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Morning Brew

Pendulum

Good morning. You’re in for a treat this Saturday morning, because the Brew is launching our first-ever Crossword Contest.

Designed by puzzle mastermind Jack Murtagh, this challenge sends you on a daring adventure through five Minis in order to uncover a secret word. Once you think you’ve found the secret word, you’ll submit it via an online form. We’ll choose three correct submissions at random to win a Morning Brew t-shirt.

Scroll to the Games section for the link. Happy solving!

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

MARKETS

Nasdaq

17,877.79

S&P

5,634.61

Dow

41,175.08

10-Year

3.807%

Bitcoin

$64,574.52

Nvidia

$129.37

Data is provided by

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 5:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: If you heard a big whooshing sound yesterday morning, it was probably investors collectively letting out the breath they were holding as Jerome Powell spoke in Jackson Hole and finally confirmed that interest rate cuts are on the way. The news set stocks up for a big finish to the week.
  • Stock spotlight: Nvidia was among the stocks that jumped, and investors will be keeping an eye on it next week, when the AI chipmaker reports earnings.
 

HOUSING

Real estate tech illegally drove up rents, DOJ says

Property for rent Frederic J. Brown/Getty Images

Uncle Sam accused a tech tool of scheming to help your landlord finally make the transition to premium cigars at your expense. Yesterday, the Justice Department and the attorneys general of eight states sued RealPage, an apartment-pricing tool widely used by corporate landlords, alleging that it lowers competition by allowing property owners to coordinate higher rents.

The case is the first major attempt by antitrust authorities to litigate how tech tools can abet price manipulation.

Rent-juicing machine

The government’s suit centers on RealPage’s YieldStar software, which suggests what pro landlords should charge tenants.

  • The suit says the software’s algorithmic pricing recommendations are based on confidential data that RealPage hoovers up from landlords, like rent discounts, lease status, and other sensitive rental agreement details.
  • The government alleges the company pushes property owners to charge higher rents and discourages them from responding to market conditions with discounts. The complaint notes that many landlords use the “auto accept” option to make the software’s suggestion the default rent.

As a smoking gun, the DOJ cited RealPage’s marketing material, which boasts about helping landlords avoid “trying to compete against one another in a way that actually keeps the entire industry down” and one customer praising the product as “classic price fixing.”

The DOJ also accused RealPage of using its tech to become a monopolist that controls 80% of the multifamily property revenue management market.

Private equity-owned RealPage denied all accusations, saying its software is built to be legally compliant and it had worked to show the DOJ that in the past. The company has also previously pointed out that landlords take its price recommendations less than half the time.

Close to home

The lawsuit dropped at a time when “housing costs” remain trigger words for many Americans, with the median rent this spring measuring 22% higher than in 2020, according to rent.com. The case echoes Vice President Kamala Harris’s recent campaign promise to push for a law that cracks down on commercial landlords using algorithms to jack up prices.

It’s not just about rent: The Federal Trade Commission recently began studying how companies use customer data to set prices across industries.—SK

   

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Get lost, cravings

Pendulum

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WORLD

Tour de headlines

The trading floor as Jerome Powell spoke in Jackson Hole Angela Weiss/Getty Images

JPow said “the time has come” for interest rate cuts. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell gave the people what they wanted in his speech at Jackson Hole yesterday, all but guaranteeing that the central bank will start bringing interest rates down in September. Acknowledging that inflation has come down and stressing concerns about the cooling labor market, Powell said, “The time has come for policy to adjust.” But the big question remains of how big a cut and, true to form, Powell’s speech didn’t offer specifics or drop hints.

RFK Jr. suspends campaign and backs Trump. The independent presidential candidate, who made headlines during his campaign for biographical details like having found a parasitic worm in his brain and having dumped a bear carcass in Central Park, said he was suspending his campaign after polls showed his bid harming Donald Trump and helping Kamala Harris. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said he did not see “a realistic path to electoral victory in the face of this relentless, systematic censorship and media control.” However, he noted that he was suspending, not ending, his campaign and urged his supporters in non-swing states to vote for him.

Canada’s freight trains start running…but may stop again. Canadian freight trains started moving again yesterday morning following a lockout of 9,000 workers after the government forced the country’s two major rail companies into arbitration with the workers’ union, the Teamsters. But the union said it plans to challenge the arbitration order, and it issued a notice to Canadian National Railway, one of the two companies, that workers plan to strike on Monday. The potential strike again raises the specter of an economically damaging hit to supply chains, as the union and the companies argue over wages and worker safety.

BUSINESS

Topgolf is at the bottom of its game

Photo of Topgolf Topgolf

The place you go to bond with your dad is in worse shape than Rory McIlroy on a Sunday afternoon. Topgolf’s shares sank to a nine-month low yesterday on the news that investment bank Raymond James slashed its rating to, basically, “avoid” a few weeks after the company reported earnings that spooked investors.

Some backstory: Golf club-maker Callaway bought Topgolf in a deal that valued part of the chain at $2 billion in 2020, but its stock has fallen 40% since the merger. Earlier this month, the company reported disappointing second-quarter revenue, with same-venue sales down 8% from a year ago.

It’s time to lay up. Raymond James analyst Joseph Altobello advised investors to sell the company’s shares since, like many LIV tournaments, Topgolf struggles to bring in traffic. That recommendation came after the company said it was conducting a “strategic review,” including a potential spinoff of its driving range business, in the wake of the poor earnings report.

But…that spinoff might be too little, too late, and even impossible. Topgolf has an estimated $2.4 billion debt load, according to Altobello, making it an unattractive prospect to potential buyers like Dave & Buster’s or Bowlero.—CC

   

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BIG TECH

The X investors Musk was forced to reveal

Pop-up windows form X over Elon Musk Francis Scialabba

A complete list of the former bird app’s minority co-owners was unsealed for the first time since Elon Musk took it private in 2022, the Washington Post reported this week. Now we know exactly whose wallet suffers every time something goes wrong.

Unmasked: Court filings named the foundation of hedge fund billionaire and vocal X user Bill Ackman, as well as Sean Combs Capital…Diddy’s fund. Many others on the list were already known for contributing to Musk’s $44 billion purchase of Twitter or his other businesses, including:

  • Silicon Valley VC firms Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia Capital, and 8VC, which was co-created by a Palantir founder.
  • Binance and Fidelity, which now holds stakes through nearly 30 separate entities.
  • Former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who’s criticized Musk’s leadership since the takeover, and Oracle founder Larry Ellison.
  • Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal (net worth: $19 billion).

No regrets? The Twitter takeover is officially the worst financing deal for banks since the 2008 financial crisis, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this week. X lost nearly three-quarters of its value from takeover time to this past January, and nobody is buying $13 billion in “hung” loans that are sinking financial institutions’ balance sheets. Still, Musk has so many businesses under his umbrella that banks may be willing to stay in it for the long haul.—ML

   

STAT

Prime number: 1 shiny object

The president of Botswana holding the world's second biggest diamond Monirul Bhuiyan/Getty Images

In news that would delight the villain from The Rescuers, the second-largest diamond ever was found in Botswana this week. The not-yet-named stone clocks in at 2,492 carats, making it the biggest diamond found in 119 years. For context: The average engagement ring in the US is one carat. But it’s still shy of the record, which is held by the 3,106-carat Cullinan Diamond unearthed in South Africa in 1905. The newly discovered diamond hasn’t been priced yet, but the previously ranked second-biggest diamond (1,111 carats), found in the same Botswana mine, sold for $53 million in 2017.

ANSWER

What else is brewing

  • Divers retrieved the body of Hannah Lynch, tech entrepreneur Mike Lynch’s daughter and the last person considered missing after the Bayesian sank off the coast of Sicily. Authorities are reportedly considering manslaughter charges in connection with the yacht’s sinking.
  • Multiple people were killed and several more were injured in a knife attack at a festival celebrating diversity in Germany.
  • Microsoft is hosting a cybersecurity summit in September. It might be a little awkward after the buggy CrowdStrike update that took out global computer networks.
  • Shein said it found two cases of child labor in its supply chain last year as the uber-cheap clothing seller tries to prepare for an IPO.
  • Crypto companies are responsible for nearly half of all corporate political donations this election cycle. The industry is hoping to help shape the regulatory landscape.
  • NASA plans to announce its decision today on whether the astronauts stuck in space due to problems with Boeing’s Starliner craft will return to Earth on their original ship or one from SpaceX.

RECS

Saturday To-Do List graphic

Watch: A roller coaster engineer explains how to pick the best seat.

Ham it up: Portraits of US presidents…holding a ham.

The future is now: Here’s what high-profile people in 1974 thought the world would look like in 2024.

Have you seen these birds? Scientists are asking bird watchers to keep an eye out for these 144 avian species that haven’t been seen in years but might still be out there.

Shipping shouldn’t suck: And it doesn’t have to. Stamps.com can help you print stamps and labels in seconds. Plus, if you sign up for a trial, you can get a $100 postage offer.*

*A message from our sponsor.

GAMES

The puzzle section

Brew Crossword Contest: Here it is…the moment you’ve all been waiting for…begin the hunt for the secret word now.

Open House

Welcome to Open House, the only newsletter section that needs some privacy. We’ll give you a few facts about a listing and you try to guess the price.

Cottage on Cranberry Isles, Maine.Zillow

Today’s home is in Cranberry Isles, Maine, and looks out across the Gilley Thorofare. There are more old-timey, nautical-sounding features of the property, but we just don’t have time to get into all that. Amenities include:

  • 3 beds, 2 baths
  • Jøtul (fancy Norwegian cast iron) wood stove
  • Clawfoot tub

How much for the serene oceanfront property?

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ANSWER

$1.25 million

Word of the Day

Today’s Word of the Day is: avian, meaning “of or relating to birds.” Thanks to Claire from San Diego, CA, for giving us wings with the suggestion. Submit another Word of the Day here.


✢ A Note From Pendulum

*Based on preclinical studies.

         
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