| X Æ A-Xii must be so proud | US job numbers are... iffy |
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Hi John, here's what you need to know for July 3rd in 3:12 minutes.

☕️ Finimized over a cortado at Distrikt Coffee in Berlin, Germany (22°C/71°F ⛅)

Today's big stories

  1. Tesla became the most valuable car company in the world
  2. Turns out actively managed investments probably aren't worth all the trouble – Read Now
  3. The US economy added almost 5 million new jobs in June
1/3

Current Affairs

Current Affairs

What’s Going On Here?

Electric vehicle maker Tesla and its otherworldly CEO shocked their gas-guzzling rivals this week by becoming the world’s most valuable car company.

What Does This Mean?

Tesla’s market value surpassed the $208 billion mark, eclipsing previous frontrunner Toyota’s $203 billion. The companies’ products aren’t as different as you might think, with the latter’s hybrids also having taken the world by storm. But their numbers couldn’t be further apart: Tesla delivered just shy of 368,000 cars last year, compared to Toyota’s almost 11 million. Nor has Tesla managed to deliver an annual profit, while Toyota has a long track record of doing exactly that (tweet this).

So what gives? Well, this week’s surge might’ve been thanks to an email Tesla’s CEO sent employees to congratulate them on a good quarter. Investors may have taken that to mean the 73,000 second-quarter deliveries – and, in turn, the revenue – that analysts were expecting was actually a serious underestimation.

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Drive toward the light.
Given the impact global trade wars and the ongoing pandemic have had on demand, it’s been a tough couple of years for carmakers. But after Thursday’s better-than-expected deliveries announcement, investors who thought they could see light at the end of the tunnel kept buying Tesla's shares – sending them up 7%. And if some early investors hadn’t sold off stock to lock in their profits, those shares might well have risen even more.

The bigger picture: Coochy coochy coo.
Tesla’s critics argue that the carmaker’s decision to drop its prices amid rising electric vehicle competition doesn’t bode well for its future earnings. That might be why it’s the most bet against company in America. But investors expecting its shares to fall may recently have been forced to curb their losses by buying those shares back, pushing Tesla’s stock higher still. And it’s not just the company’s existing investors who are benefiting: CEO Elon Musk’s bonus should set sweet little X Æ A-Xii up for life…

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2/3 Premium

Anybody’s Guess

What’s Going On Here?

It’s often said that past performance is no guarantee of future results – but fresh analysis of “actively managed” US investment funds underscores just how true that is.

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3/3

Number-Crunching

Number-Crunching

What’s Going On Here?

Data out on Thursday showed 4.8 million jobs were added in the US last month, but something isn’t quite adding up…

What Does This Mean?

The jobs report back in May left investors with more questions than answers, what with miscalculations in the unemployment rate (in reality, it was closer to 16.4% than the 13.3% reported). So the hope was that June’s data would show once and for all whether the US economy was recovering, or if it was still hobbled by the pandemic.

No such luck: the 11.1% unemployment rate in June was still full of mistakes, and would’ve been 12.1% if reported correctly. Still, more jobs were added than economists predicted, and the drop in unemployment was bigger than expected too. That makes sense: life in parts of the US has all but returned to normal, and plenty of people have already started going back to work.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: Don’t get too comfortable.
To keep the economic recovery on track, workers need to be able to… well, work. That’s especially true of the services industry – like hospitality and leisure – which contributes most of the US’s economic growth. But with reports on Wednesday of a record number of new US coronavirus cases, and hospitals in hotspots like Texas hitting capacity, it’s possible renewed lockdowns are on the cards. That’d likely derail US stocks following one of their best quarters ever, which seemed to “price in” a relatively smooth recovery.

Zooming out: The training wheels are coming off.
Less controversial figures were released in Europe on Thursday: the region as a whole saw the unemployment rate rise to 7.4% in May. And in contrast to the US, some economists reckon that figure will get even worse as job safeguarding programs expire. Seeing as UK companies have fired over 11,000 people this week, you can kind of see their point…

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💬 Quote of the day

“The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.”

– Alice Walker (an American novelist, short story writer, poet, and social activist)
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🤔 Q&A · RE: No Fest For The Wicked

“If Uber agrees to buy Postmates, won’t the US government block the deal?”

– Warren in Australia

“It’s certainly a risk, Warren, but based on what we know so far, it seems unlikely. The government’s aim in blocking deals is to make sure enough competition exists in an industry, or else risk leaving consumers with no choice but to accept unfair treatment. Uber’s likely to argue that Uber Eats and Postmates represent just a fraction of the food market, though: a customer can go to grocery stores, restaurants, and order in from other services, after all. And even if the government does decide to treat online food delivery as a market unto itself, Uber’s likely to argue that Eats is most popular in Texas, where Postmates is more prevalent in North Carolina and LA. Given there’s not much crossover between the two, a customer’s experience shouldn’t actually change much post merger.”

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🕺 Who said youth is wasted on the young?

Our next UK event, Investing in Your 20s, has been going down a treat. Clearly there are a lot of 20-odd-year-olds out there who want to sort out their finances. That, or they just love any excuse to log in to a Zoom call.

🇬🇧 UK: Investing in Your 20s – 1pm UK Time, July 3rd
🇳🇬 Nigeria: COVID-19 & The Nigerian Economy – 5pm West Africa Time, July 11th
🇩🇪 Germany: Is Cash Still King in Germany? – 3pm Berlin Time, July 15
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🇦🇺 Australia: Women & Money (in-person) – 5.30pm Perth Time, July 22
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😭 In case you missed it

Here’s some of the most popular Finimize Premium content this week…

Premium Insights:
🔨 Dalio’s picked three trends that could hammer stocks
📈 Why stocks’ current valuations might be justified
🌓 What the second half of the year might hold for us

Packs:
🎢 How the pros approach investing in volatile times
💥 What recent bankruptcies tell us about what’s yet to come
🇬🇧 Brits: is now the time to invest in property?

📚 What we're reading

  • Beauty is in the eye of the astronaut (Wired)
  • Here’s how to become a master thinker (Big Think)
  • So… can birds fly over Mount Everest? (Nautilus)
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