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Before we get to today’s newsletter, I want to tell you about an exciting new thing we’ve got going here at Marketplace. Every Friday, we’re publishing a news quiz covering the biggest stories of the week. You can get the answers from listening to “Marketplace,” of course, but if you miss an episode all the stories will be covered in this newsletter, too. 

So give it a shot, send it to your friends, brag about your perfect score, then tell them to subscribe. Oh, and have a great weekend! —  Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A worker polishes a life-size statue of Ronald McDonald.
Investor and "Shark Tank" host Barbara Corcoran knows what's up. (Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images for T.J. Maxx)
We’re a nation of Maxxinistas
While other retailers struggle, TJX, the parent company of T.J. Maxx, Marshalls and HomeGoods, reported strong third quarter earnings and raised its profit forecast. Marketplace’s Carla Javier reports on the “off-price” economy.

This week’s quarterly earnings reports told two stories about the state of retail.

First, Target reported a third quarter decline in traffic and sales and cut its outlook for the year. Then there’s TJX, owner of “off-price” stores T.J. Maxx, Marshalls, and HomeGoods. The company actually beat expectations and raised its profit forecast this morning. 

The off-price retailers are really strong right now, said analyst Janet Kloppenburg of JJK Research.

“I would say that there's very few retailers who are performing at the level that TJX is performing at,” Kloppenburg said.

That success starts with the business model.

“A lot of times they're buying excess inventory from other retailers or other brands,” Said said Nicole DeHoratius at Columbia Business School. She added the challenges facing retail lately, including tariffs, benefit the TJX model.

“The more challenge that the traditional retailer has in ordering goods, in forecasting inventory, in forecasting their own demand, the better off the TJX companies are because there's going to be supply and demand mismatches,” DeHoratius said.

That means excess inventory to buy and sell. 

“They're providing high quality products at a less than normal retail price,” said Peter Zaleski, an economist at Villanova University.

He said that’s why these stores consistently get a lot of traffic.

“It's not a very highly cyclical company. So, in a boom, they may not see sales spike but in a recession, they may actually pick up customers,” Zaleski said.

HEAR MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Wall Street was all over the place again today, but this time stocks settled higher. The S&P 500 closed up 1% after some big swings, the Dow added 1.1% and the Nasdaq gained 0.9%.

  • Bitcoin kept tanking today, falling below $81,000 at one point. November is shaping up to be the worst month for the cryptocurrency in years.

  • Consumer sentiment fell in November to near-record lows.

  • The supply chain is unusually slow for this time of year. Are we headed for a “freight recession”? 

The Trump administration

  • President Donald Trump and New York City’s democratic socialist mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani had a surprisingly cordial meeting in the Oval Office. Watch how Trump recapped it.

  • The Federal Aviation Administration is giving $10,000 bonuses to 776 air traffic controllers and technicians who recorded perfect attendance during the government shutdown. Thousands more who worked without pay, sometimes 10 hours a day, six days a week, will not.

  • After months of ICE raids on the nation’s capital, some construction workers are afraid to go into Washington D.C. Contractors are struggling to get projects done.

  • The Federal Reserve meets next month to set its key interest rate. When you game out potential votes, you can see a potentially hilarious, ironic outcome for President Trump. 

A few longreads for the weekend

  • The Texas Newsroom fought for months to get 1,400 pages of emails between Gov. Greg Abbott and Elon Musk’s companies. They arrived almost entirely redacted.

  • Months after Former Fed Governor Adriana Kugler’s abrupt resignation, we’ve learned she violated trading rules. What’s that say about the Biden Administration’s picks to lead the central bank?

  • Wirecutter reporters bought a pallet of Amazon returns for dirt cheap. Inside, they found the tragedy of American consumerism in miniature. 
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"Rural buyers, they have to earn about $75,000 in order to afford the typical home, and that is double what they needed to earn before the pandemic."
—  Chen Zhao, head of economics research at Redfin

Many Americans chasing the dream of home ownership have turned to rural areas, where you can usually get more space for less money. Home prices are rising all over, but the affordability problem is accelerating faster in those rural areas, according to a new analysis from Redfin.

A man sits at an office chair and desk in a bedroom.
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
Final note
How much work did you get done today?

Hybrid employees are working 90 minutes less on Fridays than they did before the pandemic, according to a new analysis out of Arizona State University. Work schedules are more flexible and individualized, labor economist Christos Makridis found, which could hamper collaboration in the workplace.

Makridis used data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ American Time Use Survey, which economists love because it identifies trends like this that broad-based jobs numbers can miss. Anyway, TGIF, right?
 
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