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Plus: How the war abroad is hitting U.S. farmers and truckers, and March’s hot streak. 
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It feels like there’s no end in sight for the war in Iran, and in today’s newsletter we’ll talk about how that’s showing up in the stock market and energy prices. You know what isn’t expensive these days? The drones Iran uses in strikes. We’ll explain. Also, the FBI is buying your phone data, the metaverse is virtually dead, and March is mad for a whole other reason. But first my colleague Elizabeth Trovall gives us the view of the war from Texas farms and oil fields. 
— Carrie Barber , newsletter editor
A man wearing sunglasses and behind the wheel of a white truck looks out the window at the camera. The truck is on a dirt road with tall plants in the background.
Rice farmer Casey Smith (Elizabeth Trovall/Marketplace)
Key Texas industries feel the heat of the Middle East war
Crude oil, fertilizer, and diesel prices are up. These increases are putting pressure on farmers, while the oil industry is poised to benefit.
In an open field, farmer Casey Smith surveys his newly planted rice crop in Brazoria County, south of Houston.
 
“This is the early stage. We're in the first two weeks of this crop. It'll get about waist-tall by the time we harvest,” he said.
 
The rice plants are about three inches high. They look like blades of grass, peeking through the dirt and are placed in tidy rows.
 
“My son actually planted this field. My 12-year-old,” he said.
 
Once this field dries out, Smith will need to add more fertilizer to his crop. But when he got a quote for the Urea fertilizer he uses, the price per ton had jumped about 25% since the war in the Middle East started less than three weeks ago.
 
“That's definitely gone up and so I think that's about $30, $40 an acre when you start applying it to the field,” he said. “It didn't take very long to add up some expenses.”
 
Considering higher diesel prices, which have gone up by $1.50 or so, he's looking at tens of thousands of dollars in additional expenses.
 
“Diesel … it's a big expense. My farm here, we're typically burning, you know, 20 to 25,000 gallons of fuel a year,” he said.
 
Smith loves rice farming, but it’s a brutal business. And now, because of the war, which has constrained the flow of global oil, natural gas and other petroleum products like fertilizer, Smith said he worries what this means for his operating costs.
 
“This crop will not make enough yield to offset any of those expenses. It's just going to take off our bottom line, which there is no bottom line. We're paper thin,” he said.
 
Five hundred miles northwest of Brazoria County is the engine of U.S. oil production: the Permian Basin in West Texas. You might think as prices climb, so will production.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers:
  • Stock markets fell again today as investors saw no end in sight for the war in the Middle East. The SP 500 dropped 1.5%, the Dow slid 1% and the Nasdaq tumbled 2%.

  • Regular gas cost $3.91 a gallon today, up 3 cents from yesterday’s national average, according to AAA. 

  • A barrel of Brent crude, the global benchmark, settled at $112.19 this afternoon after surging to $119 Thursday. 

  • Diesel prices are above $5 a gallon, and truckers are feeling sticker shock as new restrictions on certain foreign-born truckers are pushing thousands of drivers out of the industry. 
 Tech
  • FBI Director Kash Patel confirmed this week that the agency is buying location data to track U.S. citizens. The information is sold by brokers who source much of it from phone apps and games. The Senate and the House have both introduced bills to end the practice. 

  • Iran's Shahed-136 drones are mainly composed of off-the-shelf consumer tech, making them affordable to scale up as strikes continue. Listen to our “Marketplace Tech” episode about it.

  • Mark Zuckerberg’s metaverse, where he envisioned people working and playing via headsets and avatars, is virtually dead. “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal tried it out a few years ago to see if it was really the future of work. 


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“We don't ask the Forest Service or the weather service to make money; they are a service to the people of the United States. It would be nice if the Postal Service could break even, or at least come close.”
— Notre Dame professor James O’Rourke
The struggling U.S. Postal Service lost $9 billion last fiscal year. Its obligation to deliver mail six days a week is expensive, but the service has limited ability to raise prices even as letter volume has tanked. Losing business from Amazon is another blow.
 
Now USPS and Congress are looking at ways to close the revenue gap, including reducing delivery days, increasing stamp prices and closing rural offices. It begs the question: Should we expect the Postal Service to make money?
HEAR MORE
A gif shows a maple syrup bottle being filled, tubes connecting maple trees, a sugar house and the wood-fired furnace within.
Two older women dance next to a statue of a happy, waving man.
Click to view the interactive map (The Pudding)
Final note
Sweating the details
March temperatures have been so high this year, you’d think we skipped spring altogether. Extreme heat baked California this week, breaking records and triggering heat warnings in the southern part of the state. Yesterday, the desert community of North Shore reached 108 degrees, tying a 1954 record in Rio Grand City, Texas, for the highest March temperature recorded in the U.S. It’s not just the Southwest; cities across the country are feeling the heat.  See how your city compares on The Pudding’s heat-mapping project.
 
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