Friday, June 23, 2023

☕ The search is over

The Titan submersible saga ends in tragedy...
June 23, 2023 View Online | Sign Up | Shop 10% Off

Morning Brew

LiquidPiston

Good morning and a very Happy Summer Friday to you and yours. A couple of housekeeping notes before we hit the news:

  • If you want to listen to these stories in a podcast format, we've got a daily talk show that goes deeper into the news you read in the newsletter. You can check that out here.
  • This next one is for all the readers who recently became bosses and don't know exactly what you're doing. The Brew's New Manager Bootcamp is a one-week virtual course starting in July that gives you practical leadership skills. Learn more here.

Alrighty, that's enough announcements for one day. Enjoy the newsletter and the weekend.

Molly Liebergall, Matty Merritt, Cassandra Cassidy, Neal Freyman

MARKETS

Nasdaq

13,630.61

S&P

4,381.89

Dow

33,946.71

10-Year

3.797%

Bitcoin

$30,070.51

Overstock

$24.84

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 2:00am ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: The S&P and Nasdaq found their way back into the green after a three-day losing streak, though the market overall has been a little sleepy this week. Yesterday's game ball goes to Overstock stock (say that 3x fast), which jumped after the online retailer agreed to buy Bed Bath & Beyond's IP, name, and digital assets for $21.5 million. But BB&B, which went bankrupt in April, won't be able to keep its stores open as part of the deal.
 

TRAVEL

The search for the Titanic tourist sub is over

Five died in the OceanGate Titan disaster Handout/Getty Images

The marine mystery that captivated the world this week had a tragic conclusion: Authorities confirmed yesterday that they found broken pieces of the OceanGate Titan submersible near the Titanic wreckage it was en route to explore, meaning its five passengers are dead.

They are OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, British explorer Hamish Harding, Titanic expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet, British-Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood, and his son, Suleman Dawood (who, according to his aunt, was "terrified" of the trip but ultimately went to please his dad for Father's Day).

The details: A "catastrophic implosion" of the Titan vessel left a field of debris that was found on the North Atlantic floor yesterday afternoon, 1,600 feet from the bow of the Titanic, US Coast Guard Rear Admiral John Mauger said at a press conference.

When asked about the possibility of recovering the passengers' bodies, Mauger implied there may be nothing left to find: "This is an incredibly unforgiving environment down there on the seafloor."

What does this disaster mean for extreme tourism?

Wealthy adventurers might think twice before paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to risk their lives visiting the treacherous, less-explored parts of the world.

  • The adventure tourism industry was expected to skyrocket from $322 billion in 2022 to more than $1 trillion in 2023, according to Grand View Research.
  • Popular destinations for extreme tourists are the Titanic, Mount Everest, the South Pole, and a favorite frontier for billionaires: space.
  • Twelve people have already died this year trying to climb Everest, and five are still missing, fueling critics' calls for the adventure industry to receive more government oversight.

Years ago, experts sounded the alarm. In a 2018 letter to OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush, the Marine Technology Society said Titan was not up to certain safety standards, risking "serious consequences for everyone in the industry." The next year, Rush told Smithsonian magazine that the commercial sub industry, which hadn't had a serious incident since 1960, was so "obscenely safe" that it hadn't "innovated or grown."

Titanic director James Cameron echoed the safety concerns. Yesterday, he said he was "struck by the similarity [to] the Titanic disaster itself, where the captain was repeatedly warned about ice ahead of his ship and yet he steamed at full speed into an ice field."

Now, Stockton Rush has been added to the Wikipedia article that lists inventors killed by their own inventions.—ML

     

TOGETHER WITH LIQUIDPISTON

This is one engine-ious family

LiquidPiston

Alexander and Nikolay Shkolnik, the MIT grad and physics dad behind LiquidPiston, are delivering the first major innovation to the internal combustion engine in over 100 years.

What's more? They're giving you the chance to become a shareholder.

They've patented a new thermodynamic cycle powering a redesigned rotary engine boasting up to 10x the power of a traditional piston engine. It even runs on a variety of fuels, including hydrogen. This could unlock a 100% green energy solution for the $400b combustion engine market.

No wonder this (thermo)dynamic duo has secured $30m in government contracts already.

Due to their growth and profitability, this could be your last chance to lock in shares at this price. Invest in LiquidPiston today.

WORLD

Tour de headlines

3M global headquarters Michael Siluk/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

3M reaches major settlement over "forever chemicals" claims: The manufacturing giant agreed to pay $10.3 billion to settle a barrage of allegations from US cities and towns that it contaminated their drinking water with chemicals known as PFAS. For decades, 3M has used these chemicals (which are dubbed "forever chemicals" because they refuse to break down in the environment or the human body) in products such as firefighting foam, but hundreds of cities sued it for polluting their water and soil. If the settlement is approved, the money will go toward helping these cities clean up their water.

Disposable vapes are booming. You've seen them inhaled at parties, discarded on city sidewalks, and sold in strip malls: Refillable e-cigarettes are taking over the US vape market. Disposables' market share surged from 24.7% in early 2020 to almost 52% by December 2022, according to an analysis by the CDC, the CDC Foundation, and the Truth Initiative. The rise of disposables shows how the government's vaping crackdown is like playing whack-a-mole—the FDA snuffed out refillable brands such as Juul and Vuse in 2020, but a new crop of vapable plastic has emerged to take their place. Overall, US e-cig sales grew 47% in the period analyzed.

🫠 Record-setting heat in Texas could last through July 4. A deadly heat wave baking the South is showing no signs of releasing its grip, and forecasters increasingly believe the dangerous combo of extreme heat + high humidity will last through next week into the weekend. The oppressive weather has knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of people across three states and sparked tornadoes—one of which killed four in the Texas town of Matador on Wednesday. Meanwhile, a ferocious hailstorm injured almost 100 people attending a Louis Tomlinson concert in Colorado on Wednesday night.

ECONOMY

The world just can't get rid of inflation

Gold star with "you tried" sticker Francis Scialabba

Like your younger sister, inflation will just not take the hint and get lost. And so, as they've done for more than a year now, central bankers around the globe are hiking interest rates even more to stamp out inflation once and for all.

Yesterday, the Bank of England shocked markets by jacking up interest rates by half a percentage point to their highest level in 15 years. The European Central Bank and the central banks of Australia, Canada, Switzerland, and Norway have all announced rate hikes in the last few weeks.

Even Turkey, which over the past two years has lowered interest rates to combat inflation (a bonehead move, economists say), went back to Econ 101 and raised interest rates by 6.5% yesterday.

It's probably gonna happen here, too. Although the Fed decided to pause rate hikes last week, Chair Jerome Powell said on Capitol Hill yesterday that Americans should expect one or two more increases this year. Because, while buying eggs and gas doesn't hurt quite as much as it used to, the prices of many consumer goods and services are still rising uncomfortably fast. The Consumer Price Index, a broad measure of inflation, rose 4% in May, double the Fed's 2% goal.

Bottom line: Central banks are all of us trying to slightly turn up the AC in our parents' house without causing chaos (i.e., a recession). But the longer inflation sticks around, the harder that gets.—MM

     

TOGETHER WITH FACET

Facet

How much $$$ does it take? A Facet membership helps people reach their full potential on the reg—and that looks different for everyone. Money matters are as subjective as favorite foods. But a recent survey revealed what *most Americans think it takes to be considered "wealthy." The answer? $2.2m.

SPORTS

The NBA's Wemby era starts now

Victor Wembanyama Sarah Stier/Getty Images

Victor Wembanyama is officially a San Antonio Spur after being selected No. 1 overall in the NBA draft last night. The (possibly) 7-foot-4 French phenom joins a group of international players dominating the US-based league and fueling its influence overseas.

Wembanyama, who's been called the greatest NBA prospect since LeBron James, catapulted to basketball fame as a teenager because he manages to be extremely coordinated while also being extremely tall. His size enables him to play killer defense (dude can block a shot just by standing up), but he can also dribble and shoot—skills typically reserved for shorter players, and certainly not those with an eight-foot wingspan.

The growing presence of international stars in the NBA is hard to miss. As American legends like Kevin Durant and Steph Curry get older, the NBA is becoming a magnet for foreign talent—and taking its product to the source.

  • The last five MVP awards were given to three international players: Joel Embiid (Cameroon), recent NBA champ Nikola Jokić (Serbia), and Giannis Antetokounmpo (Greece and Nigeria).
  • The NBA staged a buzzy game in Paris earlier this year, and the league and the French government are planning to deepen ties ahead of the 2024 Olympic Games (hosted in...Paris).

What's with the Euro takeover? Wembanyama, who started playing professional basketball in France when he was 15, argues that the European system of going pro early instead of playing college ball like in the US better prepares players for the demands of the NBA: "We play at a higher level than American prospects in better competitions," he said earlier this week.

Maybe he has a point: Four of the top five picks in this NBA draft did not play college basketball.—CC

     

GRAB BAG

Key performance indicators

A scene from I Think You Should Leave where the man is saying "You gotta give" I Think You Should Leave/Netflix

Stat: Americans gave just 1.7% of their disposable income to charity last year, the lowest share since 1995, according to a new Giving USA report. You can chalk that up to economic uncertainty, inflation, and the fact that individuals feel like they're making less of an impact than bigger philanthropists, per Axios. Speaking of bigger philanthropists, Warren Buffett just donated another $4.6 billion of Berkshire Hathaway stock to five charities, bringing his total giving to over $51 billion. That's more than his net worth in 2006, CNBC notes.

Quote: "Our study points to a causal link between habitual napping and larger total brain volume."

Wait a sec…regular napping makes your brain larger? How is this not the biggest headline in the world? That's the conclusion reached by a new study that compared people age 40–69 who were genetically predisposed to take naps vs. people who weren't, and the researchers found that the nappers—through their naps—had bigger brains that were equivalent to people 2.6–6.5 years younger. The study does have limitations, such as finding that napping does not affect three other brain measures. But it does apparently preserve brain volume.

Read: Pink Floyd, The Wizard of Oz, and me. (New York Times)

QUIZ

Quizzing on the dock of the bay

New Friday quiz image

The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew's Weekly News Quiz has been compared to two self-checkouts opening at the same time when you're second in line.

It's that satisfying. Ace the quiz.

NEWS

What else is brewing

  • Kesha and her former producer Dr. Luke settled their legal battle that began almost a decade ago when Kesha accused him of drugging and raping her, allegations that Dr. Luke vehemently denied.
  • Ford secured a $9.2 billion loan from the Department of Energy to build EV battery factories. It's one of the largest loans of its kind ever.
  • V. Pappas, TikTok's COO and the public face of the company in the US, resigned after five years in the role.
  • Furby, the freaky/loveable toy that was a phenomenon in the late '90s, is being revived by Hasbro for the toy's 25th anniversary.

RECS

Friday to-do list

The meme stock fiasco is coming to the big screen: Watch the first trailer for Dumb Money, starring Paul Dano, Seth Rogan, Sebastian Stan, and Pete Davidson.

 What is the "Song of the Summer"? Here's a helpful guide.

#Discipline: This guy wants to let you know he hasn't had a fizzy drink in more than 1,100 days.

 Online investigation toolkit: Here's a spreadsheet of everything you need to become an amateur sleuth.

Invested interest: Gain a competitive edge with CFO Brew, the best source of industry insights for corporate finance leaders. Subscribe now.

Accelerate: Level up fast in math, data, and CS with Brilliant. Their quick, visual, hands-on lessons make learning fun and easy. 10m+ people already agree, so try it free today.*

*This is sponsored advertising content.

GAMES

The puzzle section

Jigsaw: Thousands of people flock to Stonehenge each year for the summer solstice. You can be there in spirit by playing today's jigsaw.

Friday puzzle

What image should replace the question mark?

Three images of someone shouting, a thorn, and a set and one question mark

AROUND THE BREW

Plan lightyears ahead

 Toy Story/Pixar

To Q4 and beyond: Take flight in August with our one-week online course, Quarterly Planning. Reserve your seat today.

Interested in VCs, Big Tech ethics, and EV sales strategy? Subscribe to Tech Brew.

Abercrombie & Fitch's recent success is not a fluke. Learn more about the TikTok strategy that generated record sales.

ANSWER

An image of stew.

The images are anagrams of the cardinal directions (shout = south, seat = east, thorn = north), so the final image should be stew (for west).

Source: Puzzle A Day

✳︎ A Note From Facet

*Source: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/who-do-americans-consider-wealthy-plain-old-millionaires-just-dont-cut-it-anymore-602569de?mod=home-page&utm_campaign=later-linkinbio-marketwatch&utm_content=later-35811203&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkin.bio

**Based on a study conducted by Facet in April 2023. A statistically valid sample of members following Facet's current planning process demonstrated that more than half of these members, defined here as a majority, achieved value greater than their planning fee. This value was shown to reoccur on an annual basis. Assumptions included average expenses and fees, using retirement tax savings, portfolio expenses and tax loss harvesting as value drivers using Facet's investment services, and discounting value to align with the acceptance of Facet recommendations. Facet assesses clients an annual flat fee for service based on the complexity of planning needs. There is no separate or additional fee for investment management. This is not a guarantee or prediction of actual results for any member and results may vary by member. Some value like tax loss harvesting may vary year to year. Facet Wealth, Inc. ("Facet") is an SEC registered investment adviser headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland. This is not an offer to sell securities or investment, financial, legal, or tax advice.

         

Written by Neal Freyman, Cassandra Cassidy, Matty Merritt, and Molly Liebergall

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