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Channeling their inner Davy Crockett, BlackRock and Citadel Securities are telling the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, “You can go to Hell. We’re going to Texas.”

This week, the two financial juggernauts announced they are among the biggest investors behind the Texas Stock Exchange in Dallas, which could start trading next year. They are doing J.R. Ewing proud. The TXSE may even help BlackRock win back some of its detractors who fret that the firm is putting the planet ahead of profits with all its ESG talk. According to The Wall Street Journal, the new exchange will be more “CEO-friendly,” not bogged down by the compliance costs or board diversity requirements found on the NYSE and the Nasdaq. As for Davy Crocket, sure, he killed a bunch of bears, but could he ride a bull? 

International Economics

Canada Slashes Interest Rates, Europe Likely to Follow Suit

Image Credit: iStock Images, Gabriel Shakour

It’s not a race. But if it were, Canada would be winning. And Europe wouldn’t be far behind.

Bringing up the rear, of course, is the “higher-for-longer” US. The Bank of Canada lowered its own main interest rate by a quarter percentage point on Wednesday, making it the first nation in the Group of Seven to slash rates in the inflation era. Indications are that the European Central Bank will follow suit on Thursday, too.

Central (Bank) Planning

Canada’s cut isn’t exactly surprising. Last month, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem signaled the move was coming, and last week, 11 out of 15 economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal predicted the slash would come on Wednesday. After its core inflation rate peaked at 8.1% in June 2022 (coinciding with the US’s peak of 9.1% the same month), it steadily declined, falling to 2.7% this past April. But unlike the US — which has only recently seen some cooling to a rollicking economy — Canada’s economy has been operating at a low purr for months. That may be due to higher levels of household debt and shorter-term mortgages in Canada compared to the US, both of which mean elevated interest rates pack a little more punch for the average citizen.

The proof is in the numbers. In this year’s first quarter, Canada’s GDP rose just 1.7%, more than a full percentage point below most economists’ expectations. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate is at its highest point in 27 months while job openings are at their lowest since 2021. The EU, too, has seen its inflation rate shrink closer to its target goal and its economy slip into a small lull. For both Canada and the EU, that means it’s finally time to cut rates from historic highs in the hope of securing the elusive soft landing — though what happens next could look different for each central bank:

  • The Canadian Imperial Bank expects three more cuts to come this year, with another one likely as soon as July. “While the language remains cautious, it does not dismiss the possibility that the BoC could cut again in July,” Alberta Central chief economist Charles St-Arnaud told Bloomberg.
  • The ECB, meanwhile, is expected to be more cautious, with most markets ruling out another cut in July and most economists expecting just one cut per quarter through the rest of the year.

Diverting Paths: But one cut per quarter is still faster than the single rate cut most economists expect the Fed to make this year, likely in September. That puts Canada, the EU, and the US on diverging paths — a dynamic that could weaken both the euro and the Canadian loonie, which could mean higher import costs and higher inflation for both regions. In other words, while the US is a step behind in the rate-cut race, it could drag down Canada and the EU in the near future, too.

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Media & Entertainment

Massive Class-Action Antitrust Lawsuit Against NFL Kicks Off

Is the NFL going to get flagged for an illegal formation? 

On Wednesday, a class-action lawsuit years in the making that takes the National Football League to task for its out-of-market broadcast strategy finally kicked off. If successful, the case could cost the league up to $21 billion — and reshape a key pillar of its business model.

The Out-Of-Market Square Riot

The NFL’s broadcast model is fairly fan-friendly, at least if you’re a casual fan or live in your favorite team’s market, with local games plus three other out-of-market games piped over the airwaves for free every Sunday on Fox, CBS, and NBC. But for any die-hard who needs more than that — or, say, a lifelong Tampa Bay Buccaneers fan who moved to Seattle, where broadcast Bucs games are rare — the only option is NFL Sunday Ticket, which grants access to virtually every out-of-market game for the not-so-low price of $349 per year. The service was available only via DirecTV for years, before the NFL made YouTube the exclusive partner in 2023.

The class-action lawsuit, initiated by a San Francisco sports bar in 2015, now has over 2.4 million members and is alleging that the entire Sunday Ticket operation violates antitrust law:

  • The plaintiffs argue that the NFL and its 32 franchises made an anti-competitive agreement to force fans to pay for all out-of-market broadcasts in one big package, rather than offer them piecemeal. Without such agreements, franchises could theoretically offer their games à la carte at a lower price, or certain teams could join together for smaller packages.
  • The plaintiffs also allege that the league and its 32 franchises abused their market power to engage in a price-fixing scheme to boost the price of Sunday Ticket when negotiating terms with broadcast partners.

Free Safety: The NFL’s legal retort is likely to be as simple as a Cover 0 defense: Sure, each team is technically its own business entity, but the league is a trade association and can therefore collaborate with teams in broadcast negotiations — especially for a tertiary package designed only for die-hard fans. If the NFL loses, plaintiffs estimate the damages at $7 billion. Given it’s an antitrust case, those damages would therefore triple. A loss could also force the NFL to rejig its broadcast structure, which the league threatens could mean fewer free games. We’ll call that offsetting penalties.

Consumer

Irish Fast-Food Upstart Keeps Sticking it to McDonald’s

As the Irish say, do not take the thatch from your roof to buy slates for another man’s house. Or Golden Arches, for that matter. 

McDonald’s, the world’s largest fast food chain, lost its “Big Mac” trademark for chicken sandwiches following a European Union court ruling on Wednesday. It marked a win for Irish rival Supermac’s, whose founder has called the whole ordeal a “David versus Goliath” battle. 

What’s in a Name?

The Big Mac is among the best-known fast food items on the planet. Plenty of people above a certain age can still recite its ingredients after decades of commercials: two all-beef patties, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickles, and onions on a sesame seed bun. “Beef” is the key word there, because when McDonald’s trademarked the Big Mac name in 1996, they believed it extended beyond just its burgers. 

Supermac’s disagreed: 

  • Since the mid-2010s, the two chains have litigated about using “Big Mac” and the “Mc” prefix. But in 2019, the EU’s Intellectual Property Office sided with Supermac’s, revoking McDonald’s trademark for some of its products.
  • This week, the EU’s highest court — the European Court of Justice — doubled down on that ruling and decided that McDonald’s can’t exclusively own “Big Mac” for chicken as it couldn’t prove it really used it over the past five years. 

Score One for the Little Guy: High-profile cases over fast-food names may seem silly, but this week’s decision isn’t trivial. Supermac’s is an Irish staple, but it has only about 100 locations compared to McDonald’s nearly 42,000 stores globally. When McDonald’s sued Supermac’s, saying its name too closely resembled McDonald’s, the Irish company said the case crippled its ability to expand into the UK and EU markets. Supermac’s founder Pat McDonagh has said McDonald’s is a “trademark bully” and that Wednesday’s ruling was a “victory for small businesses throughout the world.” Now let’s all celebrate with a real happy meal: Supermac’s 100-piece bucket of mini sausages, and yes, that does exist

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