Morning Brew Daily - DoorDash Ups Delivery Reign with $5B Deals & Tariffs Hurt Weddings?
Episode Date: May 7, 2025Episode 577: Neal and Toby discuss the meeting between President Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney in an effort to squash the beef in the trade war. Then, DoorDash reports strong Q1 earnin...gs and makes some big acquisitions. And, a deadly parasite that hasn’t been around since the 1980s has popped back up again and is threatening the livestock industry. Next, weddings are becoming more and more expensive because of…yup, tariffs. 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. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow 00:00 - Real ID Starts Today 03:20 - Canada PM Visits the White House 08:40 - DoorDash Expands 11:50 - Screwworms Return 17:40 - Weddings Getting Pricey 21:50 - Headlines All investing involves the risk of loss, including loss of principal. Brokerage services for US-listed, registered securities, options and bonds in a self-directed account are offered by Public Investing, Inc., member FINRA & SIPC. Public Investing offers a High-Yield Cash Account where funds from this account are automatically deposited into partner banks where they earn interest and are eligible for FDIC insurance; Public Investing is not a bank. Cryptocurrency trading services are offered by Bakkt Crypto Solutions (NMLS ID 1890144), which is licensed to engage in virtual currency business activity by the NYSDFS. Cryptocurrency is highly speculative and involves a high degree of risk. Cryptocurrency holdings are not protected by the FDIC or SIPC. APY as of 3/18/25, subject to change. *Terms and Conditions apply. 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, Canadian leader Mark Carney visited the White House as tensions heat up ahead of the Dallas-Winnipeg series.
Oh, and the trade war too.
Then a terrifying, flesh-eating fly species is coming for America's cattle.
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One of the last times the U.S. met Canada.
There were three fights in the first nine seconds.
Their most recent meeting was a little more cordial and also not a hockey game.
Yesterday, newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney
made a highly anticipated visit to the White House for a chat with President Trump
at a time when the economic ties between the two North American neighbors are fraying like never before.
Trump has repeatedly accused Canada and did so again before yesterday's meeting of leaching off the U.S.'s
economy posting on social media, there's no reason for us to be subsidizing Canada.
Since entering office, he's instituted 25% tariffs on Canadian goods, excluding products covered by a free trade agreement,
as well as tariffs on steel, aluminum, and cars, which Canada ships in droves to the U.S.
has also insisted that Canada become the 51st state, angering the people who live there.
Carney, meanwhile, is a former central banker who's promoted economic nationalism,
and his defiance of Trump helped him get elected last week in a massive come-from-behind victory.
So awkward might be a good word to describe the lead-up to their meeting yesterday,
but in the end, it was far from a Zelensky-level blow-up and pretty much chummy,
with Trump saying he respected Carney and Carney calling Trump a transformational president.
However, making Canada the 51st state did come up, and Carney replied to a reporter,
it's not for sale, it won't be for sale ever.
Trump quipped, never say never.
Okay, Toby, we had this big meeting.
Things seem to go okay, but still, no progress on a trade deal was made.
And with these heavy tariffs on the books, the Canadian and U.S. economies are increasingly
splintering in profound ways.
Yeah, despite this relatively chummy meeting, you are right that the U.S. and Canada are
not jumping back into bed with each other to do business because think about business owners.
want things like stability. Banks want stability if they're lending money. Private equity firms
want stability. And what do we not have right now between the U.S. and Canada when it comes to
trade relations stability? So Canada is looking at kind of their dependence on the U.S.
in reevaluating here because right now Canada depends on the U.S. for 75% of its exports.
That is a huge number. Obviously, their manufacturing sector ships, 42% of its output to the U.S.
as well. So now you're seeing companies kind of reevaluate and say, hey, where are other customers?
Can we look to the Asian markets potentially to replace the U.S.? Can we focus on distributing
not exclusively to this one market that's typically made up most of our sales? Can we reduce
the amount of sales coming in for the U.S.? So you are just seeing this kind of reevaluation when it comes
to who we're relying on for trade partners if you are a Canadian business.
And it's worth remembering amid all the talk between the U.S. and China that the U.S. and Canada are each other's largest trading partners.
The two exchanged $916 billion in goods and services last year.
Yes, Canada sent 75% of its exports to the United States, but the United States also sends $350 billion worth of goods to Canada.
And now Canada has retaliated with $44 billion with tariffs on $44 billion worth of goods like alcohol.
and things like that. So there is an economic pain happening in the other direction, too.
And you're already seeing trade levels plummet between these two countries in March.
Canadian exports to the U.S. fell 6.6%. That doesn't sound like a ton, but it is the biggest drop
since the COVID-19 pandemic. And then imports from United States to Canada fell 3%.
And if we look even smaller at just tiny border towns in Washington that rely on a lot of Canadian tourists to survive,
they're seeing a lot of pain there as well. One grocery store said that we've seen sales drop 30%
because no one's coming into the U.S. anymore. And then this was a very funny detail from a Bloomberg report.
There is a rubber duck museum that used to be located in the U.S. And again, most of its customers came from Canada.
But they relocated over the border because they could dodge some of the tariffs on Chinese goods because a lot of their rubber ducks were sourced from China.
So again, that's a very small scale example. But it just shows you how this.
decoupling is affected everyone from very large businesses to, you know, rubber duck museums.
The travel industry really has been the poster trial of this economic fraying.
Just recently, WestJet, which is Canada's second largest airline, canceled a planned flight from
Vancouver to Austin. It was the first nonstop flight between these two cities, and they just
said, well, the demand wasn't there. And you just go down the line from the earnings reports this
year, you see Airbnb saying we see Canada's, Canadians are traveling at a much lower rate to the
United States. Hyatt called it a flyover where Canadians are still traveling, but they're just
flying over the United States to Mexico. Booking Holdings, another travel giant. Canadians are
traveling less to the U.S., but we see them traveling to Mexico. More at the moment, Delta
Airlines, a significant drop-off in bookings from Canada. United Airlines said Canadian passenger
volumes to the U.S. were down 9% year over a year. So, I mean, they're just really,
there's quite a precipitous plunge in Canadians coming to the United States.
That is a fact that every single company who deals with this is saying.
Maybe they just don't have real ideas.
No, they have their passwords.
DoorDash reported earnings yesterday that exceeded expectations
and did what any of us would do when we're feeling ourselves a little.
Go shopping.
The U.S. delivery company announced two major acquisitions yesterday,
showing it's got more global ambitions than shuttling a burrito in a private chariot to your doorstep.
The first announcement was an agreement to buy the London-based delivery company Deliveroo
for just under $4 billion.
dollars. Then hours later, it snapped up the hospitality tech company seven rooms for $1.2 billion.
DoorDash's vision is to break out of a U.S. market that it has essentially taken over, having already
won about two-thirds of the domestic food delivery space. With Deliveroo in the fold, DoorDash's reach
expands to over 40 countries in a combined 50 million monthly active users, establishing it as
the biggest player in the global market as well. Speaking of the global market, a main DoorDash competitor
also did a little shopping of its own yesterday,
with Uber buying a controlling stake
in the Turkish delivery app, Trendial Go.
It all adds up to an industry
that is in its consolidation era
after a slowdown from pandemic-era highs,
clearing the way for a heavyweight like DoorDash
to expand their lead.
It is bulking season in the delivery industry.
You mentioned Uber bought this Turkish delivery app,
process, and also in Europe agreed to buy
Amsterdam's Justy Takeaway,
which is a big delivery competitor,
in Europe Wonder Group, which is this delivery startup founded by Jet.com's Mark Lour,
bought Grubhubb earlier this year. That company is now worth $7 billion. So you are seeing a lot of
consolidation in this industry, which really has weathered the post-pandemic slump, I think,
a lot better than anyone expected. DoorDash became profitable in the last year, reported really
strong earnings. And if you go down the line from these earnings reports from these delivery
companies. They're saying we're fine. Like I don't know what McDonald's and these other, you know,
Starbucks and these other companies are talking about a nervous consumer who's pulling back. I mean,
DoorDash CEO, Tony Shoe said we haven't seen any changes in consumer behavior, even if there
are changes in consumer sentiment. Instacart CFO got up there and said, no, I haven't seen any
signs of a weaker consumer. Uber CEO, Dara Khazer Sahi, call this company recession resistant.
So to a T, these companies are saying, we're doing perfect.
fine. I don't know what everyone else is going on with.
And some companies that you mentioned are even expanding, launching into new markets.
Instacart was one that you mentioned. They just launched a new drinks and snack delivery app called Fizz.
This is a alcohol and snack delivery specific app that allows you to actually split the cost
amongst your friends if you're hosting a party. So instead of just having one person buy all the alcohol and then
them later, they think that you should do that within their app called Fizz because they said young
people love doing this. It used to be in the olden days, like the host would determine the
menu, determine what people are drinking, and bear a lot of the costs. Now, millennials and Gen Z,
they want to spread it across their friends. Everyone wants to say in what they're actually
going to be eating and drinking. So they launched a standalone app there. So you're right, it's another
data point that some of these delivery companies are saying, we are seeing not only that we're doing
fine right now, but opportunities for expansion into new markets. They want to go after the frat
party market. Yeah, we'll see how that works out. Okay, moving on, a vicious
flesh-eating fly has broken a biological barrier in Central America, and officials warn hordes of
them are on their way to wreak economic havoc and do other really gross stuff in the United States.
It's not the plot of a new Stephen King novel. This is actually happening. The screw worm,
whose larvae eat their host from the inside out, has marched up into Mexico this year and is
freaking out American agriculture officials who warned, we're not prepared for all the flesh
eating that's about to come. If you were born in the 1920s and lived in Texas, you are very
familiar with the old screw worm. It devastated livestock in the South for decades, costing the
U.S. economy hundreds of millions of dollars each year. I mean, this thing can kill a full-grown
steer in just 10 days. But after the U.S. government working in tandem with Mexican and
Central American partners poured tons of resources into monitoring and eradicating these flesh
eaters, screwworms have been virtually absent from the country, saving the American consumer
more than $1 billion every year on beef by 1974 or $6.5 billion today. Now the screw worm is back
on the move while our defenses are down. More than 950 cases have been reported in Mexico so
far this year with the potential to infest American livestock and also decimate wildlife like
deer, hog, squirrels, and raccoons. As one USDA inspection leader said, I'm now very very
nervous almost to the point of being scared. Toby, are we screwed? I am nervous to the point of being
scared. Neil, these things are called flying piranhas because they descend upon livestock. They lay
their larvae and their larvae literally eat their way out from the inside. Do not Google this.
Do not Google image search this because it is as gross as it sounds. But yeah, back in the 1930s,
scientists did have this major breakthrough. We're like, wait, we can sterilize these flies. It can
really keep down populations and hurt the ability of them to reproduce.
And by 1950s, they were using literal airplanes to drop millions upon millions of these
sterilized flies per week over infected areas, which obviously did wonders to keeping these
in check.
And we actually did set up a factory to produce these things alongside the Panama government
in the narrowest part of Central America.
That's been the most fascinating thing is that these flies cannot travel over water.
So we literally went to the narrowest landmass we could find, set up a production factory that can pump out millions upon millions of these sterilized screwworms every single week and use that to kind of control outbreaks as they happen.
But as with most things in life, as you get further and further away from that initial fear, which was decimating the cattle industry all those years ago, people kind of forgot about it.
A lot of veterinarians don't even know how to identify screw rooms anymore, which is why it's creeping back into the,
like the lexicon and into the agricultural industry, we just forgot that it was a problem because
these sterilization efforts were so successful. But yeah, I am with the USDA official. I am a little
bit nervous myself. Right. They've broken through for a number of reasons. I mean, the big overarching
one is that we just don't care as much anymore. We haven't invested so many resources into this
problem. Staffing for inspectors of cattle crossing, the border has been reduced. And then when you
talk about sterile fly production, they produce these.
infertile males that they bomb on populations to render their populations zero.
They've been struggling with supply chain issues around COVID.
At the same time, illegal transport of cattle across borders has increased.
And then also there's just been more migration of humans coming from the dairy and gap in Panama,
where this biological barrier had been formed over a very narrow area of land.
So all of these factors are swirling to create this northernward march of screw worms.
and officials are clearly freaked out.
And not to make you even more freaked out,
but the parasite does thrive in warmer weather.
What else is coming up?
Summer.
So if that doesn't make you more nervous,
the hot weather could lead to an infestation
that kind of runs unchecked.
And by the way, this would impact American consumers
because, again, cattle supplies,
they've been tight for a while now.
So any damages to American cattle herds
would drive up the cost of beef.
And it is one of those situations
that we saw with the avian flu and affecting egg prices,
similar things could happen with screwworms and beef prices.
And one fun fact is that Texas was famous for producing the country's top rodeo champions
in the 50s,
and that's because the ranch hands were so good at roping and cutting cattle out of herds
to check for screw rooms.
So if you go through the rodeo leaderboards in the 50s, which I often do,
you will just see Texas people just consistently near the top.
and that's a direct linked to the screw room infestation.
They just had to get so good at inspecting them.
Thanks for leaving us on a positive note there, Neil.
Up next, we're going to talk about weddings.
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Wedding planning is stressful enough as is,
but tariffs are making everything about 145% more stressful for brides to be.
Despite a 90-day pause on most tariffs,
most vendors have jacked up prices on everything from dresses to flowers
in response to the expected import fees.
One Reddit user shared how her custom-made wedding dress
now costs $1,500 more than when she ordered it due to tariff-related charges.
Other brides are trying to get ahead of any price rises
by stocking up on candles and flower vases,
even if their nuptials aren't until 2026 and beyond.
Weddings really are ground zero for price hikes.
Not only are they running families on average $33,000, according to the knot,
but also most of what makes a wedding feel like a wedding comes from foreign countries.
About 90% of wedding dresses are manufactured in China,
according to a VP of the National Bridal Retailers Association.
Even mundane things like tablecloths and chairs are going up in price
as vendors who order from overseas pass those fees onto customers.
Neil, getting hitched, is it expensive and getting even more so?
I know, and you're starting to see these couples start to do things like trade down
because when you're doing a wedding, like it's so expensive.
You were going to pinch pennies at every step along the way.
So if something's going up in price, say flowers, you are probably going to get cheaper
flowers.
So you hear stories of couples going for getting flowers from like trader.
or Costco. And some are warning that weddings will go back to what was known as the
millennial garbage core of 2014 when you saw mason jars, milk crates, and spray-painted wine
bottles with twine everywhere at weddings. So you are seeing these tariffs really impact
the wedding industry, which relies on a constellation of small businesses to supply things
for your big day. Yeah, some other ways that brides and grooms are pinching pennies is instead
of friends or Italian wines, you go to American.
wines instead of, you know, using roses, you opt for carnations instead. Professional videographers,
very expensive. Just give your cousin an iPhone and let them cook. So people are being creative to
solve these problems. And I do think, I mean, I went to a wedding where a lot of the tableware,
at least the candlesticks, were thrifted. And it gave a very interesting and cool vibe to it
as well. So it doesn't necessarily mean these things are worse if they are thrifted or secondhand
like that. But I do think when you are seeing so many prices is being passed on to consumers,
I think we're going to see a rise in elopements. First of all, like, why even bother with all the
expenses? And then the second thing that you can do is just pare down your guest list a lot,
which, you know, no one really wants to do, but look for smaller weddings. I mean, they probably do.
Yeah, actually. And now they have an excuse to. That is a very good point. You get to know who
your true friends are when the tariffs, you know, influence costs so much that, you know,
you know what, we don't need my sorority sisters from college. Yeah, I mean, the economy does really
have a big impact on weddings because it is such a discretionary purchase. I mean,
in the aftermath of the financial crisis more than 15 years ago, the average spend on weddings
fell 8% over a two-year period. That's according to the not. So when people are looking at things
that they can cut out of their life, when economic times get a little uncertain, I mean,
weddings are one of the first to go, or at least like the fancy stuff, at weddings. And really,
this is a consequence that will really have a big impact on small businesses. Over the course
of the past weeks and months and days, we've talked to a lot about how major companies have
gotten up on earnings calls and said, we're going to take a $500 million hit off of our profits
because of tariffs. We're going to have to raise prices. Things might get a little hairy for us,
but they can weather the storm. And when you're talking about weddings and the wedding industry,
It's photographers, it's florists, it's people who sell bridal gowns, people who sell tuxedos.
Those are a lot of the small businesses that make up your community.
I'm sure everyone listening to this knows about that place where they got their prom tuxedo.
So these are the people really feeling the impact and they're wondering, you know,
what do we do?
How do we work out with our customers when we have to, when we are facing price increases,
we have to also hike prices on you or, you know, we can't stay in business.
Let's sprint to the finish with some final headlines.
Mattel's CEO is not bullish on it.
toy manufacturing returning to the U.S.
despite the massive tariffs imposed on Chinese imports.
The head of the Barbie maker went on CNBC yesterday and threw cold water on the idea
that toys can ever be made in USA.
We don't see that happening, he said, a day after deploying his company's annual financial
targets.
He emphasized that while critical functions like design and engineering do take place and
will remain in the U.S., manufacturing will continue to be outsourced because, one, it
enables Mattel to offer their products at an affordable price. And by the end of 2025, less than 40%
of Medell's products will be sourced from China with a goal to reduce that to below 25% within
two years, but the company will still not shift that production to the U.S. The end result is not
exactly a Barbie dream house for American consumers who should expect higher toy prices from one of
the world's biggest toy makers. And the Toy Association, the U.S. Industry Group,
representing 850 toy manufacturers, didn't warn just
of price hikes for toys, but also shortages in its survey of 410 small businesses that make
toys that populate our shelves every holiday season. The majority said they had canceled orders
and half said they risk going out of business within weeks or months. This is an industry
that relies a lot on China. And right now, there are 145 percent tariffs on China. And so they
are watching negotiations very closely because they are hanging on a thread. In the cutthroat world
of weight loss. If you don't adapt, you die. And Weight Watchers is the latest victim of the
industry's transformation. The company wants a household name filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last
night to shed a heavy debt load and restructure as a healthier enterprise. Weight Watchers has
watched weight loss trends pass it by, and it's been too slow to pivot. It did start offering
drugs like OZEPB as part of its clinical business, but that hasn't been enough to offset a decline
in its core programs of providing food consumption and exercise plans. Meanwhile,
social media influencers and other free fitness apps have stolen a lot of the health spotlight in
recent years. Once Oprah left the board two years ago, the writing was on the wall.
Yeah, there was this big turnaround plan from a new CEO that tried to lean into telehealth
coming out of the pandemic. That just didn't really work. It was too big of a change from,
you know, the in-person meetings and the portion control that Weight Watchers was known for.
And then obviously, OZempic was a big hit to the business as well, even though they tried to
jump on that train just a little too little too late.
But yeah, I do think Oprah, who, you know, was Weight Watchers for a lot of people in a lot of people's minds going on and saying that, hey, not only am I leaving the board, but also that she had used an unnamed weight loss drug to augment some of her weight loss.
That was probably the beginning of the end for, you know, this once iconic company.
For over a decade, travelers to the Wellington Airport and New Zealand looked to the sky to be greeted by a fantastical sight.
Two giant eagles straight from Lord of the Rings hanging from the terminal ceiling with one.
even carrying Gandalf on its back.
These things are huge, with wingspans reaching over 50 feet and weighing in at a ton each.
Travelers have passed under their watchful gaze for 13 years now,
but this month, the Giant Eagles will depart the terminal for good with the airport CEO saying,
it's been quite a Lord of the Rings heavy storytelling theme here.
Now we're looking to change that to something new.
It breaks my heart, one traveler responded,
but it's not like the citizens of Middle Earth.
I mean, New Zealand will be totally with.
without their Lord of the Rings imagery.
A giant sculpture of smog
will still watch menacingly
over the check encounters, Neil.
I understand what they're going for here.
I mean, the Lord of the Rings filmed there,
and it's been a part of that region for decades now,
and millions of people pass through Wellington Airport
to go see the sets and all, you know,
how they made those movies.
And so I understand, like,
you don't want that to be a yoke around your neck as a place,
and you're like, we have other stuff, too, trust us,
Then Lord of the Rings, when Peter Jackson came in and filmed all these movies, like,
check out all our other stuff.
We don't want to be so known for Lord of the Rings, just this one thing at the same time.
It is so iconic and people loved it.
So, you know, it is a tough decision to make.
Counterpoint, giant eagles are always going to be awesome.
They're never going to go out of style.
Although they did fall from the ceiling during an earthquake.
And again, these things weigh a ton each.
So I could see maybe the safety concerns being a bigger issue.
That's not why they did it.
This afternoon in Vatican City, 133 cardinals will say a mid-morning prayer and then enter the Sistine Chapel,
where they will be sequestered and given no contact with the outside world until they choose a new Pope to succeed the late Pope Francis.
That's right, the conclave starts now.
This ancient, ultra-secretive process to select a new leader for the world's 1.4 billion Catholics will be undertaken by the most geographically diverse group of cardinals ever, hailing from 71 different countries,
including two dozen from countries that have never even produced one cardinal, such as Myanmar and East Timor.
So all bets are off.
The Cardinals will remain in the Sistine Chapel until one Cardinals secures two-thirds of the votes from his peers.
It could be tomorrow, it could be next week, we just don't know.
One very interesting detail that Politico Europe reported is that Cardinals have been watching Conclave the movie for guidance on how to actually carry out a conclave in real life.
That's because the vast majority of the Cardinals were actually appointed by Pope Francis,
so they haven't been really around long enough to know how this whole process works.
So that is just fascinating that just like us, they too were sitting down and watching Conclave.
As for the contenders, how can you not root for Pierre Batista Pizza Bala?
The internet has a rally behind him simply because they want to say his name.
I mean, come on, Pope Pizza Bala is funny.
Well, he'll change it.
I know, but no, he's last.
name will still be Pizza Bala though. So he'll change his first name, but Pizza Bala will still be there.
But I just think if the universe bends towards, you know, having the most funny outcome, then of course Pope Pizza Bala is a lock.
And according to Kalshi, the prediction market, there's a 50% chance that they choose a Pope before May 9th, which is Friday.
And a 97% chance they choose one before May 16th, which is the Friday after that. So the people with the money on this are expecting a conclave that last.
a few days into a week and a half,
and we'll just have to wait for that white smoke.
Okay, that is all the time we have.
Thanks so much for starting your morning with us
and have a wonderful Wednesday.
Oh, we're halfway there.
If you have any thoughts on the show,
do not hesitate to reach out.
Send an email with any questions, comments, or feedback
to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com.
Let's roll the credits.
Emily Milliron is our executive producer.
Raymond Lou is our producer.
Our associate producers are Olivia Graham and Olivia Lake.
Scoop Sardaris is on Audub.
hair and makeup wants to go back to a world where they don't know the existence of the screw worm.
Devin Emery is our president and our show is a production of One and Brew.
Great show today, Neil. Let's run it back tomorrow.
Pay off your home, travel for life, drive a Ferrari. In celebration of the world premiere of the Monopoly Big Board Buckslot machine by Aristocrat Gaming,
Yamava Resort and Casino at San Manuel is giving one person a $1.6 million dream package.
The biggest prize in Yamaba's history.
Club Serrano members can earn daily instant prizes and secure a spot in the finale May 29th.
Don't pass go and own it all.
Only at Yamava, celebrating its 40th anniversary.
You win?
Details at yamava.com must be 21-20.
Please gamble responsibly.
Monopoly is a trademark of Hasbro.
Hasbro is not a sponsor of this promotion.
