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Plus: Retail therapy, anyone? 
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Hello: I’m writing to you from Minneapolis, which had the worst air quality in the world today as smoke from wild fires up north settled over the midwest.

I’ve been researching how to keep my dog comfortable and shopping for air purifiers. Turns out clean air is not cheap! The big brands are all too happy to sell you a filter subscription, which will surpass the cost of the purifier itself after a few years. It's the razor/razor blade model.

Maybe all those subscriptions are part of why the consumer seems so resilient, even when they feel lousy? We’ll talk about it in today’s newsletter, along with a bunch of other new economic data and what it means for interest rates.  — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor

P.S. If you’re interested in learning more about how tech is helping humanity adapt to climate change, check out our podcast “How We Survive.” I just revisited this 2019 episode about researchers working to clean the air in schools and offices.
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, out of focus.
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
Economic data was dreamy this week. What'll the Fed think?
The Federal Open Markets Committee meets later this month, and Marketplace’s Kristin Schwab tried to figure out what they might do about interest rates.
If you work at the Federal Reserve, this week has been pretty, pretty, pretty good.

We got data Tuesday showing inflation slowed for households in June. The next day we learned inflation slowed for businesses last month too. Today we got retail sales, which grew a hair, 0.2%, from May.

These are all things the Fed wants. Is it enough? Remember, the FOMC has 12 voting members, and lately they’ve been more divided than ever. 

“I guess it depends which Fed official you ask, right?” said Stephanie Kelton, an economist at Stony Brook University.

We’ve gotten mixed messages from Fed officials this week about the future of interest rates. But for now, that’s OK, said Randy Kroszner, a former Federal Reserve governor. This stretch of good data creates a buffer, he said.

“That takes pressure off the Fed from having to raise rates. I think the Fed is going to be on hold for a bit,” Kroszner said.

As in, no rate hikes or cuts while they suss out the situation. Which is a little hard to do when the situation is changing.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Some boffo earnings reports couldn’t outweigh investor queasiness about AI today. The S&P 500 closed 0.5% lower even though more stocks rose than fell. The Dow lost 0.2% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq lost 1.5%.

  • Brent crude has been yo-yoing a bit with all the uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz; the international standard settled down a bit today at $84.23 a barrel. Gas averaged $3.94 a gallon nationwide today, according to AAA.

  • The latest data puts inflation at the exact same pace as wage growth: 3.5% annually. It’s better to break even than falling behind, but it still means Americans’ wage gains are being eaten by higher prices.

Retail
  • But somehow consumers just keep spending, even if they’re stressed out. Retail sales rose 0.7% if you exclude gas station spending. Is this retail therapy?

  • The White House announced new 25% tariffs on Brazil this week, and retailers are bracing for more by getting ahead on imports and adjusting prices.

  • New shopping data shows consumers are starting to feel the pinch at the grocery store, buying fewer items each trip and shopping around for deals.

Tech
  • Anthropic is reportedly meeting with investors ahead of an initial public offering as soon as this fall.

  • Trump Media & Technology Group will soon sell live access to the president’s Truth Social posts, where he sometimes boosts companies he recently invested in. Call it the Trump-berg terminal.

  • Four state attorneys general are taking Meta to court for $1.4 trillion, alleging the company designed its apps to addict users. Is this Big Tech’s Big Tobacco moment?


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The Seoul Metropolitan Police is conducting a criminal investigation. The coach has resigned; the Korea Football Association's president is leaving, as well.”
— Catherine Kim, of Politico, on the South Korean men’s soccer team’s World Cup crash-out
South Korea’s soccer team didn’t make it to the knockout stage, and that poor performance has ballooned into a national scandal. It’s not the only one either. Kim came on the show this morning to talk about other countries reeling from a World Cup loss — and the payday U.S. players enjoy just for getting to the round of 16.
LISTEN NOW
President Donald Trump speaks behind two teleprompters
Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Final note
What will Trump say? You can bet on it
And if you’re the guy running the president’s teleprompter, it must be a very tempting opportunity to make a quick $100,000. Federal investigators are in fact investigating President Donald Trump’s longtime prompter guy Gabriel Perez for insider trading after Kalshi reported suspicious trades tied to Trump’s speeches. ABC News reported the aide would even back out on bets in real time as he saw the president ditch his prepared remarks. The White House says Perez is on leave, and a settlement is reportedly in the works. 
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