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Hey there, happy Monday. We’re due for new inflation data Thursday using the Federal Reserve’s favorite metric. If we were betting people we’d put good money on beef being way up, and in today’s newsletter we’ll examine why.

Later, we’ll remember former Fed chair Alan Greenspan and talk with the current Chicago Fed president about potential stagflation. Plus, we’ve got the latest out of Hollywood and good news for anyone who hoarded Bed Bath & Beyond coupons all these years. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A package of steak at a grocery store has a $50 price tag.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
🐮 Why beef prices keep climbing
Marketplace’s Caleigh Wells reports we’re facing a perfect storm of low supply and high demand.
In less than two weeks, millions upon millions of Americans fire up the grill to cook up some burgers for the Fourth of July — unless they’ve decided the beef for those burgers is just too expensive.

The price of a pound of ground beef is up almost 13% compared to May of last year, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The cost has more than doubled over the past 15 years.

The USDA predicts beef prices will go up another 10% in 2026 — much faster than the rate of inflation. High demand and low supply makes for a perfect storm, said Jamie Luke, a professor of agriculture, food and resource economics at Michigan State University.

“Right now we have a historically low number of beef cows in the country,” she said.

War in the Middle East has made fertilizer and fuel more expensive, which makes cattle feed more expensive. On top of that, weather forecasters are predicting an especially hot and dry year in parts of the U.S. with lots of cattle.

“Producers have had to make that difficult call to reduce the number of animals they have in their herd to be able to have enough forage to feed,” Luke said.

And that’s just the supply side.

“Personally, I think the bigger story in beef prices is the consumer demand side,” said Brian Coffey, a professor of agricultural economics at Kansas State University.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stocks started the week mixed. The S&P 500 closed down 0.4%, the Dow added 0.3% and the Nasdaq lost 1.3% after big sell-offs in tech.

  • Speaking of: SpaceX shares lost 16.4% today, shedding hundreds of billions in market value and most of its post-IPO bump.

  • Brent crude oil fell to $77.52 a barrel as the U.S. and Iran reopened peace talks. The national average gas price dipped under $3.93 a gallon.

  • British Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned today, just a week shy of two years on the job. He’s the sixth PM to stop down in a decade as the U.K. faces economic headwinds.
Hollywood
  • “Toy Story 5” won the box office this weekend with the biggest domestic opening of the year, and the biggest opening of the series. Overall, theaters are on track for their best year since before COVID.

  • Google invested in cool-kid indie studio A24 to research AI filmmaking tools (though a recent Deadline column claimed AI is already widely used and rarely disclosed).

  • TV has become much more cinematic in the past decade-plus, and now Instagram wants to become more like television, adding longer serialized videos and smart TV apps.

  • Audiences are gravitating toward TV and movies with diverse characters, but the latest numbers show studios are quick to homogenize when they cut back production. 
Alan Greenspan, 1926-2026
  • Alan Greenspan, who served as chair of the Federal Reserve for nearly two decades under four presidents, died today. Listen to our remembrance on “Marketplace Morning Report.”

  • Greenspan was known for his cryptic wording, popularizing “Fedspeak” among central bank watchers like us. He once warned, “If I turn out to be particularly clear, you've probably misunderstood what I said."

  • According to his biographer, Greenspan’s greatest legacy may be keeping the central bank insulated from political pressure around interest rate policy.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“I do want us to, at least in terms of our credibility, let's acknowledge the possibility that these things are lasting longer than we wanted them.”
— Austan Goolsbee, Chicago Federal Reserve president
Goolsbee talked with “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal today about “looking through” inflationary shocks to set interest rates, and the limits of that approach. He also discussed the Fed’s credibility and approach to forward guidance under new chair Kevin Warsh and the legacy of Alan Greenspan.
HEAR MORE
Get your life together!
Join host Reema Khrais and the rest of the "This Is Uncomfortable" team for a virtual meet-up to cross that financial task off your to-do list!
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A Bed Bath & Beyond store with a banner out front reading
From the last time stores reopened en masse, in 2020 (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
Final note
Bed Bath and Believe
Before it went out of business in 2023, Bed Bath & Beyond was known for its 20% off coupons, which seemed to pile up in drawers and on refrigerators and would often be accepted long after expiration. In fact, pulling back from coupons was part of what sent the retailer spiraling in the first place.

Now the brand has been resurrected by Overstock and all those old coupons are good again in reopened stores. Bed Bath’s biggest fans are Beyond vindicated, and showing off their coupons from the George W. Bush administration.
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