Morning Brew Daily - Air Canada Union Defies the Government & Americans Are Stuck…Literally
Episode Date: August 18, 2025Episode 650: Neal and Toby recap the labor dispute within Air Canada where its workers are defying a government order to return to work. Then, Americans are stuck where they are, literally, as mobilit...y has dipped to its lowest rate. Also, Six Flags is having a roller coaster of a Summer as it sees its attendance drop amid mechanical issues. Meanwhile, #RushTok expands its reach and Warren Buffett’s stake in UnitedHealth gives it a jolt in its shares. Finally, what you need to know in the week ahead! 00:00 - Check out our new show Brew Markets! 2:45 - Air Canada labor dispute 8:00 - US economy stuck in a rut 11:00 - Six Flags red flags 17:00 - Rushtok goes global 20:30 - Buffett Bump 23:45 - Week Ahead LinkedIn will even give you a $100 credit on your next campaign so you can try it yourself. Check out LinkedIn.com/mbd for more. Check out Brew Markets here: swap.fm/l/9Qk4z73Z2nEwFiCB4qee Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Submit your MBD Password Answer here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1Yzrl1BJY2FAFwXBYtb0CEp8XQB2Y6mLdHkbq9Kb2Sz8/viewform?edit_requested=true Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Good morning brew daily show.
I'm Neil Fryman.
And I'm Toby Howell.
Today, Americans have stopped moving, which spells bad news for the economy.
That the government ordered striking air Canada flight attendants back to work, but the union said, nope.
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The opinion representing Air Canada's 10,000 flight attendants is treating a government order to return to work just like you treat the fast and seatbelt sign. Ignoring it.
The decision prolongs a crippling strike that has shut down Canada's biggest carrier in disrupted domestic and global travel.
Air Canada tried to shimmy out of the strike by appealing to the Canadian government Labor Board asking it to order a binding arbitration,
where an independent third party comes in to set the terms of the contract, which would have ended the strike by 2 p.m. yesterday.
It got what it wanted with Prime Minister Mark Carney calling on the Canadian Industrial Relations Board to issue the order.
But flight attendants who are pushing for higher pay, specifically boarding pay, which compensates them for their time, getting the plane ready to travel, not just when the doors are closed, weren't having it.
This is not the first time the Canadian government has intervened to prevent a strike.
Last year, Justin Trudeau ordered the CIRB to get involved to prevent a rail and dock strike.
but it is unusual to define order, which the union says it will continue to do until their bid is heard.
In the meantime, the airline that transports roughly 130,000 passengers a day and operates nearly 200 flights to the U.S.
will have its passengers left in the lurch during the busy summer travel season.
Neil Air Canada is now saying it will once again try to restart operations come this evening,
but we'll see if that actually happens.
This has gotten quite spicy.
Quite dramatic.
The Labor Minister issued a statement just a few hours in two.
to this strike saying it has become clear that this dispute won't be resolved at the table.
These two sides are so far apart.
Canadians are increasingly finding themselves in very difficult situations, and the strike
is rapidly impacting the Canadian economy.
So she invoked something that's called securing the industrial peace, which means that during times
where the economy is rapidly deteriorating due to a strike, the government can step in and say,
okay, you have to go to work while we move this thing to arbitration.
and then the union is saying that is unconstitutional.
We defy your order.
You can't do that.
And basically didn't come back to work.
And therefore, Air Canada, which wanted to restart flights,
this is going to be a very long process to get everything back in order.
It's going to be a seven to 10 day process.
So they want to start as soon as possible.
And now their planes are still grounded and hundreds of thousands of passengers are in the lurch.
One thing that the union is very much not pleased with is the fact that the CIRB chair,
her name is Maurice Tremblay, did not recuse herself from handling this case, and why did the
union want her to recuse herself? It's because they think that there's a massive conflict of
interest. She served as Air Canada's counsel from 1998 to 2004. So they're saying, like, what are we
even doing here? How can this person be an independent arbitrator if they literally worked for the person
or the organization that we're negotiating with right now? So it does look like that is another
sticking point, not even talking about the fact that the two sides are pretty far apart when it comes
to their pay package. Let's talk about the pay package and the contract negotiations. So the flight
attendants are getting from the airline a 38% increase in total compensation over a four-year
period, including a 12% to 16% rise in hourly pay for the first year. The union shot back and said
that doesn't make up for all the inflation that we've seen over the past few years. And it's
underneath all of those consumer price increases that people have to pay to live their lives.
And then the sticking point that you mentioned is called boarding pay.
So right now for many airlines, flight attendants don't get paid for their hours until the boarding door is closed.
And as anyone who's flown a plane knows, flight attendants do work while you are boarding the plane when you're trying to stuff your overhead luggage in there.
They move things around and obviously help people find their seats.
It does seem to be, there does seem to be movement on this issue, Delta Airlines in the United States.
Their flight attendants aren't represented by a union, but they started paying flight attendants
at half their hourly rate during boarding.
Then you got Alaska and American Airlines have also done the same thing following the leader
with Delta.
It doesn't look like Air Canada has done the same.
And that's what flight attendants really, really want because they say we're working during
this period, but you're not really paying us for it.
Yeah.
And Air Canada, this is just another headache in a summer.
that is supposed to be a big summer for them as more people travel domestically in Canada,
less people traveled to the yes.
But they actually just recorded lower net income in the second quarter compared to a year ago.
So the business is getting a little bit dicey right now and add this strike into the fray.
And it just went from bad to worse.
And Canada is big.
Canada spans six time zones.
You know, you can take road trips and drive to other locations.
But compared to other countries, it is a big flying country to go from place to place because
it is just vast over there. So Air Canada has 48% of all flight seats. And so now you really
can't fly anywhere in Canada. There are some other airlines like WestJet that can pick up some
capacity, but not enough. So Air Canada wants to get this thing back moving. We'll see what
happens later today. Moving on, the American economy is stuck, literally. People in the United States
are moving to new homes and cities at the lowest rate on record, the Wall Street Journal reported,
reflecting an economy that is as stagnant as a cat that just found a nice nap spot.
Since the country's origin, Americans have been a uniquely mobile people, which contributed to
our outsized economic and cultural dynamism. When the French writer Michel Chevalier visited
in 1835, he observed that, quote, the American is devoured with a passion for locomotion.
He cannot stay in one place. In the 1960s, about one in five Americans moved in any given year,
according to the Atlantic. Fast forward to the last few years, and only one in
13 Americans moved 7.7% the lowest rate since U.S. Census records began in 1948.
Economists have a few theories to explain our dramatic shift into neutral. For one, the labor
market has slowed down, presenting fewer opportunities to move to a new city for a job.
And by the same token, workers who are thinking of quitting are worried about finding a new
gig, so they're staying put and toughing it out. Another factor is the availability of housing.
Home prices are at all-time highs, and mortgage rates are double where they were just a few years ago.
many homeowners are attached to their existing homes by so-called golden handcuffs.
Their interest payments are so low that it'd be financial malpractice to move now.
Toby, the U-Hauls are collecting dust.
Yeah, it's not just golden handcuffs in the housing market.
It is golden handcuffs in the jobs market as well, because if you have one of those stable
jobs that maybe you got during the pandemic, you don't necessarily want to take a big leap
and try something new.
And that has consequences for everyone because a frozen housing market means that if you're a
growing family. You can't necessarily upgrade. Empty nesters can't necessarily downsize. And first-time
buyers are just screwed because they are completely locked out. And so if you can't move for a job
offer too, that often means you end up earning less money. And if companies aren't looking to
other states to bringing talent, that might mean that their productivity and their profits can
suffer. So you go down the line and suddenly you see how important economic and geographic mobility
is to America as a whole.
Geographic mobility equals economic mobility.
That is something that has been documented by economists at the University of Chicago.
They looked at three of the most productive U.S. metro areas, New York, San Francisco, and San Jose
from 1964 to 2009.
And they found that if those three cities could accommodate everyone who stood to gain by moving
there because there was available housing, it would have boosted United States GDP by about
$2 trillion by 2009, putting an extra $9,000 into the pocket of every American worker each year.
So the fact that people aren't moving means they aren't earning as much, which means that
GDP is depressed. So this is a huge economic issue that maybe you don't think about.
People aren't moving. Everyone's a little bit poor.
And then one final aspect that are making people move less is that couples where both people
work have the lowest levels of interstate mobility. And so as you see more women entering the
workforce as you see more dual income houses necessary to survive in the fact that rising expenses
and just everything is so expensive now, you are going to see a lot more stagnant people because
it's hard enough to move one job. If you have to move two jobs from one area to another,
that just makes it all the more difficult. The 2023 merger between six flags and the theme park
operator Cedar Fair was supposed to bring cost savings, new pricing strategies, and create a theme
Park Empire to challenge Disney and Universal.
Instead, it's been more like six red flags with synergies few and far between.
In the latest quarter, the combined companies that operate under the Six Flags brand name
posted a 9% drop in attendance compared to last year, leading to the company's third consecutive
quarterly loss.
That translates to 1.4 million fewer parkgoers than last year.
Cedar Fair owns theme parks including Cedar Point in Ohio, Carol Wins in North Carolina,
and Knottesbury Farm in California.
Initially, shareholders were pumped for this merger because Cedar Fair was thought to be more operationally consistent across parks,
while Six Flags had a better known brand and access to popular IP from Warner Bros,
but was thought to be a little more operationally inconsistent.
What looked good on paper hasn't materialized, leaning to falling attendance and CEO Richard Zimmerman heading for the exit later this year.
A perfect microcosm of Six Flags Nightmare Summer, its brand-new Sirens Curse Rollercoaster in Ohio,
open to very popular reviews this June, only to break down five times since its debut.
Reliability issues, delayed rides, and some plain old bad weather means the company squandered the all-important
summer period where it hoped to sell season passes to its 42 North American theme parks.
Neil Thronell increased competition in the form of Universal's brand new $7 billion park
and Disney remaining strong as ever, and you have a summer that's looking worse than the time
I decided to eat an elephant ear and a turkey leg before going on King DeKaw.
Yeah, that was very disgusting.
Not pretty.
Cedar Point, this place in Ohio is becoming an absolute punchline so much so that a
state representative in Ohio has introduced a law that would require major amusement parks
to provide real-time updates about ride closures in an app because these rides are breaking
down so much.
One person was quoted who recently went this past weekend saying rides were going down left
and right.
This is just a horrible look for what was supposed to be a very hyped new,
ride Six Flags is looking to its competition. It's getting squeezed on the upper end. It's getting
squeezed on the lower end. This murder has been a failure so far. Yeah, they blamed a lot of it on
severe thunderstorms and excessive heat, but one, you know, author at the Wall Street Journal
went to one of the theme parks that operate under Six Flags on like a beautiful, sunny summer
day right before school is starting. And they're like, the parking lot wasn't full. I barely
waited in line, so you can't just blame the weather. But then also, you're in a lot.
in kind of this arms race when it comes to new rides because that is one of the reliable ways
to get people to turn out to a new park. When you open a new ride, you do see a boost in attendance.
But if your rides don't work, I mean, it's ironic that it's called sirens curse. People are saying,
is this ride actually cursed because, one, it is fun. It's a tilt roller coaster, like,
puts your face down and then send you on a drop. Sounds really exciting. But if it doesn't work,
then you're not going to see that attendance boobs. So when you are trying to compete with the big boys of
Universal and Disney, you need reliability.
you need big rides and they're not getting any of that.
Complaining about bad weather is the amusement park equivalent of the dog ate my homework.
You can, Six Flags has said this on pretty much every single earnings call every quarter since
2022.
But the thing is, it's not the only amusement park company out there.
It has a rival called United Parks and Resorts that operates SeaWorld and Bush Gardens.
And, you know, they are subject to the same exact weather constraints as Six Flags.
They posted a 1% year-over-year increase in attendance.
Walt Disney just had its earnings report two weeks ago.
They said that this was the best quarter for Walt Disney World in Orlando that it's ever had.
So clearly something operationally is off with six flags that they need to fix and they have a few ideas.
One of them is selling off land and closing some parks.
They're closing the Six Flags in Maryland near D.C., so I'm sorry for all of those people who went there.
and they're hoping to just get smaller
and pour more money into improving
the existing assets that they have.
Up next, we have our winners of the weekend.
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Welcome to Winners of the Weekend, the segment where Toby and I pick two things that treated themselves to a $20 bagel in locks.
I won the pre-show poll vault, so I get to go first.
And my winner is Rush Talk, whose cultural and financial influence only seems to grow year after year.
Yesterday, sororities at the University of Alabama handed out bids to incoming freshmen, culminating the week-long rush process that's become, in the Wall Street Journal's words, a kind of reality television for the TikTok masses.
Rush Talk, which documents the hyper-competitive uniquely American exercise in which sororities at Big Southern
Universities recruit new members, first went viral about four years ago when the applicants began posting about their experiences.
Now, the spectacle of rushing sororities is a full-blown cultural phenomenon, thanks in part to an HBO series in 2023 that helped SEC's sorority culture find a global audience.
These days, it's not rare to find people from Latin America to Australia tuning in each August to check out an outfit of the day or watch Sorority.
sororities post increasingly elaborate dance videos.
They can't comprehend why anyone would do this at a place of education, which I suppose
is a big part of the appeal.
As with anything that gets extremely popular on social media, brands have infiltrated
Rush Talk and turned it into big business.
Earlier this month, Kim Kardashian's shapeware brand Skims launched a new line of back-to-school
basics with a campaign featuring real-life sorority influencers from Alabama, Duke, and San Diego
State.
I would argue it's not just a reality TV show.
it's a full on sport at this point because there are so many girls who want to get into each one of these houses.
It's so competitive.
You don't just show up on August and, you know, dress cute and expect to get in.
They are preparing a year in advance and oftentimes hiring these rush coaches who help them curate their Instagrams,
who help them, you know, practice speaking with people to come off.
Well, some get up to 30 letters of recommendation in order to get into these sororities.
and then obviously, like, once the dance videos come around, you have to rehearse for those as well.
So it's gone are the days of just being yourself and just like dress up and have your cute outfits.
Now you have to really start planning six months a year in advance now.
And that sort of pressure has led to increased global attention at this point because it is just so foreign to a lot of different parts of the world.
They don't have American universities.
You don't have this culture there.
It's foreign to us.
It is foreign.
Kind of. And so imagine if you're living abroad and watching this all play out. I mean, it's definitely just ballooned over the past few years. And it's created a cottage industry for consultants, which are charging up to $10,000 for months of coaching. And then in each of these posts on social media, you have all these small businesses in these areas like Tuscaloosa, you know, commenting on the videos hoping so many people are watching them. They're hoping for bigger business. And certain stores in near the University of Alabama and other.
other SEC schools are seeing a huge boost. They're going viral too because this is where all these
girls are shopping to get all of their outfits. So it's become, you know, very much a cottage
industry, not to mention the fact that some of these girls are becoming actual influencers
that are inking major brand deals. And it's making the entire thing bigger year over year because
recruitment registrations have increased 13% nationwide dating back to 2022. So more people are getting
interested in sorority life going forward. So this, uh,
phenomenon is only going to get bigger as the years go on.
My winner of the weekend is United Health Group because it got a little Buffett bump.
According to a regulatory filing known as a 13F that gives the snapshot of a firm's investments
on the final day of a quarter, Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has amassed a stake in United
Health Group worth more than $1.5 billion.
When investors found out, United Health's stock rallied nearly 11% in extended trading on
Thursday.
The embattled health care company is currently going to.
through a brutal stretch. Its stock has lost nearly half of its values so far this year,
as its face down negative headline after headline. In April, it missed earnings and slashed its
outlook, sending its stock down 22% in a single day. Then May brought CEO Andrew Witty's
surprise resignation and a scrapped annual forecast. Two days later, it was found that the Justice
Department was investigating it for potential Medicare fraud, shares plunge another 28% in just
three days. But for all the bad developments of the past year, United Health still generated
400 billion in revenue and $15 billion in net profit in 2024. Before the Buffett bump, it was
valued at just 13 times earnings. For a value investor like Berkshire Hathaway, United Health stands
out as a prime buy in a frothy market sitting at all-time highs despite swirling tariff uncertainty.
Neil, this was the first good headline United Health has seen in a long while. But its probals are not
going away. Still, it is nice that Warren Buffett threw it a lifeline because, as you mentioned,
this is the kind of company that he likes to take a stake in that is generating a ton of cash.
Its stock has been beaten over the past year for certain reasons, for many different reasons.
And we'll see what happens going forward. The entire healthcare industry is, you know,
getting bludgeoned right now because there's increased pressure from the White House over regulation,
cutting out the middlemen, these pharmacy benefit managers.
and at the same time, they are just facing higher costs, greater reimbursement costs.
So we'll see what Buffett think.
It would be great if Buffett could say, here's what I think United Health Group is doing well.
Well, a lot of, it's not just Buffett, a lot of billionaire hedge fund managers also increased their stake in United Health.
David Tepper, who owns the Panthers, sorry, Panthers fans.
He bought 2.3 million shares in the second quarter.
Another hedge fund, Lone Pine Capital, bought 1.7 million shares.
The quant hedge funds were loaded up as well, Renaissance.
technologies and 2 Sigma also bought new stakes. So clearly the smart money, as you like to call it,
is pouring in United Health because it is just such an important part of the United States health
care system. They think it's almost too big to fail. And so if it has got such a big haircut,
that is why they are piling in. So probably that is similar logic to Warren Buffett,
who does love these big, boring, cash generating businesses that have been around for a long time and
probably will continue to be around. Another company that Buffett's liked, and I have to just
point this out. For our fourth consecutive quarter, he's poured money into domino's pizza,
and now Berkshire Hathaway owns 7.8% of dominoes. That is maybe a boring business that just turns
out pizza and grows year after year. Its stock price has absolutely ballooned since its IPO.
Those lava cakes are anything but boring. Do not call those boring deal.
Okay, it's Monday. So here are the events you need to know about to stay ahead in the week ahead.
Today, President Trump will meet with Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelenskyy and an entire 11th.
11-man roster of European leaders who are keen to get in Trump's ear following his meeting with
Vladimir Putin on Friday. Fears are growing across Europe that Trump will favor an arrangement
proposed by Putin that would require Ukraine to cede territory in its eastern regions in exchange
for a peace deal. So they're heading to D.C. for an urgent chat. And like I said, this is going to be
a huge meeting, including the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Britain, the EU, NATO, and more.
One French official said it was the most consequential for peace and security in Europe since the fall
of the Soviet Union. And speaking of big meetings, central bankers will be flying into one of the
coolest airports in the world, Jackson Hole, Wyoming for the Federal Reserve's annual policy
symposium. If you get a thrill from talking credit spreads and labor markets, this event is for you,
held every year in the shadow of the Grand Teton's, the symposium brings in central bankers from
all over the world to discuss the challenges facing the global financial system. It all culminates
with a highly anticipated keynote address Friday by another than Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
Yeah, remember last year, Powell kind of telegraphed a pivot to cutting rates saying the time has come for policy to adjust in that.
My confidence has grown that inflation is on a sustainable path back to 2%.
That feels like a lifetime ago at this point.
But if we don't get similar hints this time around, Wall Street might get a little nervous, despite there being a lot of confidence that a September rate cut is coming.
And on the earnings calendar, it is a retail's time to step up to the plate.
Walmart, Target, Home Depot, and Lowe's will give an update on their businesses,
giving us key info into the health of American consumers who drive two-thirds of GDP.
Pay attention to whether Target can get off the struggle bus with a back-to-school shopping boost.
It slashed its outlook in the spring and its stock is down 24% for the year.
I do have some confidence, maybe not in Tarje, because it's still a bit of a mess,
but because June and July's retail sales were solid, they rose 0.9% and 0.5% respectively,
which was in line and expectation.
Plus other retailers, Amazon, eBay, Shopify, even on running,
said that they had yet to see a pullback in spending. So I am relatively bullish. And we know that
Walmart specifically tends to thrive during times when people are pulling back because they have
lower prices. So Walmart is usually the biggest earnings that you're looking for for retail just
because they're so massive. And in sports, the college football season kicks off with a slate of
games on Saturday, including a big 12 matchup between Iowa State and Kansas State in
Dublin, Ireland, of all places. As for the top contenders, Texas.
is the preseason number one in the AP and coaches poll,
followed by Ohio State, Georgia, Penn State, Clemson, and Oregon.
Dublin, Ireland, great place.
Just went in golf there.
It is giving some big 12 energy, though.
I think they'll appreciate the high-flying brand of football.
That is all the time we have.
Thanks so much for starting your morning with us
and have a wonderful start to the week.
If you have any thoughts or feedback on today's show,
send a note to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com.
Now let's play Password, our game,
where you have to guess a secret word from a series of clues.
The password for last week was, drum roll please, mild.
M-I-L-D.
Congrats to everyone who got it correctly.
There was a winner, but apparently he doesn't check his email over the weekend,
so we are still trying to get in touch.
While we wait on confirmation, let's move on to this week's game.
As a reminder of how this works,
each day of the week will give you a clue for a mystery word.
You have to identify.
The earlier in the week, you submit the word,
the more entries you get into the lottery that determines the winner,
five for Monday, four for Tuesday, and so on.
Toby, what is the first clue of this week's password?
Your first clue for this week is the password is a two-word movie title.
The password is a two-word movie title.
If you're a particularly psychic cinefiler or you're just feeling lucky,
you can submit by heading to the link in the show description
or by heading to our Instagram at MB Daily Show
where we'll also post a link to submit. Good luck.
Now let's roll of credits.
Emily Milliron is our executive producer.
Raymond Liu is our producer, our associate producers,
are Olivia Graham and Olivia Lake.
Hair and makeup is so relieved rushes over.
Devin Emery is our president
and our show is a production of Morning Brew.
Great show today, Neil.
Let's run it back tomorrow.
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