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Who controls the Strait of Hormuz? Good question. Both the U.S. and Iran say they do after trading fire yesterday while the U.S. tried to clear the way for stranded oil tankers. But the strikes weren’t enough to end the ceasefire, and Wall Street didn’t seem to mind. More on that below. Plus, long-term bond yields crossed a psychological barrier. And why do so many workers have side hustles? My colleague Caleigh Wells digs in to it. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A man dressed in blue pants and jacket carries a red DoorDash bag past a Victorian-style home in San Francisco.
Emily Dulla/Getty Images for DoorDash
Why do so many workers have side hustles?
People are supplementing primary jobs with gig and freelance work at a rate not seen since the waning days of the dot-com boom.
There are still a lot of U.S. workers holding down multiple jobs — about 1 in every 20, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s fallen a fraction of a percentage point since last fall, when we saw the highest rate since 1999.

Back in 1999, we were living in the moment before the dot-com bubble burst.

“We were spending a lot more time talking about the fact that we have increased levels of automation, what that means for job-holders,” said economist Nicole Smith at Georgetown University.

Sound familiar? Today, it’s all about AI replacing entry-level jobs and forcing young people to piece together side hustles.

“A lot of people are combining their primary job with the gig economy, like DoorDash, and Uber, and freelance work,” she said.

There’s also a simpler reason why more people are working multiple jobs: More jobs mean more money, according to Cory Stahle, an economist with Indeed Hiring Lab.

“And I don't think there's any coincidence, with the cost of a lot of different things going up and inflation — obviously, we saw that rise,” he said.

With the price increases resulting from the war in Iran, Stahle said the pressure to get another job might increase. 

“In the last 12 months, real wages only went up by like 0.1%. So essentially, real wages haven't changed. But clearly, just in the last few weeks, the price of gasoline has.”

In the past four months, the percentage of people who work multiple jobs has started to inch downward, but Stahle said he’ll be watching to see whether stubborn inflation and rising oil prices reverse that.


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street had another winning day, despite turmoil in the Middle East. The S&P 500 climbed 0.8% to top its prior all-time high on Friday, the Dow added 0.7% and the Nasdaq rallied 1% to its own record.

  • A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, fell to $110. A gallon of regular gas averaged $4.48.

  • Spending on home remodels will grow by just half 0.5% next year, a Harvard report predicted. Part of the problem? Finding workers during an immigration crackdown.

Government
  • The yield on 30-year Treasurys briefly crossed 5% yesterday. Higher yields mean higher borrowing costs on mortgages and car loans too.   

  • The U.S. trade deficit grew by almost $3 billion in March, but the good news? Exports of oil, agricultural products, and other goods also grew.

  • California insurance regulators yesterday accused State Farm of illegally delaying, underpaying and denying homeowners’ claims from last year’s Los Angeles wildfires.  The state is seeking a record fine … of $2 million.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“A few different dots connected, and I said, ‘Wait a minute, what if there’s a way you could just go to a wedding, but you’re not actually crashing it?'”
— Jeff Besen, co-founder of Not a Wedding Crasher
If you enjoy attending strangers’ weddings, Jeff and Karina Besen have a platform for you. The San Diego couple’s business connects paying guests with unfilled seats at nuptials. The Besens said they’ve sold about a dozen seats so far and have 300 guests on the platform.
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A photo of Cardi B on the left, labeled
Cardi B, left, in Marc Jacobs and an AI-generated image of Lady Gaga in Thierry Mugler. (Taylor Hill/Getty Images, Lady Gaga image via X).
Final note
The Met Gala’s identity crisis
The Met Gala is known for the images of celebrities wearing outrageous costumes. Now the annual fashion-fest is a fertile ground for parodies and other fake photos, thanks to AI. A Deadline columnist couldn’t tell them apart. He admitted Cardi B’s “intestine”-like dress, above left, looked like an AI figment (Marc Jacobs designed it). And the image of Lady Gaga in Thierry Mugler’s celebrated La Chimère gown was so realistic, he had to confirm she didn’t attend. The annual fundraiser for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute made $42 million.
 
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