

By Matthew Gutierrez, Shawn OβMalley, and Weronika Pycek
Great news: Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), continues to decelerate for the 12th straight month. In June, the CPI rose only 3% year-over-year.
Progress! ππ»
The Fed wants to see that number at 2%. And economists prefer a slightly different inflation metric called Core CPI, which strips out food and energy prices. On that front, things are less good. Core CPI is cooling more slowly, rising at 4.8% year-over-year last month.
π The U.S. economy isnβt a monolith, either. Prices arenβt increasing evenly across the country. For example, in the northeast, prices are rising annually at much closer to 2%.
Our chart(s) of the day illustrates both.
β Shawn & Matthew
Hereβs the rundown:

Today, we'll discuss the three biggest stories in markets:
The fight against Big Tech & mergers
China hits back at Goldman
How JPMorgan is leveraging SVBβs downfall
All this, and more, in just 5 minutes to read.
POP QUIZ
IN THE NEWS
π€ The (Losing) Fight Against Big Tech (WSJ)
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Lina Khan is taking on the worldβs biggest technology companies. Mostly, itβs been a losing battle.
Khan failed this week in her latest effort to block the big-tech deal between Microsoft and video game publisher Activision Blizzard. A federal judge denied her agencyβs bid to block Microsoftβs deal, only months after the FTC failed to thwart a deal between Meta Platformsβ purchase of a virtual reality gaming company.
If this feels familiar, it is: Microsoft and Activision first struck the deal 18 months ago. And just this week, U.S. District Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley denied the FTCβs request for an injunction.
βThe FTC has not shown it is likely to succeed on its assertion the combined firm will probably pull Call of Duty from Sony PlayStation, or that its ownership of Activision content will substantially lessen competition in the video game library subscription and cloud gaming markets,β the ruling read.
Khan, the FTC chair, rose as an Amazon critic and vowed to implement stricter antitrust enforcement. She has noted that past enforcers were too cautious and failed to confront the rise of companies such as Facebook, which gained enormous power over the past 15 years.
βIβm certainly not someone who thinks success is marked by a 100% court record,β Khan said last year. βIf you just never bring those hard cases, I think there is severe cost to that, that can lead to stagnation and stasis.β
Whatβs different about Microsoft and Activision: They arenβt head-to-head competitors, so the case heavily depends on the FTCβs prediction that the combined company would abuse its power to hurt competition in the future.
The bottom line: Microsoft can close its $75 billion deal to acquire Activision Blizzard. The ruling means thereβs no U.S. obstacle to the two companies merging.
Why it matters:
The FTC and Justice Department are ramping up. They challenged 10 mergers in court last year, up from six in 2021 and eight in 2020. This year, theyβve sued to block or undo four deals involving Amgen, JetBlue, Intercontinental Exchange, and a Louisiana hospital system.
Itβs a push led by Khan, the FTC chair, who wants the law to prevent big mergers that lead to higher consumer prices and other problems, including lower wages, less innovation, and reduced quality.
The FTC hopes it can find better luck in preventing future mergers. They know they need to win some cases before the Biden administrationβs term ends, or companies will likely begin to tune out their warnings.
On the clock: βThere has been progress, but there has also been these losses,β said an advocate of stricter antitrust enforcement. βThe clock is ticking.β
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π€¬ China Hits Back at Goldman Sachs (Bloomberg)
Who says the financial world is absent of petty drama?
Itβs not every day you see a government denounce an investment bank for its research reports, but official efforts to ward off negative investment sentiments are ramping up in China.
Last week, Goldman Sachs issued a pessimistic report on Chinese banks, notably pushing Merchants Bankβs stock down 12% in the time since.
Merchants Bank responded by calling the report βillogical,β arguing that Goldmanβs assumptions have βmisled some investors.β
A state-owned Chinese newspaper chimed in, issuing a rebuttal of Goldmanβs research, suggesting the firm had misinterpreted the facts.
Valid worries? Goldman, however, was raising concerns about Chinese banksβ exposure to local government debt, which has become increasingly risky as local governments face difficult financial challenges with a downturn in the countryβs property markets (many local governments in China rely heavily on land sales for revenue.)
Intolerance of negative financial commentary doesnβt end there, though. A prominent financial writer and two of his peers were suspended from a Chinese social media platform β Weibo β for spreading βnegative and harmful informationβ about the nationβs floundering stock market.
Weiboβs statement added that they had βattacked and underminedβ Chinese policy and hurt the stock marketβs development.

And last year, JPMorganβs reports calling Chinese internet stocks βuninvestableβ cost the firm a primary role in underwriting a stock listing for Kingsoft Cloud Holdings.
At the end of June, Bloomberg also reported that Chinaβs central bank was stepping up support for the countryβs slumping currency and intervening in markets after the Yuan hit a seven-month low.
Why it matters:
A mix of positive and negative opinions is essential to how financial markets function, allowing all facts and perspectives to be considered and factored into asset pricing.
Limiting negative views only distorts the effectiveness of markets.
Itβs something investors will watch keenly in China as the central government shows a greater willingness to, directly and indirectly, punish honest skepticism at a time when the countryβs economy is weakening: Youth unemployment (those aged between 16 and 24) in the country surged to almost 21% in May.
No easy choice: As global banks continue operating in China, they must navigate a tricky balance between providing honest research for investors and corporate decision-makers, a pillar of their brand reputation, and not jeopardizing business interests there by displeasing government officials.
MORE HEADLINES
π€ The Fed wants to make money transfers a whole lot faster
π Farmers Insurance becomes the latest insurer to pull out of Florida
π Americaβs least-expensive states to live in 2023
π¦ JPMorgan Hires Dozens of Bankers To Serve Start-ups (FT)
Wanted: bankers.
JPMorgan is recruiting bankers who specialize in serving start-ups and venture capital-backed companies. Itβs a strategic move to capitalize on Silicon Valley Bankβs (SVB) downfall β a firm that, if the name doesnβt give it a way, specialized in banking emerging tech companies.
JPMorgan bolstered its commercial bank team by adding about 20 bankers in the UK, along with 10 in Israel. JPMorgan has appointed John China, a former longstanding executive of SVB, as the co-head of its innovation economy business in the U.S.
One big game: In banking, as in life, there are winners and losers. This year SVB fell into the ladder category while JPMorgan remains firmly in the former, using crisis to its advantage.
JPMorganβs customer base has grown since SVB's collapse in March, promptly acquiring new start-up and venture capital clients suddenly left unbanked.
That week the banking titan received an influx of calls, pushing JPMorgan's onboarding team to max capacity.
The bankβs sheer size provides a lot of advantages. With average domestic deposits of over $2 trillion in 2022, JPMorgan is the largest bank in the U.S. It can weather storms others canβt, reaping the benefits once the tides calm.
Another example: After First Republic Bank also failed earlier this year, regulators allowed JPMorgan to buy the distressed bank at a compelling discount.
Why it matters:
Instead of outright buying SVB, as it did with First Republic, JPMorgan is taking a narrower approach, poaching former bankers and SVB clients.
One analyst commented, βBetween the two of themβ¦JPM got one crown jewel for a steal and the other for free.β Adding that, βThey dodged a bullet [by passing on SVB] and got the benefits of having all the top SVB people.β
This plays into the mega bankβs strategy since 2019, aiming to expand its commercial banking presence in foreign markets to cater to medium-sized companies on an international scale.
βThis is about being relevant to the worldβs best companies earlier in their life cycle,β a JPMorgan executive said.
TRIVIA ANSWER
See you next time!
That's it for today on We Study Markets!
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