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Are you taking a vacation this summer? I just booked a last-minute trip, right before President Donald Trump declared the ceasefire with Iran was “over” and uncertainty sent oil prices rising again. Today, Delta is charging double for the same ticket.

We’ll bring you several stories on air travel (and Trump) below, but first let’s look at some other knock-on effects of war in Iran as another earnings season takes off. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Pepsi bottles on a shlef
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
PepsiCo had a great quarter — except in North America
Blame war in the Middle East for particularly weak sales at gas stations and convenience stores — Marketplace’s Stephanie Hughes connects the dots.
Thursday is the start of quarterly earnings season, and one of the first companies out of the gate is PepsiCo. The maker of Doritos and Gatorade — and, of course, Pepsi — reported that its net revenue was up 6.4% from the same time a year ago.

There was, however, one noticeable weak spot: North America. The company said that sales of food and beverages in the U.S. were “tempered” as consumers tighten their budgets in response to rising prices.

Pepsi said its sales in the U.S. were particularly weak this spring at places where people impulsively buy snacks and drinks — think convenience stores and gas stations.

“Gas prices are so salient, we're all standing next to our cars staring at that digital display,” said Tal Gross, a professor at Boston University who studies household finance.

As the U.S. went to war in the Middle East this spring and gas prices rose, people stared at those numbers ticking up at gas stations, and some decided not to buy a soda or bag of chips.

Psychologists call this “mental accounting.”

“If you're … typically used to spending $40 at the gas station, if now you have to spend $50, you kind of think about that as one account,” Gross said.

And if gas prices are higher than usual, people’s brains tell them that they’ve hit their limit.

“And so … you're not willing to spend money on Pepsi products, because it somehow is linked to what you're spending on gas,” Gross said.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street seems less worried about fighting in Iran today. The S&P 500 added 0.8% to erase yesterday’s losses. The Dow gained 0.3% and the Nasdaq jumped 1.3%.

  • Home sales fell 2.4% in May from the month before, and the median price rose to $440,600, an all-time high.

  • Brent crude oil fell to $76.30 a barrel, but it’s still up from this time last week. The price of gas rose to about $3.84 a gallon on average, and economists worry high prices at the pump will make Americans expect higher prices everywhere. Those expectations have a way of coming true.

Government
  • New Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh appointed five task forces to help remake the central bank. Here’s who’s on them.

  • Kalshi said it’s using Federal Election Commissions data to block campaign staffers betting on their own races. The platform is naturally taking bets on how Maine democrats will replace Graham Platner on the ticket. 
Summer travel
  • Ahead of its earnings report Friday, Delta Air Lines announced fare changes that give fliers more “choice” — by charging more. Here’s why you shouldn’t expect any airfares to drop soon.

  • An odd twist to the energy shock, sustainable aviation fuel is less expensive relative to traditional jet fuel right now. What’s that mean for greener air travel? We asked a guy who’s making the stuff.

  • Here are some tips to make the skies a bit more friendly for you this summer travel season.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“No one really talks about how much illness and death involve these to-do lists. There's this gigantic administrative and financial burden that you have to cope with before you can even begin to process emotionally.”
— Nicole Chung, author of “A Living Remedy,”
Let’s give that burden some scale: According to one estimate, millions of unpaid caregivers in the U.S. perform upwards of $870 billion worth of labor every year. Often these are members of  the “sandwich generation,” caring for their parents and their own children at the same time. It’s not easy to handle, emotionally or financially.

On the latest episode of our podcast “This Is Uncomfortable,” host Reema Khrais talked with Chung about caring for her parents, and heard from listeners caught in the middle themselves. You’ll find some tips for handling it all, too.  
LISTEN NOW
Trump poses on a Trump Shuttle plane in 1989.
Trump posts on a Trump Shuttle plane in 1989. (Larry Morris/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Final note
One more air travel story
The former Palm Beach International Airport has renamed itself after its most famous frequent flier.

The new President Donald J. Trump International Airport is the first airport named after a sitting president, and the latest in a very, very long list of institutions and locations that have taken Trump’s name in the past year and a half. Trump’s family business has trademarked the airport name, but denies that the president will use the airport to add to the billions he’s made during his second term already.

It’s not the first time Trump has branded his own air travel. He launched Trump Shuttle in 1989 with splashy gold planes. CNN points out the doomed venture faced many of the same headwinds as today’s beleaguered budget airlines.
 
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