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Analysis: Elon Musk’s antics may finally be catching up to him.
Here’s the deal: Federal regulators just announced that Musk’s private space tourism company, SpaceX, will no longer receive nearly $900 million in subsidies that it was awarded last year because the company “failed to demonstrate that [it] could deliver” the internet service it promised.
Let’s rewind for a minute.
SpaceX didn’t respond to a request to comment, as is typically the case at companies run by Musk.
BIG PICTURE
Part of Elon Musk’s whole idiosyncratic-visionary-mega-billionaire persona (whether you believe in it or not) is that he runs multiple companies with lofty ambitions — like colonizing Mars, in SpaceX’s case.
Even if you find his antics — the overpromising, the troll-y tweets, the reckless corporate raiding, naming one of his kids X Æ A-12 — off-putting, you still kinda have to appreciate the audacity.
But it now seems like Musk’s bad behavior might finally be catching up to him.
In recent days, Musk sold nearly $7 billion worth of Tesla shares just in case he loses his legal battle with Twitter and is forced to buy the company, which he no longer wants. At the same time, California officials have filed a complaint alleging that Tesla lied in advertisements about its Autopilot and Full Self Driving technology (which, despite their names, are not fully autonomous).
“Yeah, actually not good.”
We could say the same for Musk right about now.
NUMBER OF THE DAY: 8.5%
The inflation headline of the day was a bit rosier than expected, as the annual consumer price index reading for July came in at 8.5% — much slower than June’s 9.1%, but still historically high.
So, that’s good news and we should all take a moment to savor it. More good news: Overall prices didn’t rise at all between June and July. The last month prices didn’t rise was November 2020.
It’s not all good news, though. Prices didn’t rise for one reason, and one reason only: Energy costs, which are notoriously volatile, have tumbled. If you strip those out, prices rose in practically every other category.
Bottom line: July’s report indicates the Fed’s rate hikes may not be having their desired effect. High energy prices likely brought themselves down as demand began to dry up.
THE ITALIAN JOB
Imagine being in the room when someone at Domino’s, the most aggressively mediocre pizza purveyor on the planet, pitched the idea of getting into the Italian market.
See what we’ll do is, we’ll take our objectively inferior American pies and we’ll sell them to the very people who invented pizza and for whom food is not only a source of national pride but also, like, the fundamental underpinning of Italian cultural identity…
That’s crazy, the boss replies. So crazy it just might work…
Spoiler alert: It didn’t.
After seven years trying to make it in Italy, Domino’s has formally shut all of its locations, according to Italian media.
Domino’s had big plans when made the plunge into the Italian market in 2015, signing a 10-year franchising deal with a Milan-based company called ePizza. Together, they planned to introduce a large-scale pizza delivery service to the country, which didn’t really exist at the time.
It wasn’t an immediate disaster. By the start of 2020, ePizza was managing 23 stores in Italy and six more through a sub-franchise partner.
But it turns out Italians preferred, um, Italian pizza to the American type, with its distinctively American toppings, like pineapple.
Who could have guessed? (Apart from, like, everyone?)
Although some may attribute Domino’s failure to its brazen attempt to infiltrate pizza’s homeland, ePizza blamed its demise on competition from food delivery apps.
EPizza filed for bankruptcy in April, after it struggled to make enough sales during two years of pandemic restrictions amid “unprecedented competition” from local restaurants.
‘News of the Day’ content, as reported by public domain newswires.
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