Retail & Consumer Products

The Goods (U.S. Edition) – Style High Club

Welcome back to The Goods! This week we’re discussing high-end airport lounges, the potential return of meme stocks, and how McDonald’s Snack Wrap put the chain in a lettuce crunch.

 

We all know that familiar rush when that long-awaited package arrives at your doorstep. Unfortunately, this isn’t the case for one woman in San Jose, CA who has received hundreds of boxes filled with car seat covers from Amazon over the past year. The San Jose address was apparently used by an Amazon seller on product return labels, creating a pseudo-return center stacked with boxes in her driveway. The woman says she’s filed multiple complaints with Amazon, who finally sent a truck to remove the packages from her property earlier this month.

What’s In: This Week’s Trends

Cash or Card: Consumer Behavior

What’s going on with the consumer these days? This week we talk about June retail sales, what’s happening in the housing market, and how families are navigating holiday shopping amid economic pressure.

Making Moves: Industry Transformations & Innovation

ICYMI, even industry icons need to reinvigorate their brand presence through unique and creative ways. Here are some new brand moves that you should know about: 

Capital Markets Corner

What consumer news is moving the market this week? Our investor relations experts break down this week’s trends and headlines.

  • A Meme-orable Week: Meme stock mania might be back, and this time, Kohl’s is at the center. This week, shares of the department store chain skyrocketed 105%, opening at a high of $21.39 on Tuesday after closing at $10.42 on Monday. The dramatic spike comes as Kohl’s struggles with profitability, shuttering stores, and cutting headcount amid a broader department store downtrend. Some experts believe that the volatility in Kohl’s shares marks the potential return of meme stock activity, a phenomenon best exemplified by the explosive rise of GameStop in 2021. Recent data also supports this viewpoint: according to Jefferies Electronic Trading Solutions, retail traders comprise over 20% of total U.S. trading volume, and activity in stocks priced below $5 make up more than a fourth of overall trading volume.
  • Go With Your Gut: Continuing the wave of M&A involving health-conscious food and better-for-you beverage brands, the private equity owners of Health-Ade have agreed to sell the popular kombucha brand for $500 million. Generous Brands, a company owned by Butterfly Equity, will purchase Health-Ade from private equity firms First Bev and Manna Partners. Health-Ade’s line of kombucha – which is a fizzy fermented tea that is said to benefit gut health – will join Sambazon, Evolution Fresh, and Bolthouse Farms in Generous Brands’ wellness-focused portfolio.

Tariffs, Ands or Buts

A nearly 30-year-old tomato trade agreement between the U.S. and Mexico was recently replaced with a 17% tariff on most Mexican tomato imports. U.S. shoppers pay roughly $1.70 per pound for field-grown tomatoes, but things could get saucy with prices expected to rise by about 10% and demand predicted to decline by 5%. Although companies like Heinz and DiGiorno already use U.S.-produced tomatoes for their ketchup and sauces, restaurants and small businesses like pizza parlors must decide whether they can eat the increased costs.

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