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Hey there, hope you had a great weekend. It’s been an exciting Monday for us as we welcome a brand-new host, Kimberly Adams, to our morning show. I hope you’ll listen to her first episodes and sign up for our Friday morning newsletter, where she’ll be recapping her first week for us.

In today’s newsletter, we’ll ponder the upcoming inflation numbers, a new AI-powered Siri and the eye-watering prices for NBA Finals tickets. We’ll also tell you what we know (not much) about OpenAI’s IPO. But first, my colleague Caleigh Wells has a smaller, stranger public offering you should keep an eye on. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A screen grab of an AOL homepage
Getty Images
A tech company you've probably never heard of just filed to go public
Bending Spoons just became profitable picking the bones of an older internet. Will investors buy in at a $20 billion valuation?
Vimeo, AOL, Eventbrite, and WeTransfer all have a couple things in common, aside from being throwbacks to the aughts and 2010s: They're still alive, and they're all owned by a tech company called Bending Spoons.

Those brands — and the others that the company has acquired — aren’t exactly known for being cash cows. Last year, Bending Spoons lost more than $100 million.

But now, it’s turning a profit — and it's just filed to go public on the stock market.

How could anyone turn a profit on AOL? Actually, it’s pretty simple to Rita McGrath, a professor at Columbia Business School. She’s got an AOL email address herself.

“If you're still on AOL, chances are there's some idiosyncratic thing you get from them,” she said. “I have a bunch of friends who are on AOL, because it's the throwaway email that they give to their shopping sites.”

But the contents of their spam boxes are treasure because there is a lot of information in there that Bending Spoons can sell.

“Nordstrom knows me as my AOL address, but now AOL knows that I'm a Nordstrom shopper,” McGrath said.
That information wasn’t valuable enough for AOL alone. Or for many of the other companies that Bending Spoons acquires. So the name of the game is cuts and consolidation.

“You only need one CFO. You only need one chief marketing officer,” said analyst Roger Entner, founder of Recon Analytics.

He said a team running several brands at once leads to fatter profit margins. “You can have a very efficient sales force when you are one large company instead of a significant number of small companies,” he said.
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street looked cautiously optimistic today but didn’t come close to making up Friday’s big losses. The S&P 500 closed up 0.3%, the Dow fell 0.2%, and the Nasdaq added 0.9%.

  • The price of Brent crude rose to $94.25 today after renewed fighting between Israel and Iran over the weekend. The national average gas price fell to just over $4.16 a gallon.

  • We’ll get an update on the consumer price index this week, just after learning average hourly wages were up 3.4% annually in May. Will inflation eat up workers’ gains?
Tech
  • OpenAI filed confidential paperwork for an IPO, but cautioned it might be awhile before the company goes public. At last check, the ChatGPT maker was worth $852 billion on paper.

  • Apple’s 15-year-old voice assistant Siri is getting an AI upgrade, the company announced today. Watch a demo.

  • A new federal law compels social media companies to remove nonconsensual intimate imagery, AI-generated or not, quickly. But the Take It Down Act comes with potential for misuse.

  • What’s the right age for kids to get a smartphone? A new study says 13 or older.
The Trump administration
  • A judge blocked the White House’s new-ish $100,000 fee for H1-B visas. The program is meant to bring high-skilled workers to the U.S., but last fall’s price hike had ripple effects on small business and rural health care.

  • The president said Friday he plans to meet with leading AI companies, even floating that the U.S. government could take a stake in them. That was news to the AI companies.

  • Trump defended his proposed (and blocked) $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” slush fund in a TV interview he later stormed out of.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“If housing prices increase significantly, there's some evidence suggesting that divorce rates among homeowners actually goes down.”
— Anthony Orlando, an associate professor of finance, real estate and law at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
Research has also found a correlation between a hotter economy and higher overall divorce rates. We looked at the relationship between marriage and money as part of our weekly column, “I’ve Always Wondered.” If you have something you’ve always wondered about the economy or business, send it to us and we may answer in a future installment.
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LET'S GO
A man waves a New York Knicks flag on the streets of New York City
Adam Gray/Getty Images
Final note
Let’s do some numbers on Game 3
The world’s financial capital is also the world’s basketball capital tonight as the red-hot New York Knicks face the San Antonio Spurs at home in the third game of the NBA Finals.

President Donald Trump will be in attendance, which means traffic jams and stepped up security for fans that paid $8,000 on average for resold tickets. As I write this, the get-in price on Subhub has dropped to about $6,000, or the Kelley Blue Book value of my Toyota Rav4.

When asked about the New Yorkers priced out of Madison Square Garden, Trump noted the game was “semi-free” to watch on television, despite his administration’s fraught relationship with broadcaster ABC.
 
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