Morning Brew Daily - Why Oil Prices Could Tank the Economy & St. Louis Real Estate Market Plummets
Episode Date: April 15, 2024Episode 301: Neal and Toby get into the oil price concern that’s coming from the growing tensions in the Middle East and how it could hurt the economy. Then, St. Louis is selling one of its iconic b...uildings in downtown for a fraction of its peak price. Next, Broadway season is in full swing but shows may be worried that there aren’t enough seats to be filled. Also, Neal and Toby share their biggest weekend winners. Meanwhile, the Forever Stamp is the latest victim of rising prices, but it might not be as bad as it seems. Finally, a look at what’s coming up this week. 00:00 - Intro 2:40 - Oil prices rising 6:30 - St. Louis doom loop 10:20 - Broadway back for good? 14:00 - Weekend winners 18:20 - First-class stamps 21:00 - Week ahead Get your Morning Brew Daily Merch HERE: https://shop.morningbrew.com/products/morning-brew-daily-sweatshirt?utm_medium=multimedia&utm_source=podcast&utm_campaign=mbd&utm_content=shownotes Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://link.chtbl.com/MBD Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Disclosures: Returns are not guaranteed. Interest is earned on uninvested cash swept from your brokerage account to program banks. The cash sweep program is offered through Robinhood Financial LLC. Terms apply. Robinhood is not a bank. Terms apply to the match and limitations apply to IRAs. 3% match requires Robinhood Gold for 1 year from the date of first 3% match. Must keep Robinhood IRA for 5 years. Visit robinhood.com/retirement for more information. Robinhood Financial LLC (member SIPC) is a registered broker dealer. 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, 14 new shows in 11 days.
Broadway is back, baby.
Then a big office building in downtown St. Louis just sold at a 98% discount, which does not
bode well for the future of Midwest America.
It's Monday, April 15th.
Let's ride.
It's tax day, which means you better submit those tax returns or make plans to leave
the country, change their name, and live under a different alias for the rest of your days.
Okay, it's not that serious, but please get that paperwork done to avoid those annoying failure to find penalties.
Neil, did you get your taxes done?
I did do my taxes.
It's maybe the one thing in the entire world that I don't procrastinate over.
And while I do owe the IRS a little bit of money, I definitely don't owe as much as Mark Cuban.
So Cuban tweeted yesterday that he was going to wire $288 million to the IRS.
He said that the country has done so much for him and he's proud to pay his taxes.
every single year. Is 208 million, I mean, is that a outlier for him? Or does he do that every year?
I mean, I think he sold the Dallas Mavericks this past year. So it's definitely an outlier year.
But what a flex to say that you're giving Uncle Sam $288 million. Good for you, Mark.
Now let's hear from our friends over at Robin Hood. Neil, I got to say sometimes when you're making
a daily news podcast, it's easy to get caught up in the never ending now.
I know exactly what you mean. Always so concerned with what's happening today or
tomorrow, you never take a breath to do a little TLT. TLT. Thinking long term. The ups and downs of financial
markets can make anybody's headspin. So it can be nice to think long term, like in decades, instead of
obsessing over what one stock is doing today. Ah, as the great Adam Smith said, happiness never lays its
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First, let's talk about what's going on
in the Middle East and how it could impact energy markets and markets more broadly.
Late Saturday, Iran launched more than 300 drones and missiles at Israel, marking the first
time Iran directly attacked its adversary from its own territory.
Historically, Iran fights Israel through its network of proxies in the region like Yemen's
Houthis or Lemons Hezbollah.
According to Tehran, the barrage was in retaliation for a suspected Israeli strike on an Iranian
consular building in Damascus on April 1st.
The attack caused little damage. Israel said it, along with the U.S., Western allies and Arab partners,
shot down 99% of the projectiles. But despite the successful defense, the attack significantly
raised the temperature in the region and could put more upward pressure on oil prices,
which have already risen nearly 20% this year. And that's because a direct confrontation
involving Israel, Iran, and the U.S. that disrupts energy supplies from the Middle East
was the worst-case scenario for investors since October 7th. The U.S. is trying to
to lower the tensions telling Israel to, quote, take the win and not escalate things further with
a counterattack, but the prospect of a wider regional war in the region got a little more real this
weekend. Right. The big risk here for the global economy, if we want to zoom out, is whether this
escalates into a broader regional conflict. Like you said, that's been on traders' minds for ever
since October 7th. And when that happens, how do higher oil prices kind of filter through the economy?
The most obvious way is that it leads to higher gas prices.
We've already seen that this year.
US gas prices have jumped 50 cents per gallon since the beginning of January.
There are right around $3.70 right now, but also higher oil prices and higher energy prices
filter through the economy in general because anybody who has to move any good that uses fuel
to do it will feel that sting of higher oil prices.
So your targets of the world, your deltas of the world who are moving people, oil prices do filter
through every single part of the economy.
That's why Mark Zandi, who's the chief economist at Moody's said that spiking oil prices
reflect the most serious threat to the economy just because of how they filtered through
every industry that exists. Meanwhile, stocks are doing poorly. Last week, the S&P 500 had its
worst week of the year. And that's just over these general concerns that are going on in
the Middle East. Meanwhile, safe haven assets like gold, the U.S. dollar, are.
all surging. The U.S. dollar had its best week in 18 months last week. And gold, as we've been
talking about on the show, a bunch, has been reaching record highs over the course of this year.
So maybe over the first few months of this conflict between Israel and Gaza, there has not been
huge ramifications for the global economy with Iran getting involved. There are because there's
two factors that investors are looking at with when it comes to Iran. First of all, is they are
major oil producer. So if anything, if any conflict,
escalates in the region, then it'll curtail supplies from Iran as a producer. And then also,
it borders the Strait of Hormuz, which is one of those oil checkpoints around the world.
It, through the Strait of Hormuz, more than 20% of all global oil consumption moves from the
Dubai's, the UAE's, the Gulf states of the world, goes to global markets through the Strait of
Hormuz so they could close those shipping channels as the Houthis have been doing in the Red Sea.
Those are the primary risk directly tied to the conflict, but rising oil prices aren't just tied to those tensions in the Middle East right now.
OPEC plus that conglomerative oil producing nations have also cut output.
Demand for fuel has been a lot higher than most people expected due to the fact that our economy is still just humming along very strongly.
And then Ukraine is also launching attacks against Russian oil refinery.
So everywhere you look, there is upward pressure on the price of oil.
So it's not just tied to specifically what's happening in this reality.
region. Signs that a city are struggling can come in many shapes and sizes. And for St. Louis,
that size and shape is a vacant 44-story downtown office building. The former one AT&T Center just
sold for $3.6 million, 98% less than its sales price all the way back in 2006. Showing that the
Midwest is just as, if not more vulnerable to the so-called doom loops than more widely publicized
issues facing coastal cities like San Francisco.
according to real estate brokerage JLL, the total office vacancy in St. Louis reached an all-time
high of 22.3% in the first quarter of this year. And as offices sit empty and other shops
and restaurants close up, it leads to fewer and fewer people commuting downtown, which feeds
into less foot traffic for struggling businesses, and thus the cycle continues. Toss in the
pandemic, which led to a mass emptying of office buildings. You have a recipe for big office tower
selling at 98% discounts. You know, today we're talking about St. Louis, but
Tomorrow, it could easily be another city.
The future of some American downtowns is looking rather bleak.
It is pretty bleak, especially these office districts, the five eyes of the world.
I mean, we have one in New York City, but they exist across cities in the United States
where you rely on office traffic of people commuting into work.
And when that dries up, then the whole sort of ecosystem and the viability of those areas
comes under threat.
St. Louis is not doing well.
most North American cities are not doing well, but St. Louis is doing the worst.
Its central business district suffered the steepest drop in foot traffic of any North American
city between 2019 and mid-2020.
And you mentioned the Midwest more broadly.
Six of the 10 U.S. office districts that were at the bottom of that of that ranking are in
the Midwest.
We've talked a lot about San Francisco and New York, but those have actually bounced back
much better than people expected.
San Francisco is doing better thanks to AI and companies,
companies wanting office space to win that arms race. New York has a lot other stuff going on
in addition to offices like tourism and culture and sports and things like that. So that has helped
out those coastal cities. Meanwhile, these Midwestern cities are looking for a possible solution
to bring their downtowns back. Right. San Francisco was kind of plastered as this cautionary
tale against what happens when the remote work boom happens and it starts this doom loop in downtown.
but they actually still rank 18 spots above St. Louis in terms of downtown foot traffic. And you're
right, it is these coasts in middle, it is these cities far from the coast in middle of America
that are suffering the most. And there's just a lot of factors that make it hard for St. Louis to succeed.
They've experienced population loss. There's been competition from offices in the suburbs.
The suburbs of St. Louis are very vibrant. And then there's also a lot of kind of uninspired
urban planning that hasn't gone to to plan. The one,
thing that I do think there is hope for St. Louis is actually the soccer team that just recently
moved to the city. There's an office district to the west. There's a new soccer stadium there.
There's a train station that's turned into amusement parks. So there is ways to kind of revitalize
these cities. And the soccer team has seen a lot of great support there. So it's not all doom and
gloom for St. Louis as long as we can look at the football team. Well, it's funny because
we've talked a lot about studies that show that state.
do not lead to economic revitalization.
Then when you look at St. Louis,
the only neighborhoods that seem to be doing well
are the ones with the soccer stadium
and the ones with the Cardinal Stadium
that bring a lot of people to those areas during game day.
So at least anecdotally, these stadiums do provide
a bit of vibrancy and economic development.
If you're a fan of theater,
get your butt to New York City right now
because there are a historic number of Broadway shows
opening in the next few weeks.
Over the span of 11 days in mid-to-late April,
14 shows are opening,
ranging from musical revivals to
celeb studded plays.
April is always a popular month for new shows
to raise the curtain, but this is a historic
bonanza. The number of new shows
will increase the number of available
seats at Broadway theaters by almost
50% from about
240,000 across all productions
at the end of March to 350,000
in April. This has theater analysts
wondering if it's too much of a good thing
because making money on a show is hard enough
as it is.
and trying to stand out from the crowded pack will be harder than ever.
To others, though, the rush of openings is a sign that Broadway is back
after COVID shuttered theaters and raised existential questions about the industry's future.
Either way, it's great news for consumers who have more options than ever.
About 38 shows are currently running on Broadway.
Toby, which one are we seeing first?
I don't know which one we're going to because there are truly too many to go to.
Who knows if this is actually a good thing because critics are saying,
listen, we cannot possibly give enough time to review all these shows that are debuting in April,
and then audiences can't possibly go to enough shows.
Part of the reason why we're seeing just this late April push is award season, the Tony Awards,
which is the big award show for Broadway.
They have a cutoff date that's been moving earlier and earlier.
It used to be back in May 8th in 2008, jumped up to April 30th, and it's now gone even
earlier in the month.
So part of the reason why these shows want to be,
for that day is they can say Tony eligible as a marketing material.
So that is part of the reason why we're seeing just this massive late push in April.
Yeah.
You don't think of Broadway as a seasonal industry,
maybe like Chipotle burrito season or the holiday season.
But it does appear that Broadway is a very seasonal industry with most shows opening in the spring.
So they get before that Tony cutoff date.
Let's talk about Broadway more generally how it's doing.
Obviously during COVID, everyone was saying,
man, this is an industry that.
will not bounce back, kind of like the box office and theaters. So far this year, attendance is
down 16% below where it was the same point in 2020. Total box office grosses are down 15%. So it has
come back a decent amount. It hasn't come back all the way. But there is a general bullishness that
this site, that this slate of new openings is a sign that Broadway has maintained its resilience
throughout the pandemic. Right. And if we just want to quickly touch on the slate, I know I didn't
give an answer to what I'm mostly. No, let's talk about it. To see the outsider, if we're going
in on some plays that are tied to some more, some more well-known IP, you have the outsiders.
Great Gatsby, the notebook, water for elephants, of those four. I think I got to see the notebook.
I've never seen the notebook actually all the way through the movie, but I would love to see it.
I'm sure it's an emotionally. Apparently you have to bring a lot of tissues to the notebook.
Another one worth highlighting is Suffs, which is about the women's suffrage movement. The WIS is coming
back. I saw
Illinois, the Sufion Stevens
album. It's more of a
dance thing, but there's a live band that
plays this album all the way through. I love
that. It was not on Broadway, and
it was so popular that it came to Broadway.
So that is definitely one that I'm looking
forward to. Stereophonic is another
play that is actually three hours long,
but it's another one that had so
much enthusiasm in its off-Broadway one
that it's coming to Broadway. So those two, if you're
music lovers, those two are ones I recommend.
Good Rex. Up next,
Morning Brew Daily's winners of the weekend.
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Welcome to our winners of the weekend segment
where we look at two stories that had a better weekend
than New Yorkers seeing the sun for the first time in months.
Neil, I won our pre-show game of Dance Dance Revolution.
So I'm up first and my winner of the weekend is bagels.
Specifically bagels from McDonald's.
Franchises in California are bringing back
the fan favorite Ring of Carbs after a four-year absence
to help offset the impact of the new fast food workers minimum wage hike.
With the law adding in an estimated $250,000 in cost per location,
McDonald's is turning to the bagel to see if the new menu item can give a little
sales boost to restaurants in the state.
As part of the experiment, they are spending $15 million on local advertising.
A significant amount given McDonald's rarely promotes product in just one area.
This is my favorite part of the whole wage hike saga, though.
McDonald's reportedly assembled a $1,000.
task force of employees and restaurant owners to figure out how to offset the added expenses
and called it the rise and dominate team. And apparently the rise and dominate team decided
bagels were the answer. Well, bagels are expected to add 10% foot traffic to these restaurants and
raise profit margins. We've talked about it a lot. Breakfast is the golden goose. I don't know if that's
the right term of the fast food industry. And apparently bagels were so popular before the pandemic when
these fast food chains limited their menu during COVID bagels were apparently the first to go.
But who doesn't love bagels?
I mean, you and I love bagels.
I don't know if they're actually bagels.
They're probably just round pieces of bread with a hole in the middle.
First of all, I thought you were definitely going to say the golden goose for the golden arches.
You were setting up so well for that.
But it's all right.
You stuck the landing still.
I do think one of the reasons why McDonald's is trying to innovate through this is because
they've seen other fast food chains already start to raise prices ahead of that pay jump.
Burger King prices rose about 2% February.
Wendy's prices were 8% higher,
but McDonald's has tried to say,
like, we do not want to raise prices.
So they're trying to do things like introduce new menu items,
innovate a little bit,
just on the margins to try to offset some of these wage hikes
because they are very reticent to raise their prices.
McDonald's has been the poster child of inflation,
those big Mac meals that in certain areas got to $16, $17, $18.
Those have been plastered across.
headlines everywhere. And you're right that McDonald's is very sensitive to price increases.
It wants to find any other way it can do think it can get through this minimum wage increase
than raise prices. But competitors have done that and they just don't care. My winner is societal
collapse because Civil War, the movie, was the king of the box office this weekend, bringing
in $25.7 million in ticket sales. The film follows journalists in an America where California and
Texas have united against a president who disbanded the FBI and gave himself a third term.
It's a dystopian thriller that to audiences doesn't feel all that distant from reality.
And it worked because, according to one film consultant, the story is not directly partisan,
but it's provoking partisan feelings, which is a fine balance to strike.
Plus, the timing ahead of a divisive presidential election was uncanny.
Civil War's strong debut was also the biggest opening ever for A24, the Upstart studio that's
made a name for itself with thought-provoking unconventional films like everything everywhere all
at once and uncut gems. Toby, are you surprised people wanted to watch a movie about Civil War?
I'm not surprised because it feels like we're definitely entering a new era of movies that really
bland family-friendly superhero fair seems to be on the way out. Now these more gritty movies like
the Oppenheimers of the world like the Civil Wars of the world is luring these adults out to go watch
movies because we've just been starving for anything different, anything a little bit more serious
than, apparently, than Ironman just cracking the same jokes over and over. So, and A-24 is probably
the poster child for this new era of movies as well, because you're right, they've always had
these beloved movies that have done really well at award seasons, but they've never had a film open
at number one. They've never had a box office hit just like this. And it does feel like a lot of factors
were providing tailwinds for Civil War to do really well at the box office. If you're in Aries and just
receive some lovely presents for your birthday. I suggest you get on those thank you notes because
the price of a forever potes stamp is set to rise five cents this summer. Pending approval this July
first class stamps will run you 73 cents up from the current 68 cents. If this news sounds
familiar, it's coming on the heels of another price hike back in January and would be the sixth
price hike since January 2021. It might be tempting to just point a finger on inflation as justification
for the price increases, but that doesn't tell the whole story.
The Postal Service is a bit of a financial mess.
The use of first class mail, which is the Postal Service's main revenue driver,
has been in decline for decades, while costs, specifically the agency's obligation to pay
for retirees' health care and pension plans have been rising.
So the formula for setting stamp prices that the USB uses has spit out yet another price hike.
So write those thank you notes, everyone, please.
The USBS is taking a lot of pains to say that, yes, while we're,
increasing prices six times since 2021, that we are still relatively cheaper than any other
postage in 31 pure countries. They issued this report saying the price of a standard domestic
letter in the U.S. was nearly half the average price in 31 sampled countries. So they are trying
to make the point that we have kept stamps extremely cheap in the U.S. relative to other countries
for decades. And now we have to increase postage in order to.
to not be in the red. They lost $6.5 billion in 2020. So they're cutting back service. They're raising
prices in order to be solvent. Right. In raw numbers, only four countries had cheaper stamps in the
U.S. And if you adjust for purchasing power, then the U.S. did have the lowest stamp price of any one of
those 31 peer countries that you mentioned. So why are stamps in the U.S. actually cheaper than a lot of
our peer countries? The big reason is mainly scale. The U.S. is by far the largest market for the delivery
of domestic mail.
This just goes to show you how big the U.S. Postal Service actually is.
It handled half of the world's domestic mail in 2021.
So even though domestic mail has been on the decline in first class poses has been on
the decline in the United States, it's not nearly as sharp or as bad as the decline in other
country.
Right.
And I was thinking about why the U.S.PS is so big relative to the other postal services
and other countries.
Maybe it's more fragmented in other areas in other countries that are even bigger than
the United States because the United States is not the biggest by population.
It is one of the wealthiest countries, and maybe it does have a more centralized mail service.
But just looking at these numbers, I know no one is surprised by this, but the volume of single piece first class mail, which is your bill payments, your letters, and your cards.
That stood at $2.7 billion in 2007.
And now it has fallen 68% to just $900 million to its lowest level since the 60s.
So it's not surprising, but no one is sending mail anymore.
Let's go to our week ahead preview.
It is extremely, extremely busy.
Donald Trump's historic hush money trial begins today.
The GOP's presidential nominee will become the first former commander-in-chief to stand trial in a criminal case when he faces 34 counts of falsification of business records for concealing a $130,000 payment to buy the silence of adult film star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election.
He faces a maximum of four years in prison, although legal experts believe that.
even if he's found guilty, he's not likely to end up behind bars. Right. Not likely to
end up behind bars and probably not likely to impact his election chances as well because we've
seen in the past that cases levied against Trump has done nothing to kind of shake his basis
faith in him going forward. So who knows if this. Right, but this may be a conviction for the first
time. This is the first of four criminal cases that Trump face. One thing that could derail his
his election, his reelection bid is that he's going to actually have to be in the
courtroom, which he hasn't had before in his civil cases. He's going to have to be in Manhattan
for the courtroom over the course of this trial except for Wednesday. So campaigning while you're
in court might be a bit of a logistical issue. Moving on, the Boston Marathon is also today. About
30,000 people are running 26.2 miles from Hopkinton, Mass, to Boyle Street in Boston in the
128th running of one of the most famous races in the world. Productivity in your company's Boston
office is going to be low with 500,000.
spectators spilling out into the streets to cheer on the racers and sneaking in a few Monday morning
beers marathon day. It's just the best. It's just the best. And you better believe next year I will
be there towing the line alongside everybody. The one name that I'm looking out for this year is
C.J. Albertson on the American side. He's an American man. He calls himself the best downhill
run in the world. And he's been famous in years past for just going out at a suicide pace and just
trying to gap the field. We'll see if he tries again this year. The runner started around nine,
in the morning, so I will be tuning in to watch that.
And we get some morning baseball out of the Red Sox.
One of the most hyped WMBA drafts ever is tonight.
And yes, it's because of Caitlin Clark.
The Iowa legend is expected to be the first overall pick by the Indiana fever,
while her college rival Angel Reese at LSU is projected to go in the top 10.
Everyone's wondering whether these players can bring their star power from college to give a
boost to the WNBA.
I think it absolutely will translate the fever who has the number one pick.
they have 36 out of 40 nationally televised games this year.
Obviously, the WMBA is trying to capitalize on that star power, on the momentum that
the women's game has, and I think it will translate pretty well.
It's been a while since we said Taylor Swift's name on this show, but the streak is broken
because the pop superstar is releasing her 11th studio album that tortured Poets Department
on Friday.
Remember, this is the album she teased during her acceptance speech at the Grammys,
and it comes a few weeks after Beyonce dropped her album,
she previewed at the Grammys.
Yeah, we saw Beyonce's album, Cowboy Carter,
linked to a rise in Western boot sales,
a rise in denim sales.
So what will Taylor Swift's album translate to a rise in quills and parchment paper?
We'll see, but I will be listening to the Tortured Poet Department.
I will too.
Earning season rolls on with heavy hitters Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, and Netflix.
Bitcoin's once in every four years happening event is coming this week,
which should be exciting.
The NBA playoffs are beginning with the playing tournament on Tuesday.
The long-awated travel show Conan O'Brien-Muscoe will premiere on Thursday on Max.
Feels like there's been a renaissance of Conan in the past few weeks, the Conannaissance.
And I'm totally here for the Conan Nassau.
He was on Hot Ones that reality TV wingtasting show.
Conan's great.
Everyone loves Conan.
All right, let's finish up there.
Hope you all have a great Monday.
And shout out to everyone listening to Morning Brew Daily while running the Boston Marathon.
As always, you can write in with any feedback on the show to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com or just tell us some funny stories.
Let's roll the credits. Emily Milliron is our executive producer. Raymond Lue is our producer. Olivia Graham is our associate producer.
Eugenua Ogu is our technical director. Billy Minino is on audio. Hair and makeup is on strike over Toby's bad pick of Corey Connors to win the Masters.
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.
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