â¦and Airbnbâs travel makeover, feat. âOMGâ stays [Disclosures]( The dreaded dairy aisle (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images) Yesterdayâs Market Moves Dow Jones
31,834 (-1.02%) S&P 500
3,935 (-1.65%) Nasdaq
11,364 (-3.18%) Bitcoin
$29,014 (-6.42%) Dow Jones
31,834 (-1.02%) S&P 500
3,935 (-1.65%)
Nasdaq
11,364 (-3.18%) Bitcoin
$29,014 (-6.42%) Hey Snackers, Itâs #WeddingSzn, and some people are really feline the love: a British woman just [married]( her cat to stop her landlord from separating them. Weirdest honeymoon ever. Stocks were back in [tank]( mode after Aprilâs inflation report showed prices continuing to come in hot (more on that in a sec). The techy Nasdaq dropped another 3%, and the Dow notched its fifth consecutive loss. Flated From flights to cheese, prices are still rising â and while inflation could be peaking, real relief looks distant April showers bring... May's expensive water bill. We're checking in on our old frenemy, inflation. Consumer prices were up 8.3% in April from a year earlier. The pace of inflation slipped a bit from March, falling for the first time in eight months â but is still close to a 40-year high. The biggest culprits were food, plane tickets, and housing. Zooming in: - That bites: Food prices were up over 9% from a year ago. Dairy products jumped 2.5% from March alone, the category's largest monthly price gain since 2007. Milk is up 15% from April 2021, and your omelet isn't faring much better: eggs are +10% month over month.
- Not fly: Your summer getawayâs making you sweat before you hit the beach. Airline fares were up a whopping 33% from a year ago, and soared 19% from March alone.
- Lost steam: Not everything got more #flated. Energy and clothing prices fell from March to April, with gas dropping 6%. Don't get too pumped â thatâs still up 44% year over year. JFK to LAX... You know it's bad when $600 looks like a sweet deal. With stimulus gone, consumers are dipping into savings to support [rising spending](. The Fedâs hiked rates twice so far this year to tame prices, but April's data inspires little confidence that broad inflation is cooling. And despite the hot labor market, prices are rising faster than historically high wage gains. THE TAKEAWAY Lower income = smaller runway⦠Americans with low incomes are the [most sensitive]( to inflation because they have smaller cash reserves to meet elevated prices for necessities (think: $4.50 milk gallons and wild rent prices). While there are signs that inflation could be peaking, the real question is how long itâll take to get back to âacceptableâ levels. The longer it takes, the sooner savings will run dry. Treehouse Airbnb pulled off a pandemic turnaround for the ages â now itâs betting on a future with all-new travel habits Sunbathing at a shepherdâs hut⦠welcome to the new age of great escapes. [Airbnb]( has launched its biggest makeover in more than a decade, hoping youâll ditch your spa getaway for an off-the-grid excursion. The revamp includes the ability to search by category, from castles to tiny homes, no specific destination required. Plus: - AirCover: Free travel protection with a 24/hr safety line, and a âget what you bookedâ guarantee. AKA: travel insurance.
- Split stays: A frictionless way to split longer trips between two homes, intended to appeal to digital nomads.
- âOMGâ getaways: A new category highlighting IG-worthy stays, like an alien-themed [glamping]( site in Joshua Tree (FYI: itâs booked solid till 2025). Team meetings in Tahoe... Airbnb almost collapsed when Covid hit, cutting a [quarter]( of its workforce as bookings fell off a cliff. But the rental giant staged a quick pivot â not to mention an IPO â recognizing that "old" travel was gone while creating experiences for remote safety-conscious customers. Bookings [reached]( a record 102M last quarter, and nearly a quarter were long-term rentals. The company expects a strong summer travel season to keep fueling record sales. - Rental competition: Rival VRBO (owned by [Expedia]( also [saw]( record bookings in the first quarter, and said half its customers were brand new.
- 7 out of 10 Americans expect to travel this summer, though inflation could scramble some of those plans. THE TAKEAWAY Flexibility and discoverability are the future of travel⦠and Airbnb has always had a built-in advantage for that future. Its revamp is intended to merge the things that customers love about the service (think: the whimsy of finding and staying in a treehouse) with the comforts of the traditional hotel experience (think: getting exactly what you pay for, and a refund if you donât). What else we're Snackin' - [Ears]( [Disneyâs]( managed to avoid the [Netflix]( curse: the Mouse House reported 7.9M new Disney+ subscribers last quarter, more than expected â and a long way from the Flixâs 200K loss. Shares popped 3% after hours.
- [Frunk]( [Rivian]( shareholders breathed a sigh of relief after the EV maker kept its annual production target of 25K cars despite ongoing supply issues. Rivâs quarterly loss came in a bit less than expected too.
- [Meltdown]( The (not so) stablecoin UST continued its free fall, at one point trading as low as $0.30 after losing its dollar âpegâ amid a crisis of crypto confidence. USTâs sister coin, luna, is down 97% in the turmoil.
- [Stock]( [Redbox]( the DVD-rental service with a small on-demand arm, is being acquired by [Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment](. Itâs a streaming play, with Chicken Soup looking to bulk up its Crackle service.
- [RTO]( Or not. Just 8% of Manhattan office workers are back at their desks full time, a sign that employees in the USâs economic center are winning the hybrid-work battle with their bosses (at least for now). ðª Thanks for Snacking with us! Want to share the Snacks? Invite your friends to sign up [here](. Snack Fact Of the Day Thereâs enough concrete in the Hoover Dam to pave a highway from San Francisco to NYC [Read more]( Thursday - Weekly jobless claims.
- Earnings expected from Alibaba, Toast, Affirm, WeWork, Mister Car Wash, Duolingo, Six Flags, Squarespace, Joby Aviation, and Canada Goose Authors of this Snacks own: shares of Disney and Netflix ID: 2198449 Robinhood Snacks newsletters reflect the opinions of only the authors who are associated persons of Robinhood Financial LLC (Member [SIPC]( and do not reflect the views of Robinhood Markets, Inc. or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates. They are for informational purposes only, and are not a recommendation of an investment strategy or to buy or sell any security, digital asset (cryptocurrency, etc) in any account. They are also not research reports and are not intended to serve as the basis for any investment decision. Any third-party information provided therein does not reflect the views of Robinhood Markets, Inc., Robinhood Financial LLC, or any of their subsidiaries or affiliates. All investments involve risk including the loss of principal and past performance does not guarantee future results. [Robinhood Terms and Conditions]( ⢠[Disclosure Library]( ⢠[Our Editorial Principles]( ⢠[Contact Us]( ⢠[FAQ](
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