocoa-producing nations like the Ivory Coast and Ghana, which between them grow about two-thirds of the world’s cocoa, have seen excessive tree failure due to disease, changing weather patterns, and hot, dry conditions causing devastating droughts.

As such, consumers are starting to see the effects of the largest cocoa supply deficit in over 60 years: “shrinkflation” and reduced-cocoa recipes might soon hit your favorite chocolate bars, and Hershey stock was recently downgraded. Unfortunately, the worst may still be yet to come: the International Cocoa Organization expects production to lag behind demand by 374,000 tons for the 2023-24 season.

Cocoa prices
Power

World out of balance: It costs the US 3¢ to make 1 penny

The cost of producing a US penny rose 13% in fiscal 2023 to 3.07 cents. Yes, it means that Uncle Sam loses more than 2 cents for every cent it produces. (And no, you can’t make it up on volume.)

For the record, that’s the 18th straight year the penny’s face value has been below production costs, fueling calls for abolishing the lowest value denomination coin. Canada started to phase out the penny in 2013, joining Australia, Brazil, Finland, New Zealand, Norway, and Israel, according to Smithsonian Magazine.

3.07¢