☕️ Amazon is big

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February 04, 2022 View Online | Sign Up | Shop

Morning Brew

IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants)

Good morning. To celebrate Jackass Forever's premiere today, we made Neal edit this newsletter in a tub of spiders. He did a pretty good job, only cried once.

Matty Merritt, Max Knoblauch, Neal Freyman

MARKETS

Nasdaq

13,878.82

S&P

4,477.44

Dow

35,111.16

10-Year

1.839%

Bitcoin

$37,009.41

Snap

$39.00

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 6:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: The Nasdaq had its worst day since September 2020 after Meta's mustard stain of an earnings report dragged down other tech stocks. But other companies said "Zuck's problems are not my problems." Snap popped in after hours trading when it posted its first quarterly net profit as a public company.
  • Economy: The January jobs report due this morning will be a "hot mess express," per Axios's Neil Irwin. By that he means that several Covid curveballs will make the numbers extremely confusing to interpret (the jobs survey was taken when many people were out sick with Omicron, for example).

TECH

News flash: Amazon is big

The logo of Amazon is seen on the facade of the company logistics center on April 21, 2020 in Bretigny-sur-Orge, France Chesnot/Getty Images

Remember when you were a kid standing at the base of the Empire State Building and looked up to the tippy top? That's what it felt like reading Amazon's Q4 earnings report yesterday.

Among the ginormous numbers…

Workforce: Amazon has doubled its global workforce since the start of 2020 from nearly 800,000 to more than 1.6 million today.

Profits: Net income almost doubled from last year thanks to its booming cloud business and its stake in the EV maker Rivian. Bigger profits could be on the horizon, because Amazon is raising its Prime subscription price for the first time since 2018, to $139/year from $119.

Advertising: Amazon revealed the size of its advertising unit for the first time—and it's shockingly huge. Bringing in $31 billion in revenue last year, it's a bigger business than YouTube.

Capital expenditure: The amount Amazon has spent building out its physical infrastructure (warehouses, cloud networks, etc.) is breathtaking. At $61 billion last year, it's double the capex of oil giants Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips combined.

What it means: Amazon is firing on all cylinders despite supply chain bottlenecks, rising labor costs, and the ongoing pandemic. Already a $1.4 trillion company, its stock shot up more than 14% after its earnings came out.

But labor relations are still a sore spot

Amazon's report came one day ahead of the start of a big union election at an Alabama warehouse.

If you're having déjà vu, it's because this is the second time workers at the facility are voting on unionization. Amazon won the first vote handily last year, but the National Labor Relations Board found that Amazon violated labor law during that vote and ordered a new one.

  • Key data point: Due to high turnover, nearly half of the 6,143 eligible voters weren't employees at the facility when the first vote took place, according to the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union.

Zoom out: Amazon's report wraps up a wild period of earnings for internet giants. The winners: Microsoft, Alphabet, Apple, and Amazon, which have shown that you're never too big to keep on growing. The loser: Meta.—NF

        

SPORTS

Here we go again

ZHANGJIAKOU, CHINA - FEBRUARY 03: An athlete of Team Canada performs a trick during the Snowboard Slopestyle Training session ahead of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at the Genting Snow Park on February 03, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, China. Clive Rose/Getty Images

The 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics have arrived. But with all of the geopolitical controversy, Covid bubbles, and the fact that we just had an Olympics less than six months ago, it might be the least hyped people have been for a mega international sporting event in recent memory.

Still, it's happening, and here are some answers to your burning questions.

When is the opening ceremony? Well, if you're reading this anytime after 7am ET, the opening ceremony is either happening right now or has already concluded. Expect a more muted affair than the extravaganza Beijing put on when it hosted the 2008 Summer Games.

Will I be able to make fun of Peacock again? NBCUniversal's Peacock streaming service did not win any medals for its confusing interface during the Tokyo Games last summer. This time around, NBC will stream all of its broadcast and cable coverage of the Games concurrently on Peacock, instead of just a few live events like it did for Tokyo.

Are there any new events? Yep, seven to be exact, many of which are focused on creating more mixed-gender teams.

Does Jamaica have a bobsled team? Yes!

When are the competitions? Here's a full schedule of events.—NF

        

ENTERTAINMENT

Netflix is sick of hearing about Euphoria

Movie theater with Netflix logo on the screen Francis Scialabba

Netflix released its 2022 movie preview yesterday and it's packed with more A-list celebrities than an ugly NFT platform.

The details: The streamer plans to release 86 original movies in 2022, or more than one movie a week. The slate includes 61 live-action films, five animated movies, 17 non-English language features, and, for the first time, three anime films. Some of the most anticipated releases include the Russo brothers' The Gray Man starring Ryan Gosling, Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio, the return of rom-com Lindsay Lohan in Falling for Christmas, and the extremely expensive Knives Out 2.

  • Netflix acquired the rights for two sequels of the Daniel Craig mystery thriller last April for $469 million.

Big picture: After the company raised subscription prices last month and projected slower subscriber growth for the beginning of 2022, a beaten-down Netflix thinks the key to staying on top in the cutthroat streaming wars is by churning out its own shows and movies. It spent $17 billion on original content in 2021, and will likely spend even more this year.—MM

        

TOGETHER WITH IMA® (INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTANTS)

You don't need Cupid to find a job you love

IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants)

When you love your job, you take up residence on cloud nine. Because not even allll the Valentine's Day chocolate is sweeter than doing what you love.

But if your current position isn't exactly the apple of your eye, consider this stat from a 2021 IMA® global salary survey: 72% of CMAs love their job. Not only are Certified Management Accountants always in demand, but becoming a CMA equips you with the skills necessary to earn a higher salary, too.

Earning a CMA certification also means you'll be sought out by global organizations for the impact you can make on their biz.

So if you're ready to advance your career, earn more, and land a job you love with a higher calling, there's no need to track down Cupid. Just start your CMA® here.

GRAB BAG

Key performance indicators

Mark Zuckerberg standing in front of a poster that says "Meta" Meta

Stat: Wall Street has never seen anything like Meta's stock crash yesterday. After a shockingly bad earnings report Wednesday, more than $250 billion was wiped off Meta's market value as its shares plunged 27%. It's the biggest single-day drop in value in the US stock market's history.

Quote: "I feel good about that."

Spotify CEO Daniel Ek is (big word alert) sanguine about the changes the company made in response to artists' boycott of the platform over its business partnership with Joe Rogan. Spotify's investors are less sanguine about the trajectory of the company, dropping the stock 16.8% after feeling burned by its growth projections.

Read: A visual essay about the (mis)representation of women in the news. (The Pudding)

        

WEALTH

Finally, a win for the yachters

The Koningshaven Bridge in Rotterdam SEBASTIEN BOZON/AFP via Getty Images

A historic bridge in Rotterdam will be temporarily dismantled this summer to make way for an exciting innovation: some guy's boat. Jeff Bezos's new 417-foot-long, $500 million sailing yacht is too tall to pass under the city's Koningshaven Bridge, so a portion of the bridge will be removed, a spokesperson said Thursday.

Critics take issue with the fact that a 95-year-old bridge, a national monument, is being taken apart for a billionaire's superyacht—but local officials say it's worth it for the jobs it will create. According to the city, which has a rich heritage of shipbuilding, Bezos and Oceano (the company building the yacht) will foot the bill.

Once completed, the vessel will be the world's largest sailing yacht, complete with its own "support yacht" (featuring a helipad) to trail alongside it.—MK

        

QUIZ

Quiz (soon to be acquired by the NYT)

Weekly news quiz

The feeling of getting a 5/5 on the Brew's Weekly News Quiz has been compared to putting on a pair of pants straight from the dryer.

It's that satisfying. Ace the quiz.

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • The leader of the Islamic State died in a raid by US commandos in northwestern Syria, President Biden said. Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi exploded a bomb that killed him and members of his family, the US government said.
  • NBCUniversal has sold out of Super Bowl ads across all its platforms. Some companies are paying a record $7 million for a 30-second spot.
  • Good news: Skyrocketing used car prices have passed their peak, a new study showed.
  • Hundreds of thousands of customers are without power across the US due to a winter storm.
  • Andreessen Horowitz is reportedly in advanced discussions to buy the startup behind Bored Ape Yacht Club. The valuation? Up to $5 billion.

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GAMES

Friday puzzle

Given the word STANDARD, take away two letters and add three digits to make a logical sequence (trust us, there's a good answer).

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ANSWER

Take away the two As and add 1, 2, and 3 to get 1st 2nd 3rd.

         

Written by Neal Freyman, Matty Merritt, and Max Knoblauch

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