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CWS Market Review – August 12, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 12th, 2025 at 6:12 pm(This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)
Stocks Surge to All-Time High on Mild CPI Report
Last Friday, the stock market got a shock when the monthly jobs report came in lower than expected. The previous months’ data was also revised lower. President Trump was so angry that he fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
On Friday, August 1, the stock market took a 1.6% hit. Since then, the market has changed its outlook for the Federal Reserve. Traders now expect a few rate cuts from the Fed before the end of the year. Investors liked that news and the market gradually made back most of what it lost. Last Friday, the S&P 500 closed within 1/200th of 1% of an all-time high.
This morning, the stock market got its next big test when the inflation report for July was released. The news showed a mostly benign report which gives a green light for the Fed to lower interest rates.
The stock market celebrated and closed at a new all-time high. In 18 weeks, the S&P 500 has added nearly 30%. But there’s an odd fact about this rally. It’s been almost entirely centered on riskier stocks. Conservative stocks have largely gone nowhere.
I’ll touch on that in a bit, but first, let’s take a closer look at this morning’s report. The CPI report said that consumer prices rose by 0.2% last month which matched Wall Street’s consensus. Over the last year, consumer prices have increased by 2.7% which is still above the Fed’s target rate for 2%. Today’s report is also noteworthy because it’s the first time we’ve seen the effect of the tariff policies.
If we look at the core rate, which doesn’t count food or energy prices, then the CPI rose by 0.3% last month. That was also in line with forecasts. It was also the largest increase since January. Over the last year, core CPI is up by 3.1%.
Shelter costs, which are a large part of CPI, rose by 0.2% in July while food prices were flat and energy prices fell by 1.1%.
Tariffs did appear to show up in several categories.
For instance, household furnishings and supplies showed a 0.7% increase after rising 1% in June. However, apparel prices were up just 0.1% and core commodity prices increased just 0.2%. Canned fruits and vegetables, which generally are imported and also sensitive to tariffs, were flat.
Twelve-month headline inflation has increased over the last three months, but not by much (2.3% to 2.7%). Overall inflation has been well-behaved. I suspect that, post Covid, the resting rate of inflation is probably close to 3%. By that, I mean that all things being equal, the inflation rate will mostly hover around 3%. Before Covid, that rate was around 2%.
Here’s a look at the Fed funds rate (in red) along with the core rate of inflation (in blue). In simple terms, the blue line ain’t moving up so the red line is coming down.
Inflation at 3% is higher than the Fed said it wants, but I don’t view it as a major problem and I certainly don’t think it’s worth damaging the labor market for an extra 1%.
The futures market sees an active Fed for the rest of this year, and it’s hard to disagree. Traders now see a 94% chance of the Fed cutting rates next month. Remember, there are already two votes at the Fed for lower rates.
After September, traders see a 64% chance of another cut in October. In December, traders narrowly see a third rate cut. If that’s correct, it will bring the target range for the Fed funds rate to 3.5% to 3.75%.
Tuesday’s trading was unique because investors poured into riskier assets and ignored safer assets. For example, the S&P 500 High Beta ETF (SPHB) increased by 3% on Tuesday. Meanwhile, S&P 500 Low Vol ETF (SPLV) was mostly flat. That’s an unusually large spread.
This is part of a larger trend that started in April. High Beta stocks have demolished Low Vol stocks. I don’t know how much longer this trend can last.
Interestingly, many travel-related stocks were very strong today. Delta Air Lines (DAL) and United Airlines (UAL) were some of the best performers in the S&P 500 today. Southwest Airlines (LUV) and Expedia (EXPE) both had very good days today.
Also today, Perplexity offered to buy Google’s Chrome browser for $34.5 billion. Last year, the Justice Department suggested that Google divest itself of Chrome. Technically, Chrome is worth more than Perplexity, but they should have little trouble raising the money to close the deal.
Hawkins: Up 180-Fold Since 1992
Fourteen months ago, I told you in this newsletter about little Hawkins Inc. (HWKN) of Roseville, Minnesota. Hawkins is one of those small- to mid-cap industrial stocks that I love. The company describes itself as “a leading specialty chemical and ingredients company.”
Snoresville, right? No, Hawkins isn’t the most exciting business, but it’s an important one, and it’s something people need. Hawkins “formulates, distributes, blends, and manufactures products for its Industrial, Water Treatment, and Health & Nutrition customers.”
Since I told you about Hawkins last year, the stock has more than doubled.
Hawkins has been around since 1938. The company has 64 facilities across 28 states. Hawkins has about 1,100 employees and last year, it generated revenue of $974 million.
Now for the best part. Since 1992, Hawkins is up by more than 180-fold. The S&P 500 looks like a flat line in comparison. Hawkins has also raised its dividend fairly consistently for nearly 40 years. In fact, it just raised it again by 6%.
Hawkins used to have a practice of announcing 10% or 15% stock dividends each year. These tended to be in line with the stock’s long-term performance. As a result, the nominal share price didn’t move much. That might you lead you to believe that the stock hasn’t done well, but it’s been a huge winner. Despite all its success, still only three Wall Street analysts bother following Hawkins.
That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Morning News: August 12, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 12th, 2025 at 7:04 amGlobal Markets Rise Ahead of U.S. Inflation Data
US-China Tariff Truce Extended as Xi, Lula Speak on Trade Unity
Gaming Out the Price of a Trump Trade Deal With China
Greg Mankiw’s Solutions Are the Path To Much More Federal Debt
In Economics, the Unseen Is Much More Important Than the Seen
Trump, Seeking Friendlier Economic Data, Names New Statistics Chief
Bond Traders’ High Hopes for September Rate Cut Hinge on CPI
Can This New ‘Elite’ Travel Card Compete With Amex and Chase?
Stop Letting Middlemen Pickpocket Your Bank Account
The Era of Big Raises for Low-Paid Workers Is Over
U.S. Small Businesses Brush Off Tariff Fears
When Will Voters Blame Trump for This Economy?
Bessent on Tariffs, Deficits and Embracing Trump’s Economic Plan
Car Companies Are Paying the Tariffs. For Now.
Ford’s Answer to Cheap Chinese EVs Starts With a $30,000 Electric Pickup
Ford’s New $30,000 EV Pickup Cuts Against Washington
China Creates World’s No. 1 Shipbuilder, Driven by Rivalry With U.S.
US Premiums for Gold Retreat Following Trump’s No-Tariff Vow
Rare-Earth Deals Show the US Can Break China’s Grip
Sugar Set for Longest Run of Gains in Five Months on Brazil Crop
Danske Bank Cuts Fossil-Fuel Exposure From Its Investments
China Urges Firms to Avoid Nvidia H20 Chips After Trump Ends Ban
America’s New AI Plan Is Great. There’s Just One Problem.
Larry Ellison Wants to Do Good, Do Research and Make a Profit
Spirit Airlines Issues Going Concern as It Faces Cash Crunch
Bain Considers Late 2025 IPO of Bob’s Discount Furniture
Pastor Sees Boycott of Target Stores as New Civil Rights Fight
Swiss Sneaker Brand On Lifts Targets on Europe, Asia Demand
White House Cage Fight Is ‘Going to Happen,’ Says UFC Boss
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Morning News: August 11, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 11th, 2025 at 7:08 amThe Dollar Still Rules, But US Policy Is Making It Less Special
Forgotten US Global Bond Funds Face ‘Show-Me-the-Money’ Moment
Hedge Fund Schonfeld’s Millennial Boss Drags It Back From the Brink
The Death of Diversification: Why Buffett Was Right All Along
Is Dow Inc. Doxing the Shareholders Who Ask the Wrong Questions?
Inflation Up or Down? What About Jobs? The Agency That Should Know Is on the Rocks
What Happens When Politicians Meddle With Economic Data: Argentina’s Example
The U.S. Marches Toward State Capitalism With American Characteristics
On Economic Policy, the White House Is Its Own Worst Enemy
Supercharging ICE Threatens to Be a Costly Mistake
The Economy Is Starting to Pay for Trump’s Chaos
US Consumers to Bear Brunt of Tariff Hit, Goldman Economists Say
Small Businesses Brace for the Punishing Side Effects of Trump’s Tariffs
Small US Firms Paying Trump Tariffs Face $202 Billion Annual Hit
How to Offset Trump’s Aluminum Tariffs: Recycle Your Beer Can
Orsted Shares Tumble After Halting of U.S. Wind Project Sale; $9.4 Billion Rights Issue Proposal
Lab-Grown Diamonds Are Testing the Power of Markets
Lithium Market Soars as CATL Shuts One of World’s Biggest Mines
Rare-Earth Magnet Maker Raises $65 Million in Push to Counter China
China’s Automakers Are Taking a Shortcut to European Markets
Builder China South City Ordered to Liquidate by Hong Kong Court
U.S. Government to Take Cut of Nvidia and AMD A.I. Chip Sales to China
An AI Replay of the Browser Wars, Bankrolled by Google
Rumble Mulls $1.17 Billion All-Stock Deal For Northern Data
Goodbye, $165,000 Tech Jobs. Student Coders Seek Work at Chipotle.
AOL Will End Its Dial-Up Internet Service (Yes, It’s Still Operating)
Activist Investor to Push Avantor to Make Changes or Sell Itself
Inside Target, Frustrated Employees and the Search for a New CEO
Can AriZona’s 99-Cent Iced Tea Survive Trump’s Tariffs?
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Morning News: August 8, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 8th, 2025 at 7:01 amIsrael to Seize Gaza City, Stopping Short of Full Takeover
Can Russia’s Economy Withstand Trump’s Pressure?
China Defends Buying Russian Oil After Trump’s Tariff Threat
Congo Peace May Herald $700 Million Power Deal With US Company
A Mile Underground, America’s Largest Untapped Copper Mine Inches Toward Reality
Taiwan Strained by 20% Tariffs, No Trade Deal and Political Uncertainty
Japan Says Trump to Correct ‘Extremely Regrettable’ Error in Tariff Order
Gold Hit By Surprise US Tariffs, Unleashing New Turmoil
Why a Product’s Country of Origin Matters in Trump’s Trade War
US Trade Shifts From Bretton Woods to the ‘Turnberry System’
It’s Only a Matter of Time Until Americans Pay for Trump’s Tariffs
You Don’t Enhance Free Speech By Giving Politicians Control of It
Trump’s Surprise Fed Pick Buys Him Time on Chair Selection
JPMorgan Says Treasury Curve Can Steepen on Miran Fed Pick
Sahm: The BLS Can’t Be Replaced by the Private Sector
SpongeBob on the Syllabus of Class Examining the Shackles of Work
Follow the Money: The Inevitable Rise of Crypto and Blockchain
Playing by the Rules Costs Wall Street an Extra 51 Million Hours a Year
Wall Street and AI Startups Are Fighting Over Entry-Level Quants
Don’t Turn Chip Controls Into Bargaining Chips
Trump Reminds CEOs Who the Ultimate Boss Is
Intel CEO Dogged by Decades of China Chip Bets, Board Work
Intel’s Chief Holds Firm After Trump Demands His Resignation
SoftBank Buys Foxconn’s Ohio Plant to Jumpstart Stargate AI Push
Silver Lake Invests $400 Million to Tackle Data-Center Power Bottleneck
The AI Building Boom Is Bound to Bust
E.P.A. to Stop Updating Popular Database After Lead Scientist Criticized Trump
Truck Companies Sour on California’s Strict Clean Air Rules
What If Everything We Think About Obesity Is Wrong?
Irish Whiskey Makers Crumble Under Trump’s Trade Tariffs
Nicotine Is Hot, Beer Is Not. What Vice Stocks Say About America’s Guilty Pleasures.
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Morning News: August 7, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 7th, 2025 at 7:04 amA Defiant Israel Eyes a Full Gaza Takeover Despite Global Isolation
Bank of England Cuts Rates to Two-Year Low After Rare Re-Vote
China’s Exports Surged Again in July, but Not to America
German Exports to U.S. Fall for Third-Straight Month as Industry Slumps
Trump’s Tariffs Take Effect in Fresh Test for Global Economy
Trump Doubles Tariff on India to 50%, Sparking Outrage in Delhi
Southeast Asia Looks for Clarity From U.S. on ‘Rules of Origin’
‘Next Era of Dollarization’ Is Visible From Bolivia to Indonesia
US Would Be Wise Not to Count Its Winnings on Trade Just Yet
Dollar Falls to 10-Day Low as Tariffs Take Effect
This Isn’t How You Deal With Free Riders
Stablecoins, Digitized Bank Deposits, and Future Banking Risk?
Trump to Sign Order Easing Path for Private Assets in 401(k)s
Youth Is Losing to Experience in This Job Market
The BLS Isn’t Alone in Facing Data Challenges; U.K. Has Them Too
Taxation Is Easily the Least Harmful Aspect of Government Spending
US Offers to ‘Simplify’ Harvard Case Over Foreign Student Ban
Japan’s Auto Giants Are Expecting Pain Despite Trump Trade Deal
Auto Industry Takes $12 Billion Hit From Trade War
Trump’s Latest Attacks Stun Wind and Solar Industries
Space Company Firefly Poised for Wall Street Debut
The Real Nuclear Moonshot Is Here on Earth
Siemens Beats Market Views With Order Momentum in Mobility
Artificial Intelligence, and the Future of the Magnificent 7
Elon Musk Takes on Sam Altman, This Time Over the Chessboard
Foodpanda Aims to Double Pakistan Business in Three Years
Lilly Obesity Pill Cut Weight by Just 11% in Study; Shares Drop
How Ozempic’s Maker Lost Its Shine After Creating a Wonder Drug
It Was a Promising Addiction Treatment. Many Patients Never Got It.
Disney’s Thriving Parks Are Buying It Time to Figure Out Streaming
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Morning News: August 6, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 6th, 2025 at 7:06 amAmerica’s Ultimatum to Russia Is About to Pass. Now What?
Ukraine Appoints Head of Economy Watchdog After Anti-Graft Protests
German Factory Orders Dip as Sluggish International Demand Weighs
Germany Gets No Bidders in Zero-Subsidy Offshore Wind Auction
Shale Oil Drillers Tap the Brakes on Production Until Prices Gain Speed
In Hawaii, New Tourism Tax Aims to Offset Costs of Climate Change
US Is Still Critically Reliant on China, ECB Finds
China Is a Nation of Savers. Many Are Drowning in Debt.
India’s Central Bank Stands Pat as Tariff Pressures Linger
The Tariff Effect: Billions in Revenue but No Economic Earthquake
Trump Ramps Up Tariff Blitz With India, Pharma, Chips in Sights
Does Japan Want American Cars? Trump’s Push to Open Foreign Markets Faces Test
Detroit Rediscovers Its Love for Giant Gas Guzzlers
Why the B.L.S. Regularly Revises Jobs Data
Trump Airs Personal Financial Grievances Ahead of ‘Debanking’ Crackdown
Goldman Trader Says Buoyant Stocks Are Ignoring Recession Risks
The New Economics of People in a World of Closing Doors
When Top Lawyers Earn $30 Million, Who Pays?
The Texas Gerrymandering Fight Could Ignite a National Fire
OpenAI in Talks for Share Sale at $500 Billion Valuation
How Palantir Won Over Washington—and Pushed Its Stock Up 600%
Disney, McDonald’s and the State of the U.S. Economy
Disney Tops Profit Estimates, Led by Parks Division, Streaming
Disney Paying $1.6 Billion for WWE Rights
The NFL Is Taking a 10% Stake in Disney’s ESPN
McDonald’s Returns to Sales Growth With Toys, Budget Meals
Uber Boosts Buybacks by $20 Billion After Upbeat Forecast
How One Company Maintained a Monopoly on U.S. Fire Retardant
Shopify Rallies on Revenue Beat, Strong Third-Quarter Outlook
Aldi’s Passionate, Cultlike Following Fuels Its Rapid Expansion Plans
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CWS Market Review – August 5, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 5th, 2025 at 10:01 pm(This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)
The Weak July Jobs Report
The stock market got a big shock on Friday when the Labor Department said that only 73,000 new jobs were created last month. That was below expectations for a gain of 100,000 jobs, and as expectations go, that’s quite modest.
But what really hit Wall Street were the revisions to the old data. The numbers for May and June were revised lower by a combined 258,000. That means that the economy created only 19,000 jobs in May and 14,000 in June.
Here’s a look at the original jobs report compared with the revisions.
The unemployment rate increased by 0.1% to 4.2% for July. I like to look at the decimals, and the unemployment rate came very close to rounding up to 4.3%. We now have the highest unemployment rate since October 2021.
This was a very unusual jobs report. For example, health care and social assistance combined for 94% of the job growth.
The jobs report is the cause for a major change in outlook because these new numbers indicate that the jobs market isn’t nearly as strong as we thought. It was only last Wednesday that the Federal Reserve said in its policy statement that the “unemployment rate remains low, and labor market conditions remain solid.”
Maybe not.
The futures market responded immediately, and it looks like a September rate hike is back on the table. The odds of a Fed rate cut in September soared to 89%. Before the jobs report, the odds were around 40%. There’s even talk now of the Fed cutting by 1% before the end of the year.
The S&P 500 lost 1.60% on Friday. That was the biggest lost for the index since late May. During the month of July, Friday’s loss was more than double the next worst daily loss.
The quiet upwards market that we’ve been enjoying this summer may no longer be with us:
There were few signs of strength in the July jobs count, with gains coming primarily from health care, a sector that has continued to show strength in the post-Covid recovery. The group added 55,000 jobs, easily leading the way. Social assistance also contributed 18,000 jobs. The two sectors combined for some 94% of the job growth.
Retail added nearly 16,000 jobs and the financial sector was up 15,000.
However, federal government employment continued to decline, down 12,000 for the month and 84,000 since its January peak, before Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency began paring down the jobs rolls. Professional and business services lost 14,000.
Is the economy slowing, or it coming to a crashing halt? We don’t have the data yet to say.
There were some good bits in the jobs report. For example, average hourly earnings rose by 0.3% last month which matched estimates. Over the past year, average hourly earnings are up 3.9%. That’s not bad, but I want to see it go higher. Over the last year, average hourly earnings increased by 3.9%.
The labor force participation rate edged down to 62.2% That’s the lowest since November 2022. The broader U-6 rate, which counts “discouraged workers,” rose to 7.9%.
President Trump was not happy with the jobs report, especially the revisions. He fired Erika McEntarfer, the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The president has demanded lower interest rates from the Fed, and he may soon get his wish. On top of that, Adriana Kugler just announced her retirement from the Federal Reserve Board. That gives the president an opportunity to appoint a new member.
Folks on Wall Street are now talking about the Fed lowering rates by 1% before the end of the year. If that’s correct, that would be a big boost for value and defensive stocks. I’ll give you an example. On Friday, as the market was falling, shares of American Water Works (AWK), one of our Buy List stocks, gained nearly 4%.
IDEXX Labs (IDXX) Soars 27% on Earnings Beat
In last week’s issue, I listed some stocks that I’m considering for next year’s Buy List. One of them, IDEXX Laboratories (IDXX), gave us a nice surprise on Monday. The company beat earnings, raised guidance and soared by more than 27% in Monday’s trading.
I wish I could take credit for predicting this, but I was as surprised by the big move as the market was. I merely said I was looking at the stock.
IDEXX is an interesting company, and it had a few industry segments. For example, IDEXX provides diagnostic solutions for pets. It also develops diagnostic tests to detect diseases in livestock and poultry. The company also does water testing so it can spot E. coli. IDEXX has more than 10,000 employees and it serves over 175 countries.
IDEXX mostly stays out of the headlines although it has faced anti-trust lawsuits. This is common among companies with strong positions in their market. IDEXX usually runs its gross margin near 60% and its operating margin around 30%. I also really like the recurring revenue model.
For its Q2, IDEXX had reported earnings of $3.63 per share. That was 33 cents per share better than Wall Street’s consensus, and 49% better than last year’s result. Quarterly sales rose 11% to $1.11 billion which beat estimates of $1.07 billion.
CEO Jay Mazelsky said, “We saw exceptional momentum with IDEXX InVue Dx™ placements, exceeding expectations as veterinarians adopted this slide-free technology to streamline workflows and gain faster, more accurate clinical insights. This growth builds on the successful launch of IDEXX Cancer Dx™ in North America. Our focus on helping veterinarians gain deeper diagnostic insights to inform patient care continues to drive customer loyalty and sets a solid foundation for sustained long-term growth.”
IDEXX raised its full-year guidance to a range of $12.40 to $12.76 per share. The previous guidance was $11.93 to $12.43 per share.
IDEXX also raised its 2025 sales guidance from the $4.10 billion to $4.21 billion range up to $4.21 billion to $4.28 billion.
I can’t say that IDEXX is a bargain at these prices, but it’s an innovative company that’s not well-known and it has very sound finances. Over the last 34 years, its total return has exceeded 67,000%.
That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Morning News: August 5, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 5th, 2025 at 7:06 amRussia’s Secret War and the Plot to Kill a German CEO
White House Shouldn’t Let Putin Off the Hook Now
Israel’s Financial Markets Are Soaring Despite 22 Months of Brutal War
India Shifts to Damage Control After Trump Ratchets Up Threats
Swiss President Dashes to Washington in Attempt to Sway Trump
EU Continues to Press for Tariff Exemption on Wine, Spirits as Part of U.S. Deal
What’s the De Minimis Tariff Loophole and Why Is Trump Closing It?
Wall Street Bonus Pool to Grow as Stock Rally Defies Tariff Woes
Fed Voting Structure Raises the Bar for Trump’s Favored Rate
Trump’s Fed Pick Likely to Find Colleagues Cautious on Rate Cuts
Trump Says Bessent Doesn’t Want to Be Considered for Fed Chair
Trump Questions Discrimination Claims, Even One His First Administration Brought
Trump’s BLS Firing Tests Wall Street’s Reliance on Government Data
Real Strains Inside the BLS Made It Vulnerable to Trump’s Accusations
The Jobs Market Is Showing Signs of a ‘He-cession’
Earning More but in Worse Shape: Hardship Overwhelms Many American Families
Luckin’s Arrival In the U.S. Is Bad News For the Birthrate-Obsessed
Our President Is Economically Illiterate
Wharton’s ‘Collusion’ Paper Is Just How Markets Work
Global M&A Hits $2.6 Trillion Peak Year-to-Date, Boosted by AI and Quest for Growth
Norway’s Hedged Bet on Europe’s Energy Future: A Garbage Disposal for Emissions
In Battle to Save Sacred Land From Mining Giants, Apaches Hope for a Miracle
US Explores Location Trackers for AI Chips, Official Says
Taiwan Arrests Six in Probe of TSMC Chip Technology Leak
Palantir Surges on First $1 Billion Revenue Quarter
It’s Time for the DOJ to Declare Victory, Settle Google Lawsuits
On a YouTube Show, Making Machine Parts for Glory and $100,000
French Industry Gets Boost From Soaring Aviation Output
Harley-Davidson Names Topgolf Leader as New CEO
Pfizer Raises Profit View as Cost Cuts Offset Poor Sales Growth
Marriott Profit Beats Estimates, Fueled by International Hotels
Why Burgers Cost So Much Right Now
Yum Brands Earnings Miss Estimates as Pizza Hut, KFC Struggle in the U.S.
Molson Coors Cuts Outlook Again on Weak US Beer Demand, Tariffs
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Morning News: August 4, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 4th, 2025 at 7:04 amTurkish Inflation Keeps Edging Down as Central Bank Primes More Rate Cuts
Swiss Inflation Edged Higher in July
Trump’s ‘Slap in the Face’ Puts Neutral Switzerland in Trade-War Crossfire
What’s It Like to Deal With Brutal U.S. Tariffs? Ask Malaysia.
Trump’s Trade War Targets Data as the New Enemy
The Stock Market Just Got a Sobering Reality Check
Wavering US Consumer and Job Market Show Risks to Economy
American Consumers Are Getting Thrifty Again
The Fed Was Right to Say No on Interest Rates
Trump Fired America’s Economic Data Collector. History Shows the Perils.
Trump Seeks Bigger Overhaul at Labor Statistics Bureau, Adviser Says
Job Description — Find Better Numbers, or Else
Why Mortgage Lenders Are Ignoring Trump’s Rollback on Home Appraisal Reviews
Dudley: The Fed’s Under Siege. It’ll Be Just Fine
Brokerages Retain September Rate Cut Bets After Soft Jobs Report
UBS to Pay $300 Million to Resolve US Mortgage Securities Cases
Jane Street India Trades Show Blurry Line Between Arbitrage and Market Manipulation
OPEC Plus Will Increase Oil Output
OPEC+ Supply Finale Teases a New Mystery for Oil Markets
China Is Choking Supply of Critical Minerals to Western Defense Companies
Boeing Defense Workers Go on Strike
Electric Air Taxi Company Plans to Acquire a Helicopter Business
Silicon Valley Enlists in the Business of War
Amphenol Strikes Big Broadband Deal in AI Boom
Is It Still Disney Magic If It’s AI?
The 20-Somethings Are Swarming San Francisco’s A.I. Boom
What Happens to AI Startups When Their Founders Jump Ship for Big Tech
Harley-Davidson Names Topgolf Leader as New CEO
For a Few CEOs, Pay Keeps Growing—by the Billions
Tesla Awards ‘Good Faith’ Shares to Musk Worth $29 Billion
Lilly’s Push to $1 Trillion Derailed by Trade Risks and Obesity Drug Speedbumps
The ‘Troublemaker’ Behind Netflix’s Biggest Gamble
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Morning News: August 1, 2025
Eddy Elfenbein, August 1st, 2025 at 7:03 amHow the US Weaponized Pakistan Against India
Eurozone Inflation Holds Steady at Target, Leaving ECB in ‘Good Place’
Asia Manufacturing Outlook Marks Five-Year Low as Tariff Concerns Linger
Trump Tariff Blitz Unleashes Delayed Shock to Global Economy
Trump’s Tariffs: Where He Started, What He Threatened, Where He Ended Up
Switzerland Is Stunned by 39% U.S. Tariff, Among the Highest in the World
Cambodia Agrees to a Reduced Tariff and Breathes a Sigh of Relief
In a Country Trump Says Nobody’s Heard Of, Tariffs Bring Chaos
Tariffs Land on Taiwan Amid Tension With Washington
With New 40% Tariff, Trump Takes Aim at U.S. Dependence on China’s Factories
Stocks Tumble as Investors Grapple With the Rising Cost of Trade
The Anti-US Axis Isn’t Dead, Just Resting
Ritholtz: Might Tariffs Get “Overturned”?
Harm or Help? Why Companies Are Battling Tariffs Meant to Benefit Them.
Mere Permanency In the Tax Code Will Encourage Economic Growth
Trump Urges Fed Board to ‘Assume Control’ If Rates Not Cut
For Trump’s Harvard Deal, $500 Million Is Only a Starting Point
The Sanctuary Cities Ruling Is a Win for States’ Rights
Bitcoin Pulls Back to Three-Week Low After Record-Breaking July
Bridgewater Founder Dalio Sells His Remaining Stake in Firm
AXA Shares Slide After Currency Fluctuations Bite
The Nimbleness of Corporate America Is on Full Display
How Trump Let $1 Trillion Worth of Imports Escape His Tariff Hammer
Exxon, Chevron Surpass Estimates With Record Oil Production
Where Human Labor Meets ‘Digital Labor’
A.I. Researchers Are Negotiating $250 Million Pay Packages. Just Like N.B.A. Stars.
Amazon Falls as Profit Outlook, Cloud Growth Spook Investors
What Microsoft’s $4 Trillion Market Value Really Means
Apple Surprises Investors Worried That It Had Lost Its Touch
L3Harris Partners With Air Taxi Maker Joby on Military Aircraft
Etsy Turns From TV Ads Toward Search, With AI as the Wild Card
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Eddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His