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Hi, happy May Day.

President Donald Trump signed a bill last night funding much of the Department of Homeland Security, but not immigration enforcement agencies. Many of the department’s 260,000 workers went without regular pay during the 76-day funding lapse.

The immigration crackdowns that spurred the DHS shutdown are creating deep fissures in local economies. We’ll tell you about that below. Also: How tracking underemployed people can help predict layoffs, and why celebrities are trademarking themselves. Plus, Spirit Airlines is preparing to liquidate, and there’s more to it than surging fuel costs. My colleague Janet Nguyen explains why some ultra-budget carriers couldn’t compete with “basic economy.” — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A yellow Spirit Airlines plane takes off against a blue sky.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
How ultra-low-cost carriers like Spirit lost customers to major airlines
New “basic economy” tickets from larger carriers have eaten into the bottom line.
Spirit Airlines is preparing to sell its fleet of bright-yellow airplanes and shut its doors, The Wall Street Journal reported today. The low-cost carrier is running out of cash and a government bailout has failed to materialize.

Spirit has been beleaguered by high fuel costs, like other airlines, and other problems going back more than a decade. 

Some of Spirit’s issues are unique to the airline, but there are also structural issues with ultra low-cost carriers, said Robert Mann, an independent airline industry analyst.

Over the past 15 years, major airlines have rolled out cheap travel options to compete with them.

In 2012, Delta became the first U.S. airline to introduce basic economy, which allowed customers to buy cheaper tickets with the caveat that there’d be restrictions on refunds and seat selection. Other major airlines eventually followed suit by establishing their version of basic economy, Mann said.

United had software that would allocate enough basic economy seats to attract budget-conscious consumers without displacing the people willing to pay higher fares, said Henry Harteveldt, airline industry analyst at Atmosphere Research Group.

Major airlines have also expanded their fleets, increasing the amount of economy and basic economy seating. That’s prevented ultra low-cost carriers like Spirit and Frontier from picking up customers who couldn’t find seats on those airlines, Mann explained.
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Hefty earnings reports propelled Wall Street to more records today. The S&P 500 climbed 0.3% to a new high and its fifth-straight winning week. The Dow dipped 0.3% and the Nasdaq added 0.9%, setting a new record.
     
  • A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, fell to $108.17. A gallon of regular gas averaged $4.32. In California, it was over $6. Here’s why prices vary in different states . 

  • Exxon Mobil stock fell 1% and Chevron’s 1.4% after they reported profits tumbled in the first quarter, but only on paper.

  • There are about 4.5 million underemployed people in the U.S. Tracking workers who are  “part-time for economic reasons” can be an indicator of future unemployment or job reductions.

Government
  • After King Charles convinced him to back off taxing Scottish whiskey, Trump said he would raise tariffs on cars and trucks imported from the European Union to 25% The president accused the EU of not complying with its U.S. trade deal; the EU pushed back on that. 

  • Immigration crackdowns are hurting economies across the country, and many immigrants are afraid to be in public. LA city public school attendance is down 4.5%, meaning a loss of $100 million this school year for the district.

  • Exports from the Port of Corpus Christi have reached new heights, driving jobs and investment along the Texas coast, while the Iran war disrupts oil and gas coming from the Middle East.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“Hey, it's Taylor.”
— Taylor Swift, in a clip used to trademark her voice this week
That outta do it … right? There are no laws protecting performers’ identities — or anyone else’s — from artificial intelligence misuse. Swift’s image, in particular, has been used in AI-generated porn, Maria Curi of Axios told “Marketplace Tech” today. But other celebrities are getting creative with trademark law too. Matthew McConaughey trademarked his image and voice earlier this year, including his catchphrase “All right, all right, all right.” It's an untested legal theory, Curi said, but it’s better than nothing.
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Eight photos of famous men named Claude.
These guys thought they were sooooo special. (Screenshot via FamousBirthdays.com)
Final note
There are a lot of advantages to having an uncommon name. One is knowing if your name comes up at a meeting, you are the intended subject. Claude used to be one of those monikers, until Anthropic used it for a massively popular chatbot. Bloomberg spoke with a number of Claudes about how they’re adjusting. Here's a gift link to that story. The whole thing begs the question: How do companies come up with these names?
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