The Rundown
The Rundown

Netflix Walks Away From Warner Deal, Block Cuts Half Its Staff for “AI”

2/27/20269:211,828 words
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Public dot com presents the rundown your daily market update in under ten min...

My name is Zayda Admani and today is Friday, February 27th and today's episode will break

down the latest inflation report. While also tell you why Netflix is walking away from the

Warner's deal and why Jack Dorsey is laying off nearly 50% of his workforce. Then stick around to the end of the show to find out why Americans are leaving the country in record numbers. We got a great show for you today. Let's go. Well, markets are coming off a pretty weird day of trading on Thursday, 70% of the stocks in the S&P 500 were in the green, but yet the S&P 500 index fell by half

a percent to NASDAQ did even worse down 1.2%. Now the reason this happened was that the index was dragged down by Nvidia. Nvidia stock dropped more than 5% yesterday despite reporting blowout earnings. We broke down the earnings report on yesterday's shows, so go check that out if you missed it. But yeah, that was kind of a surprise and it's just another son. The market is just freaked out about AI right now. Now zooming out we just got some inflation data this morning. The January producer

price index report just dropped which measures wholesale inflation and numbers came in pretty hot. Headline PPI was up 0.5% month over month, higher than the 0.3% that was expected, and core PPI which strips out energy and food prices was up 0.8% in January. That is much higher than expected and on a year over year basis, core wholesale prices are now running at 3.6%. So if wholesale prices are running this hot, that could trickle down to consumer prices as well.

So definitely going to be keeping an eye on future inflation reports. And look, this report likely means that the Fed is not going to be cutting interest rates anytime soon. So yeah, we're probably going to have another choppy day of trading, putting it into this wild week. And unless we get a surprise rally today, the NASDAQ is on track for six negative week in the last seven. We're going to be staying on top of everything, so make sure you guys subscribe to the podcast

and tuning in every day to stay in the loop. Let's run through some headlines, starting with Netflix. Netflix is officially walking away from its deal to buy Warner Bros. Discover. Remember last week, Netflix gave Warner's a seven day window to negotiate a deal with Paramount. Well, in that window, Paramount raised their bid to $31 a share to buy all of Warner's. That top Netflix's earlier agreement to buy just WBD studio and streaming assets for $27.75 per share.

So now the Warner's board is picking Paramount's bid as the superior one. Now, Netflix has the option to match this deal, but Netflix yesterday came out and said that they were good. They're going to just back off from the deal. Netflix co-CEO's Ted Serandis and Greg Peters said the deal was a nice to have at the right price, but not a must have at any price.

So the saga has finally come to an end. Paramount walks away as the winner. But honestly,

though, I think Netflix might be the real winner here because the market hated this merger for them. Netflix's socket loss of third of its value since this deal was announced back in early December.

Now they get to walk away from this deal and collect a $2.8 billion break of fee from Warner's,

which Paramount said they're going to pay. And markets are loving that Netflix's socket is up nearly 10% this morning at the time of this recording. Now, the story isn't completely done. We'll have to see if Paramount gets regulatory approval to acquire Warner's. You know, that's still not a guarantee. And the financial picture here is pretty challenging for Paramount moving forward. You know, they probably overpaid for Warner's. Now, they had the

backing of Larry Ellison's worth like $200 billion. But Paramount will have a little ton of debt on the balance sheet. And you know, the history of media mergers hasn't been so great. So who knows? Maybe Netflix will end up buying Warner's in like three to four years at a steep discount if this merger with Paramount doesn't work out. Let's shift gears and talk about CoreWeef. Shares of the Neal Cloud Company are tanking this morning at their delivering a disappointing

earnings report. Now, a quick refresher on what CoreWeef does, they have a bunch of AI data centers stacked within video chips and they rent out that capacity to hyperscalers like Microsoft and meta and others. And the Q4 numbers were a mixed bag. The top line was fine. Revenue more than

doubled to $1.57 billion. That beat estimates. But the guidance for Q1 was disappointing,

coming in at $1.9 to $2 billion. Wall Street was expecting $2.3 billion in revenue.

But I think the bigger concern here is the debt on the balance sheet. Now CoreWeef's business

model is basically borrow money to build data centers and rent them out and just repeat that process. While they're borrowing aggressively right now, debt and lease liabilities ballooned to $30 billion at the end of December up from $19 billion just one quarter earlier. In fact, in the fourth quarter alone, 25% of the revenue went straight to paying interest on that debt. And the thing is spending isn't slowing down. CoreWeef is planning to spend $30 to $35 billion in capital expenditure this year.

The thing is, when Microsoft or meta or Amazon announced these kind of capex ...

it's usually not an issue because those companies are sitting on a massive amount of cash.

CoreWeef though just has $3 billion of cash on the balance sheet. So they're funding all

of this capex with debt and that's making investors nervous right now. Shares of CoreWeef are down more than 15% this morning at the time of this recording. Let's talk about some stocks making moves today. Blockshares are absolutely ripping this morning after the company reported earnings and CEO Jack Dorsey shocked Wall Street by announcing the company is cutting nearly half its workforce because of AI. The company will be reducing head count from over 10,000 employees to under

6,000. And they're doing this cut all in one go. It's not going to be gradual. It's all happening

this week. On the earnings call, Jack Dorsey said that recent AI model improvements showed

a path to applying AI to nearly everything they do. Now, people are already saying that this isn't actually about AI replacing jobs and more about block over hiring during the pandemic and being bloated in an efficient revenue growth for the company have slowed down jumping just 3.6% in the recent quarter. And that's one reason why blockshares have dropped more than 40% over the last 12 months.

So I think Jack Dorsey is using AI to put a positive spin on the layoffs. He probably should have

been doing layoffs a while ago, but now he sort of looks like a visionary by implementing AI. Investors are clearly eating this up. The stock is up more than 20% this morning at the time of this recording. You know, I wouldn't be surprised if you see more tech companies announce the layoffs and use AI as a cover. We've already seen this happen with Amazon and Shopify. I think we're going to see more. Now, on the flip side, dual-lingo stock is getting crushed this morning after reporting

earnings and announcing their shift in the strategy to prioritize user growth over near-term revenue. Now, let's talk about the earnings far as Q4 results were solid both revenues and earnings

beat estimates and daily active users hit 50 million. Well, the company wants the double

users to 100 million by 2028 and to get their management says they're scaling back monetization basically if you were ads, if you were paywalls, less friction for free users. So while that's great for dual-lingo users, that's not great for dual-lingo's business. It means slower revenue growth in the short term. In fact, the company guided Q1 revenues to be about $288 million, which was below analyst expectations. So yeah, this strategy pivot is freaking out investors,

dual-lingo stock is down nearly 30% this morning at the time of this recording. I got to say though, it's pretty impressive that dual-lingo has 50 million people using its app every day. Let's wrap the show with the fun fact. Last year, more people moved out of the US than moved in, which hasn't happened since the great depression. American citizens are heading overseas in record numbers, we're talking students, remote workers and retirees. Some of the biggest inflows

seeing Americans or countries like Portugal, Spain and Germany. In fact, the American population in

Portugal has jumped over 500% since the pandemic. And you know, I think a big reason for this is the

rise of remote work. US salaries are still amongst the highest in the world, but the cost of living in places like Spain or Portugal can be significantly lower than major US cities. So imagine earning a US paycheck while paying European rent prices. That math and lifestyle arbitrage looks pretty attractive, especially if you're someone that's young. I've seen a few TikToks pop up on my feet of Americans living abroad, people showing their rent, groceries, and health care costs.

And yeah, it's a lot cheaper than what I pay here. Let me know in the comments if you're an American living abroad right now, or if you've done it in the past. Well, all right, guys, that's the run down for today. That's the run down for this week. Hope you guys enjoyed today's episode. If you did, and you have like five extra seconds, don't forget to hit us with a five star rating on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, wherever you listen to your podcast, and if you are listening on Spotify, don't

forget to vote in today's Spotify poll. Leave us a comment on Spotify, all of that engagement. It really does help us out, and it helps other people find this show. Thank you guys again for listening, watching, and commenting, shout out to Mike and Connor. For all the work behind the scenes, and see you guys back here tomorrow. Yeah, exactly. This story is so deep, the story is just a little different.

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So, let's start with the 50% cost-probe, and our next episode is Flexible.

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