Thursday Mar.16, 2023

⌛ Meta's mistimed NFTs

Unfortunate timing (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
Unfortunate timing (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Hey Snackers,

Meet Kellanova — sounds like a newly discovered star in our galaxy, actually the new name of Kellogg’s snack biz. The cereal giant plans to spin out Pringles and Cheez-Its into a separate publicly traded company. Happy snacking.

Stocks fell after Credit Suisse disclosed problems with its financial reporting, stoking worries about the global banking system. Liquidity in Treasury markets fell sharply.

NFTrend

Meta ends its NFT push, in the latest example of bad trend timing (metaverse included)

Blinked and missed it… This week Meta quietly announced an end to its nonfungible-token platform (#sadtrombone). The exit followed grand ambitions: Meta launched NFTs on Facebook and Instagram last year in 100 countries, targeting adoption among its billions of users. It reportedly considered monetizing NFTs and said creators could mint tokens on polygon and sell them to fans. Now Meta's looking to lean down as it focuses on “efficiency”:

  • Pink-slipped: On Tuesday, CEO Zuck said he planned to lay off 10K more employees after slashing 11K in November.
  • Meta-hearse: Meta's Reality Labs division, which houses its metaverse projects, lost nearly $14B last year and is expected to lose $16B this year.

Nonfungible growin’… Meta may be ditching NFTs, but they're having a low-key moment. Though NFT trading volume has plunged from early 2022 highs, it jumped nearly 40% to $946M from December to January and hit $2B last month. Brands have found an NFT audience by tying tokens to pop-culture faves (like: HBO's "Game of Thrones" collectables and Starbucks "journey stamps"). Amazon reportedly plans to launch a fashion-focused NFT marketplace next month. Meanwhile, ordinals birthed a new NFT market on the bitcoin blockchain.

Timing is everything… Meta announced its NFT push right as the algo stablecoin TerraUSD collapsed — kicking off crypto winter — and is now walking away as NFTs could be regaining relevance. It's not the first time Meta's missed the trend boat: its metaverse transformation kicked off as spenders shifted to prioritizing IRL experiences, while recession fears made big bets like the metaverse even riskier investments. Recently, Meta announced its ChatGPT rival. Brands that miss trend timelines risk becoming leading indicators of trend death.

Bloom

Lennar’s sturdy earnings are a window into the housing market ahead of a key spring season

Blooming estates… Lennar, the US’s second-largest homebuilder, posted expectation-beating quarterly growth this week, even as debt-fatigued Americans cool on home buying. Lennar’s revenue and profit both grew, while home deliveries rose 9%. Lennar’s CEO said the beat was partly thanks to buyers accepting higher mortgage rates as “the new normal.” Still…

  • Small nails: Lennar’s new-home orders dipped 10% from last year, and the average price of its new-home sales dropped to $452K from $495K.
  • Big hammer: Mortgage rates fell this week after the bank collapses, but are still 2X higher than in 2020. And in February, US home sales fell for the 12th straight month.
  • Hard wall: Still, lofty house prices have stuck as supply remains low. Case in point: housing costs drove 70%+ of consumer inflation last month.

3BDRs + patio… break out the bidding paddles. Mid-pandemic, houses were built at the fastest pace in a decade as more Americans took advantage of low interest rates and fled to the ’burbs. But rates have surged, making homeownership unaffordable for even high earners. Meanwhile, current homeowners locked into lower rates are staying put and listing less, exacerbating the supply problem.

The housing bud may start blooming… Homebuilder confidence rose for the third straight month in March as rates started to cool. That could set up the housing market for a warm spring (the season when most US home sales happen). Next week is crucial: if the Fed cools or pauses rate hikes, it could be a green light for more buyers to hit the market.

What else we’re Snackin’

  • iDown: Foxconn, the manufacturing powerhouse that supplies most iPhones, reported a 10% annual profit decline and said consumer-electronics demand would likely fall this year. Apple anticipates a similar slowdown.
  • Star: Ryan Reynolds and fellow owners of Mint Mobile are selling the low-cost carrier to T-Mobile for up to $1.3B. The celeb-preneur also owned a stake in Aviation Gin, which was sold to Diageo for up to $610M.
  • TokOut: The Biden admin has demanded that TikTok’s Chinese parent company, ByteDance, sell its stake in the popular video-sharing platform or face a potential ban of the app, the WSJ reported citing sources.
  • Ad: Apple, Amazon, and Google will likely be spared from stricter antitrust legislation related to their ad businesses. Despite bipartisan support for tougher rules, the GOP-controlled House seems unlikely to impose them.
  • Check: Biden issued an executive order for stricter background checks for firearm sales, aiming to get closer to universal checks. But significant changes on gun control are unlikely in a split gov’t.

Thursday

  • Initial jobless claims
  • Earnings expected from FedEx and Dollar General

Authors of this Snacks own bitcoin and matic and shares: of Apple, Amazon, Google, Starbucks

ID: 2796280

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

 Max Holloway and Mark Zuckerberg

Meta exhaustingly tries to merge the metaverse and AI

Gonna have to rename the company... again

Markets

Chipotle continues to go on a tear, hitting a sales record

Hey it might not be the kind of AI stock investors are all hot and bothered over, but don’t sleep on the burrito business.

Chipotle posted much better-than-expected results on Wednesday, with sales rising 14% to a record $2.70B in the first quarter, which is like a billion additions of guac.

Profits jumped 23% to $359M.

Chipotle has quietly cruised higher over the last year. It’s up 63%, compared to the 24.5% gain for the S&P 500 over the 12 months through Wednesday’s close. Not bad for a rice-and-beans based business model.

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
Tech

Facebook had great earnings, the market hates it

Facebook reported impressive earnings. Record first-quarter revenue thanks to AI! Profit up 117% compared to a year earlier! But at the same time, its capital expenditures are going up and it’s expecting second quarter revenue potentially lower than analyst estimates. So in other words, the future doesn’t look as bright as the present.

All in all the stock is down more than 10%. (Basically the opposite of what happened with Tesla yesterday).

Business

Why Tesla investors are holding on to hope for a cheap car

Despite terrible earnings numbers last night — declining vehicle sales, disappointing revenue and profit, enormous spending — Tesla stock is up more than 10% as of midday. That’s a welcome move for the car company, that’s been among the worst performers this year in the S&P 500.

Why the about face?

While Reuters reported earlier this month that Tesla is no longer making its long-awaited $25,000 mass-market car — news sent the stock, already suffering from headwinds across the EV industry, down even further— Tesla reported during its earnings that it’s going to make cheaper cars than it currently has.

Before the second half of next year, Tesla said it will release “more affordable models” that “will utilize aspects of the next generation platform as well as aspects of our current platforms, and will be able to be produced on the same manufacturing lines as our current vehicle line-up.”

So rather than release the $25,000 Model 2, Tesla is incorporating some of that technology into its existing models. UBS called it the Franken-3Y2.

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.

Job switchers and stayers

The FTC is banning non-compete clauses

Why that might make job switching even more lucrative

Culture

Not so Gucci

French luxury fashion conglomerate Kering has seen its shares fall ~10% in the last 24 hours after reporting that sales at its flagship brand Gucci had dropped 21% in its latest quarter.

Kering’s other brands, which include Yves Saint Laurent, Bottega Veneta, and Balenciaga, fared slightly better — but the only real bright spot was the company’s eyewear division, where sales rose 24% (9% on a comparable basis).

With Gucci responsible for roughly two-thirds of the company’s profit, the ongoing struggles of the brand are weighing heavily on the bottom line: the company expects recurring operating profit to drop 40-45% in the first six months of the year.

Gucci execs will be hoping that new designer Sabato de Sarno can turn the iconic brand’s fortunes around, particularly in China where demand has dropped precipitously. His designs only started hitting stores in February.

Gucci sales

With Gucci responsible for roughly two-thirds of the company’s profit, the ongoing struggles of the brand are weighing heavily on the bottom line: the company expects recurring operating profit to drop 40-45% in the first six months of the year.

Gucci execs will be hoping that new designer Sabato de Sarno can turn the iconic brand’s fortunes around, particularly in China where demand has dropped precipitously. His designs only started hitting stores in February.

Gucci sales
Business

The FTC vs. Big Handbag

The Federal Trade Commission has sued to block big tech, big grocery, big vacuum, and now, big… “affordable luxury handbag.”

Yesterday, the FTC sued to block Tapestry Inc’s $8.5B acquisition of Capri holdings. The agency is worried that a merger between Tapestry, which owns the Coach and Kate Spade brands, and Capri, which owns Michael Kors, would eliminate competition in the market.

The crux of the FTC's argument lies in the scope of the "accessible luxury" handbag market, where Tapestry competes with Michael Kors, with the FTC saying the following:

Where Tapestry and Capri most vigorously compete against one another – mainly between Tapestry’s Coach and Kate Spade brands against Capri’s Michael Kors brand – is in the “accessible luxury” handbag market. Today, Coach, Kate Spade and Michael Kors continuously monitor each other’s handbag brands to determine pricing and performance, and they each use that information to make strategic decisions, including whether to raise or lower handbag prices.

The deal would eliminate fierce head-to-head competition on many important attributes including on price, discounting, and design. Tens of millions of Americans that purchase Coach, Kade Spade, and Michael Kors products could face higher prices

While Capri and Tapestry are two of the largest players in this market, winning an antitrust case won't be so straightforward, as consumers have other options at similar price points, including Marc Jacobs (owned by competitor LVMH), Tory Burch, Cuyana, and Mansur.

The crux of the FTC's argument lies in the scope of the "accessible luxury" handbag market, where Tapestry competes with Michael Kors, with the FTC saying the following:

Where Tapestry and Capri most vigorously compete against one another – mainly between Tapestry’s Coach and Kate Spade brands against Capri’s Michael Kors brand – is in the “accessible luxury” handbag market. Today, Coach, Kate Spade and Michael Kors continuously monitor each other’s handbag brands to determine pricing and performance, and they each use that information to make strategic decisions, including whether to raise or lower handbag prices.

The deal would eliminate fierce head-to-head competition on many important attributes including on price, discounting, and design. Tens of millions of Americans that purchase Coach, Kade Spade, and Michael Kors products could face higher prices

While Capri and Tapestry are two of the largest players in this market, winning an antitrust case won't be so straightforward, as consumers have other options at similar price points, including Marc Jacobs (owned by competitor LVMH), Tory Burch, Cuyana, and Mansur.