Morning Brew Daily - Ozempic Era Winner...Yogurt & Apple and Meta Becoming Friends?
Episode Date: June 24, 2024Episode 350: Neal and Toby chat about how Ozempic users are seeking out high-protein, low calorie yogurts as a healthy snack. Then, Meta talks to Apple about possibly integrating its AI with Apple pro...ducts. Could this be the start of a new friendship? Next, the hackers who’ve crippled car dealerships are demanding millions of dollars and CDK Global is preparing to pay it. Also, further delays for the Boeing Starliner astronauts still stuck in the International Space Station. Meanwhile, the US and other countries are planning to bring their own AC units to the Paris Olympics. Plus, Sha’Carri Richardson and the Iberian Lynx are making strong comebacks. Lastly, the biggest news you need to know this week. Download the Yahoo Finance App (on the Play and App store) for real-time alerts on news and insights tailored to your portfolio and stock watchlists. 00:00 - Big weekend of selfies 2:40 - Ozempic food winners 7:15 - Apple and Meta as friends? 11:15 - CDK update 13:30 - Boeing return delayed again 15:20 - Olympians tryin’ to keep their cool 19:00 - Weekend winners: Sha’Carri Richardson & Iberian Lynx 23:30 - Week ahead Get your Morning Brew Daily Mug HERE: https://shop.morningbrew.com/products/morning-brew-daily-mug?utm_medium=youtube&utm_source=mbd&utm_campaign=mug Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://link.chtbl.com/MBD 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, the Paris Olympics refused to put a sea in the Olympic Village.
Team USA has other ideas.
Then the NASA astronauts who hitched a ride to the space station with Boeing
haven't been able to hitch a ride back to Earth.
It's Monday, June 24th.
Let's ride.
Welcome back to the week.
Yes, it was an extremely hot weekend, but it was also a big weekend for selfies.
After her show in London on Friday night, Taylor Swift posted a viral selfie with Prince William, Prince George, and Princess Charlotte.
Then on Saturday, Portugal's Euros match against Turkey had to be stopped four times when fans ran onto the pitch to nab a selfie with Cristiano Ronaldo.
Finally, Chicago's Bean Sculpture, where every tourist is obligated to take a selfie reopened to the public on Sunday after being closed for a year.
Toby, our selfies back and were they ever gone?
I think selfies are back, but I do.
want to break down the difference between a
millennial selfie and a Gen Z
selfie, a Gen Z selfie,
you actually use the back camera, you don't
use the front camera, and you also put it on
0.5, and you take it from kind of this
downward angle to make your forehead look
a little big. I don't know why
young people are doing that these days, but
it is what it is. Basically, it's whatever
the Ellen selfie was,
not that. It's very different
from that 2016 Oscar's
Elin movie. And then what's a millennial selfie?
The Allen one? The classic. The classic, yeah.
Now, let's hear a word from our friends over at Yahoo Finance.
Growing up, Neil, were you into investing at all?
Honestly, not really.
I was more focused on memorizing the stat line of every baseball player in the MLB.
That checks out.
I wasn't either until I took an econ class my junior year of high school.
Part of the class was a stock trading competition where we got $10,000 of fake money to trade.
And how'd you do?
Well, I tried to find random biotech companies that were on the verge of releasing new treatments.
That strategy did not work at all.
part of that competition, I'll never forget, was using Yahoo Finance. My teacher encouraged us to use
the platform because it has great data on companies we'd actually be trading. Even the random
biotech you were trying to get insider info on? Yes, even those. What'd you end up doing with the
fake $10,000? Well, I 0.5 exit, a cool $5,000 by the end. I got dead last and now I'm a
podcaster. If you want to see if you can trade better than Toby and I think you can, head to yahoofinance.com
or download the mobile app to get it directly on your phone.
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Like Monday morning looming after a big weekend, the food industry has been monitoring the
GLP1 class of weight loss drugs with a sense of impending dread. A type of drug that makes
people less hungry is not what you want when you run a food company and already billions of
dollars have been wiped from the market caps of Nestle craft and other big conglomerates.
But even as the industry reels, there have been some bright spots. Danone, the French
food giant says it's seeing a major boost in demand for its yogurt in the U.S.
Yogurt is a high-protein, low-calorie option that is attractive to people taking
Ozempic or Rigovi, who are eating less but still want to keep muscle on.
It's an angle that food companies have started to embrace, hoping that an uptick in people
buying nutrient-rich foods that aren't too filling will offset some of the losses
they're incurring on verticals that usually pad the bottom line and waste like ice cream or
candy. Neil, some of these companies are starting dedicated product lines, specifically geared
towards people taking GLP1 drugs. We're in the midst of a major industry shift here. Yeah,
I mean, 30 million Americans have taken one of these shots. That's one in eight. I think the food
industry is trying to figure out whether this is a marginal shift, another small trend that
they have constantly been having to adapt to over the past few decades, or more of a watershed
moment where really everything that we knew about food and food marketing is going to blow up
in their face and they have to rip up the playbook and start afresh. We're already seeing some of the
impacts, as Danone said, it's yogurts. We're flying off the shelves. Nestle, which is the biggest
food company in the world, said it would release a line dedicated to people who are taking
these shots. It's called Vital Pursuit, and it's going to be frozen pizzas, sandwich melts,
pasta again, high protein, high nutrients, low calorie.
It seems like that is the, that is sort of the mix that they're going with to try to attract
people who are on these shots.
Right, because remember, these weight loss drugs, they help you lose weight by putting you
at a reducing caloric intake.
But when you reduce caloric intake, that usually leads to losing muscle alongside losing
fat.
So it feels like they've carved out this lane here to say like, hey, do you want to reduce
that, the muscle loss that you're experiencing?
here are some high protein, very nutrient-dense foods,
and you're making lines dedicated towards them.
It will be interesting because you said
the food industry is constantly reacting to new trends.
I mean, when veganism became mainstream,
you saw a bunch of more vegan meals.
Gluten-free became mainstream, more gluten-free meals.
But now the industry is shaking
because this new class of drug is making people eat less,
and that's a much harder trend to adapt to overall.
The overall pie is shrinking.
So it's very interesting to see how they're facing this crisis.
Yeah, crisis or just changing trends.
It'll be, yeah, especially fascinating to watch food marketing,
which is pretty much what the food industry is banking on.
And typically they've tried to create associations with particular points in your life.
Coke is happiness.
McDonald's is comfort.
And so when you have these new sort of product lines you're rolling out,
you have to create these fresh new associations,
and you can't rely on the sort of craveability, snack ability,
dive in and eat as much as you can marketing associations that you have made in the past.
And it will be really interesting to see whether these companies mention GLP1 explicitly on the packaging.
Nestle, with its new line, is saying, is not mentioning specifically.
They're calling it a health journey on your weight management journey.
So they're doing a little of a wink and a nod to people to maybe broaden their user base or customer base for this particular product
and not trying to alienate people who aren't taking these shots specific.
And I do just want to circle back finally to yogurt because I do think yogurt is almost the poster child of food trends
because back in the early 2000s, fat-free yogurt was like this very big thing.
And then it evolved into Greek yogurt, Chabani, which is full fat, very filling yogurt.
I actually had a yogurt wholesaler come in and talk to one of my classes when I was in college.
And he was in charge of, he came up with a flip cup, you know, the ones that you can,
drop the fruit in and he's like, oh yeah, I absolutely killed that trend.
So it's just very interesting to see how yogurt come and goes and now it's writing this new wave.
Meanwhile, Truist, which is a bank analyzing Krispy Kreme, said that Krispy Kreme is no,
or Ozempic is no match for Krispy Kemp.
You never want to bring a vegetable platter to your office in the morning.
So he thinks Krispy Kreme is going to overcome whatever trend may come its way.
Buzz in Woody, Donkey and Shrek, Katara and Zuko.
History is littered with examples of enemies becoming friends, and the tech world is no different.
Over the weekend, the Wall Street Journal reported that Apple is talking to MEDA about integrating META's generative AI model into Apple Intelligence.
The company's new AI product suite coming to the newest iPhones.
Apple and META's feud goes way back to when META was called Facebook, but times have changed and putting a top-class AI model in front of customers.
is seemingly the only thing that matters now.
Remember, Apple already linked up with OpenAI
to make Siri actually useful.
And these discussions with meta shows
it's leaning further into this partnership approach.
In the same report, the journal also mentioned
that Apple is talking with perplexity and anthropic
to AI startups about bringing their models
to the iPhone as well.
What this means is in the near future,
when using your new iPhone,
you might be able to choose from a buffet of AI services
to accomplish different things.
And for the AI companies,
will be a great opportunity to show you what they're capable of and hope that you'll upgrade
to a paid version. Toby, the AI revolution is leading to some unlikely tech partnership.
It is, I was very surprised to see this, but it makes a lot of sense for all parties involved.
I mean, it makes sense that you would want this buffet of options when choosing which models
you want to use for different tax because maybe you really like Lama, Meda's model for
creative writing, but then you really love Claude from Anthropic for coding.
each model kind of has their pros and cons, and Apple is saying, come one and come all, I'll distribute you guys. You guys all want distribution, and we want the really great flexibility that you guys offer us.
So it's a weird kind of mixture, though, because not a lot of dollars are being exchanged. No dollars are being exchanged if reports are debilieved. It's all about distribution and all about access. So it's just interesting to see this very unique conglomerate of, of,
brands coming together. Yeah, Apple has a billion iPhones in people's pockets, and it can
bring that to any part of the negotiating table. Meanwhile, companies like anthropic, perplexity,
open AI, they're kind of at a disadvantage here because they need to get with Apple. They're not
going to get paid for it. And anytime anybody uses their chatbots or anything, they have to,
they are doing the computing power on the back end, which is, remember, extremely expensive,
extremely power intensive. ChatGBT infrastructure costs are expected to grow 30 to 40 percent
because of this iPhone partnership.
So these companies may be getting a fleeced a little bit by Apple,
but Apple has put itself in that position
because it has an iPhone in everybody's pocket.
The thought process is, though,
that to offset some of these higher computing costs,
hopefully once using the beautiful capabilities of these models,
you will go to Apple's App Store
and download the premium versions of OpenAIs chat CBT,
the premium version of these other models,
so they can offset some of those costs.
But it's kind of a little bit of a big if at the current moment.
Also, though, we just have to zoom out and say that Apple's rolling out of these AI features is meeting a few roadblocks, especially abroad, because there's a big problem in China where iPhone sales have been lagging. We've talked about this over and over on this show.
ChatGBT BT is banned in China. So here was Apple's rolling out this great new AI features, their Apple intelligence features. And yet in their second biggest market, they cannot use chat GPT. So they're going to try to find a Chinese partner specifically to work with maybe.
buy-do, maybe Alibaba, but that's putting a cramp in their style.
And same in Europe.
I mean, Europe just released these new tech regulations called DMA, Digital Markets Act.
And because of that, Apple said it's not going to be able to release Apple intelligence,
their AI product suite, at least this year because they have to learn about the regulations
and see whether they comply.
So in their two biggest international markets beside the United States, Europe and China,
Apple's big push to get people to upgrade their iPhones is not going to be able to roll out this
year, which could put a cramp on their sales.
So last week, you may have heard us talk about a big hack that affected 15,000 car dealerships
across North America.
And you might have also heard us mention the astronauts that were stuck up on the International
Space Station because their Boeing spacecraft was having some issues.
There have been a few more updates, so let's circle back on those two stories, starting
with the car dealership situation.
It is still not great.
So the tech that was hacked is from a third-party provider called CDK Global.
Its core product is a suite of software tools that are known as a dealership management system.
DMSs are involved in pretty much every part of a retailer's day-to-day business.
CDK shut down its systems after reporting the hack on June 19th, and it is only now,
four to five days later that it's started to restore some of its functionality.
A group that claims to be behind this cyber tech, which has remained anonymous, is demanding tens of million dollars in ransom,
which CDK was reportedly planning to send.
Neil, the word on the dealership street right now is that it's just mass chaos still, made
worse by the fact that this is peak car buying season right now.
Yes, there's a big end of the quarter push. It's June 24th now, and the first half of the
year, the second quarter is coming up in just a few days, and there's always this big push
from car dealerships. We'll see the economic fallout of this, but $1.2 trillion is the size
of the car dealership market. That's how much sales they did last year. So we'll see what
resorting to pen and paper, just putting sales on ice will do. But yes, mass chaos did seem to be
the sort of phrase that was thrown around by many car dealership owners last week. And it's very
frustrating for car dealership owners, too, because this is a third-party software. They
could do everything right when it comes to security on their own premises. But if a third-party
app that you use, a third-party software that you use is compromised, then you feel the downstream
effects of that. So it just shows the danger of having kind of this one node, this one point of
failure for such a large industry. I mean, that's what happened with that United Healthcare
hacked. It was chain. It was their payment processor. That was hacked earlier this year. And
when you use a third-party vendor, the entire industry is on this particular software. And then
hackers are starting to go after that particular third-party vendor. And that cripples the entire
system. We're starting to see hackers go after these vendors and it kind of takes down the entire
sector. Now let's check in on the astronauts on the International Space Station. Things are also not
looking great up there either. After delaying the return of its Starliner spacecraft two times,
Boeing provided another update saying the return mission is now delayed indefinitely as the craft
tries to deal with various technical issues ranging from helium leaks to thruster malfunctions.
Now, Boeing is confident that the craft is operational and could make the return trip in an emergency
situation, but they'd rather be safe than sorry at this point. It was a celebration when Starliner
carrying astronauts, Butch Wilmore, and Sunni Williams made it up to the return trip.
to orbit and docked at the space station. But that was only half the battle. And right now, Boeing is
losing the other half. Yeah, wow. This is not going according to plan. I mean, they docked on the
ISS on June 6th. It was supposed to be an eight-day mission. So they were supposed to come home June
14th, which was already 10 days ago at this point. And now it looks like they're going to be
spending July 4th on the International Space Station. I don't know if you can see the fireworks.
Maybe that'll be a good view. But they are going to stay up there for at least three weeks.
coming back in July. But the thing is, there's a 45-day timeline for Starliner to be docked
on the ISS, and that started ticking on June 6th. So if you do the math at home, July 21st
is the last possible day that Starliner could come back. I mean, I know Boeing and NASA officials
are saying, putting on a brave face and saying, like, we got everything covered. It's, you know,
it's a hiccup here and there. But this is not how it was supposed to go.
Worst case scenario, astronauts will have to wait on the space station.
until SpaceX's Dragon SpaceCath makes a scheduled trip to the ISS in August.
Up next, there's a war over air conditioning going down at the Olympic Village in Paris.
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Years ago, Paris officials raised eyebrows when they announced that the rooms in the Olympic Village
would not have any air conditioning and instead feature an alternative cooling system
that was much more friendly on the environment.
Spurning AC units was the marquee symbol of Paris attempting to pull off the most sustainable
Olympics yet by slashing its carbon footprint in half. But turns out not offering air conditioning
to elite athletes who prize their sleep has backfired spectacularly. On Friday, Team USA said that it would
be bringing its own AC units to install in rooms. And it's not the only country to freeze Paris's
Green Olympic dreams. Australia, Great Britain, Canada, Greece, and maybe even China are going to
supply air conditioning to the athletes. And you'd expect more to come on board since this is a
competition we're talking about. And taking a step back, it's not unusual.
for houses in Europe to not have air conditioning.
Fewer than one in ten European houses have AC,
and that shrinks to just one in a hundred in Paris.
It doesn't get as hot there as it does here
with the average July high being 79 degrees.
But Toby, athletes are training their entire lives,
dawn till dusk, for maybe 10 minutes total of competition.
If they can afford to,
their countries are going to eliminate
any possible negative variables in their living arrangements.
Yeah, listen, Paris was, their heart was in the right place here.
You do want to reduce carbon emissions.
You want to make this a Green Olympics,
but their cooling system,
they were promising to use these natural systems
that they've been testing out in the Louvre, actually,
to keep the temperature down there.
But here is where they lose me.
They said they can keep the indoor temperature
between 23 and 26 degrees Celsius.
That is 73 to 79 degrees Fahrenheit.
Absolutely untenable for a lot of these athletes.
I can't sleep unless it is like 64 degrees there.
They're saying try to sleep in it's 79 degrees.
So it's very tough because this is the biggest moment of a lot of these athletes' life.
And of course, they're going to want to strip away variables that would make them sleep worse or variables that would make them perform worse.
Yeah, I mean, the number of countries that are bringing their own ACs, definitely not just USA.
A lot. Most of high-income countries are going to be doing this.
More than a quarter of the total number of athletes are already going to have ACs in their units.
All of the G7 countries besides for the host country, France, are bringing their own AC units.
So I don't know what France is going to do.
Do you think they'll eventually cave and say, hey, we want to win gold too.
And everybody else is sleeping like a log.
And our guys are twisting and turning in 77 degree heat.
Maybe they're used to it.
I mean, like I said, Europe is just not as hot here.
Though there have been heat waves in the last seven hottest years have come since 2007 in Europe.
Obviously, things are getting hotter.
But yeah, Europe is just not an air conditioning continent.
But I don't know whether they'll change based on what all these competitor countries are doing.
the AC Statsu, there's 1.6 billion AC units in use across the globe as of 2016. More than half
are in China, 570 million. And then the United States has 375 million units. The entire
European Union has around 100 million units. So you're right. It's just not a part of life
over there, much different. There are questions about whether this creates inequality or
unfairness because the delegation of Uganda is like, yeah, we compete in tournaments all over
the world where it is super hot and we can't afford to bring ACs. And there might be
be a bunch of countries that would be like, yeah, we can't just like shell out a ton of Aces like
the United States and Germany can. So I wonder whether it'll create this imbalance in the
competition because of people who, you know, because of just the various levels of economic
inequality.
An Olympic redemption arc fit for a movie and some surprising comebacks in the Animal Kingdom,
it's time for our winners of the weekend segment where Neil and I pick two stories
that had a better weekend than Travis Kelsey on stage at the Ares Tour.
I won the pre-show game of naming obscure mid-2000s running backs.
So I'm up first, and my winner of the weekend is the Olympian Shakary Richardson.
Shekary Richardson was supposed to be the face of American sprinting at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.
But after earning her spot on the U.S. scene by winning the 100 meters at the U.S. Olympic trials,
she ended up missing out after accepting a one-month ban for testing positive for THC.
But over the weekend, she got a do-over and did not miss a bad.
beat. She won the 100 meters at the U.S. trials in Eugene in dominant fashion and barring any
unforeseen circumstances, she will finally get a chance to represent Team USA at the Paris Olympics.
This was such a great story, such a great redemption arc, and I'm very excited for her.
She's got to be happy about the AC. I mean, because the Jamaican sprinter she's going to be
going against are incredible. They've won the last four golds in 100 meters, going back to
2008 in Beijing, but
she's got to be the favorite 10.7.1.
That's the fastest time of any
woman this year in the 100 meters.
So super exciting for her after getting
disqualified a few years ago. She's definitely
raring to go. It was also interesting
too because in that you have to make it through
multiple heats and the semifinals to even make
it to the finals. And she actually stumbled
out of the blocks in one of her heats and her
shoe came untied, which to me is just
a sprinter's worst nightmare. She start running and go
oh no, the shoe is untied. The shoe is untied.
But yeah, she won World's Last
year two. So she won the 100, the 4 by
1, and she got 3rd and the 200.
So I think it is her year right now.
And yeah, you could just see how much a mentor.
Meanwhile, the Olympic trials themselves
where all of Team USA potential
competitors go and
race against one another has become just
massive events. The swimming trials
just ended yesterday.
They put that in Lucas Oil Stadium,
a football stadium. More than 20,000
people attended that on Saturday
night and made it the most watched
swimming event in the history of the
world. And you have gymnastics coming up in Minneapolis in just a few days on Thursday. So these
events were just USA, Americans go at it against each other for a very limited number of
spots in the Olympics team has become almost must-watch TV. Oh, it is much-watched. I know it has been
for you for years. You know who's also must-watching, though, is NBC itself because they are
broadcasting Olympics, so they want the stars to advance through. Like, Shikari is someone who they've
been marketing a lot, so they breathe a sigh relief as well. My winner of the weekend is the Iberian
lynx, a wild cat that has just been removed from the endangered species list by the International
Union for Conservation of Nature. Go back two decades, and few people thought Iberian links would
still be around today. In 2002, there were only about 60 of these cats living in Portugal and
Spain, and they were labeled critically endangered. But in a last-ditch attempt to save the species,
conservationists launched a major effort to regrow the population, which included getting local
hunters and farmers on board and raising awareness in newspapers.
and on social media. Fast forward to today, and there are more than 2,000 young and adult Iberian
links living in Spain and Portugal. One expert called it the greatest recovery of a cat species
ever achieved through conservation. And the even better news is this kind of recovery isn't limited
to the Iberian links. In recent years, a bunch of storied animals have reversed a decline in
population, such as tigers, humpback whales, and mountain gorillas. You love a good comeback story.
Yeah, I really do.
And what's so interesting to me is how conservation actually works.
I never really thought about how do you bring a species back from the edge of extinction.
And the interesting part to me was how big of a role that media plays is that you need this to become a public interest phenomenon.
You need people on board.
You need the newspaper.
I mean, start in 2002 and social media wasn't even a big thing.
But then it evolved into social media campaigns, get those local hunter groups on board.
So just the actual nitty gritty of how do you bring a species back from extinction was very,
interesting to read about here. Meanwhile, while we're on the subject of endangered animals,
which it's not really endangered anymore, but China is about to carry out the first panda
census in a decade. Pandas were removed from the endangered species list in 2016. And they think
by doing this census, again, they're going to find even more wild pandas. They're expecting to get
1,800 wild pandas compared to about 1,100 in the 1980s. So that's been a great comeback story
as well. Absolutely. And there is also, they've been re-releasing pandas from
captivity back into the wild, rewilding them is what it's called. So it's been very interesting to
see that come back as well. And yeah, everyone loves pandas. It's Monday. Time to plan out your week.
So here are the big events coming up in the next several days. On Thursday, President Biden and
former President Trump will square off in the first of two debates ahead of November's election.
But it'll take place under different rules than their last verbal duel in 2020 because both
candidates decided to bypass the commission on presidential debates, which had been the organizer
since 1988.
Some of the changes include no live audience,
muted microphones when the other candidate
is speaking, and no props or written notes
allowed on stage.
Should we try the mute the microphone, the other people's...
It would be great to have a little button
to mute Neil's microphone.
And if you're thinking, it's still June,
like, why are we having a debate for November election?
That instinct is correct.
It is still the earliest televised
U.S. general election debate since 1960.
The Supreme Court will leave for its summer recess
at the end of this week. Sounds pretty nice, but it still has 15 cases to rule on by then.
The most pivotal is whether Trump can claim immunity from prosecution for election interference
because he was serving as president. And then other major cases to be decided on include
the legality of emergency abortions in states that have banned the procedure, regulations on
outdoor homeless encampments, and whether social media platforms can censor users.
In Entertainment, season three of the bear premieres on Thursday, so if you haven't watched
the first two seasons, you have a little.
time to catch up and understand why everyone has been shouting corner at you.
In sports, game seven of the Stanley Cup final is tonight between the Edmonton
Oilers and the Florida Panthers. Edmonton is trying to make history by clawing back from a
3-0 series deficit and become the first Canadian franchise to bring home the Cup in 31 years.
Come on, McDavid. I'm rooting for you. Finally, the Tour de France begins on Saturday.
Two-time champ. I'm not going to be out of the name. Toddage Pojikar is the odds-on
favorite to win this year. I love Tour de France season. It just humbles you every time
though, because you're like, they're doing this day after day,
and I can't even ride 20 miles on a bike.
All right, let's wrap it up there.
Thanks so much for starting your day with us.
Have a wonderful start to the week.
Toby, name a random running back from the 2000s.
Archel Walker.
Oh, God, that's not.
Right.
Oh, no.
Okay, we're going to move on.
For any feedback on the show or questions on anything you heard,
send an email to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com.
Let's roll the credits.
Emily Milliron is our executive producer.
Raymond Lou is our producer.
Olivia Graham is our associate producer.
Eugenawa Ogu is our technical director.
Billy Minino is on audio.
Hair makeup is no longer endangered.
Devin Emery is our chief content officer
and our show is a production of Morning Brew.
Great show today, Neil.
Let's run it back tomorrow.
All.
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