Apple Inc
AAPL
$154.51
(+1.61%)
Alphabet Inc - Class C
GOOG
$2,291.69
(+1.33%)
Alphabet Inc - Class A
GOOGL
$2,287.90
(+1.68%)
Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN
$2,177.18
(+0.06%)
Microsoft Corporation
MSFT
$269.50
(+1.86%)
Meta Platforms Inc - Class A
FB
$197.65
(+0.73%)
Berkshire Hathaway Inc. - Class B
BRK.B
$312.53
(-0.14%)
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd - ADR
BABA
$84.57
(-0.32%)
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM
$118.89
(-2.44%)
Johnson & Johnson
JNJ
$177.09
(-0.14%)
Bank Of America Corp.
BAC
$35.76
(-1.68%)
Exxon Mobil Corp.
XOM
$85.02
(+0.66%)
Wells Fargo & Co.
WFC
$43.08
(-2%)
Visa Inc - Class A
V
$193.58
(+0.3%)
Walmart Inc
WMT
$149.18
(-1.41%)
Shell Plc - ADR
RDS.B
$51.06
(0%)
Shell Plc - ADR (Representing Ordinary Shares - Class A)
RDS.A
$51.04
(0%)
Intel Corp.
INTC
$44.01
(+2.18%)
AT&T, Inc.
T
$19.36
(-0.97%)
Unitedhealth Group Inc
UNH
$488.01
(+0.33%)
Cisco Systems, Inc.
CSCO
$49.55
(+1.21%)
PetroChina Co. Ltd. - ADR
PTR
$47.65
(+0.04%)
Novartis AG - ADR
NVS
$84.39
(+1.09%)
Pfizer Inc.
PFE
$49.49
(+1.75%)
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing - ADR
TSM
$88.82
(+1.74%)
Toyota Motor Corporation - ADR
TM
$166.45
(-1.2%)
Home Depot, Inc.
HD
$291.16
(-1.98%)
Oracle Corp.
ORCL
$72.53
(+1.38%)
Boeing Co.
BA
$132.95
(-0.27%)
Procter & Gamble Co.
PG
$154.79
(-0.53%)
Verizon Communications Inc
VZ
$48.13
(-1.01%)
Citigroup Inc
C
$48.75
(-2.29%)
HSBC Holdings plc - ADR
HSBC
$30.75
(+1.05%)
China Mobile Limited - ADR
CHL
$27.51
(0%)
Coca-Cola Co
KO
$64.01
(-0.93%)
Anheuser-Busch In Bev SA/NV - ADR
BUD
$54.66
(+1.09%)
Mastercard Incorporated - Class A
MA
$325.33
(-0.81%)
Abbvie Inc
ABBV
$152.09
(+0.75%)
Comcast Corp - Class A
CMCSA
$40.30
(+1.36%)
Philip Morris International Inc
PM
$98.88
(-0.99%)
Walt Disney Co (The)
DIS
$107.68
(+0.65%)
PepsiCo Inc
PEP
$171.49
(-0.12%)
Unilever NV
UN
$60.50
(0%)
Unilever plc - ADR
UL
$45.49
(+1.47%)
Merck & Co Inc
MRK
$87.81
(+0.19%)
NVIDIA Corp
NVDA
$175.95
(+3.81%)
International Business Machines Corp.
IBM
$129.13
(-3.95%)
3M Co.
MMM
$149.12
(-2.14%)
No Result
View All Result
The New York Ledger
  • Home
  • News

    Everytable, a California Chain With Sliding Scale Prices, Opens in New York

    Military briefing: why Russia and Ukraine are fighting over Snake Island

    A Pasta Granny Gets a Perch in Manhattan

    Financial support for Ukraine falling short, says Janet Yellen

    Buffalo Shooting Live Updates: Biden Arrives in City to Mourn Shooting Victims

    LaChanze, a Tony Nominee, Is Casting Herself in New Roles

    Trending Tags

    • general news
    • Risk News
    • Political/General News
    • industrial news
    • Travel
    • Financial Crime
    • business
    • consumer services
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle
Subscribe
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News

    Everytable, a California Chain With Sliding Scale Prices, Opens in New York

    Military briefing: why Russia and Ukraine are fighting over Snake Island

    A Pasta Granny Gets a Perch in Manhattan

    Financial support for Ukraine falling short, says Janet Yellen

    Buffalo Shooting Live Updates: Biden Arrives in City to Mourn Shooting Victims

    LaChanze, a Tony Nominee, Is Casting Herself in New Roles

    Trending Tags

    • general news
    • Risk News
    • Political/General News
    • industrial news
    • Travel
    • Financial Crime
    • business
    • consumer services
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle
Subscribe
  • Login
The New York Ledger
No Result
View All Result
Home Tech

Goodbye to the golden age of consumer choice

May 13, 2022
in Tech
A A
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Anyone who has entered a supermarket recently knows that groceries are more expensive. The prices of many items, from cat food to coffee, are rising and they are harder to transport around the world swiftly in an era of high inflation and snarled supply chains.

There was a subtler consumer warning this week as investors ran scared of technology companies and shares kept on falling. “In times of uncertainty, investors look for safety . . . Channelling Jerry Maguire, we need to show them the money,” Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive, told staff.

Shoppers have enjoyed a spectacular bounty for more than a decade — not only in the price and availability of everyday goods and services, but in an explosion of consumer technology and innovation. That experience is in doubt now: if the golden age of the consumer is not yet dead, it looks quite poorly.

A combination of high inflation and rising interest rates, which are puncturing many high-risk investments, from cryptocurrency to venture capital, are already having an effect. But the impact of the latter has yet to work its way through, and will create more pain.

Inflation and the crisis of affordability has pushed many shoppers back to basics. With energy bills rising sharply, the question is not which new brand of coconut milk yoghurt or craft beer they will try out, but how to feed their families or heat their homes.

More are now shopping at discounters, from Walmart to Aldi and Lidl. They also favour the ordinary and familiar over the experimental. Shares in Beyond Meat, a pioneer of plant-based burgers and sausages, tumbled below its 2019 flotation price this week, while those in stalwarts such as Kraft Heinz and Campbell Soup have risen in the past month.

Even Danone, the food and drink multinational that has expanded in healthier ranges, is adjusting. Antoine de Saint-Affrique, its chief executive, told me this week that it would re-emphasise its essential products, such as the yoghurt from which it got its name. “We will go back to fundamentals, rather than what was fashionable at one time or another.”

This implies that the extraordinary proliferation of groceries and other goods — with greater space in shops and supermarkets occupied by innovative products and smaller brands — faces a reckoning. As more shoppers retrench, start-ups will find it harder to push or pay their way on to shelves.

But there is a separate threat to the ecosystem of new products that has grown around us — not only groceries but grocery delivery, online fitness apps, maps and entertainment. Much has been backed speculatively by investors who have prioritised growth over immediate cash flows, confident that dividends would emerge in time.

That is the philosophy behind the exchange traded funds run by Cathie Wood at Ark Invest. She trusts in the displacement of incumbents by innovation, and “a constellation of connected devices that will inform us, entertain us, relate us, protect us, and mediate our perceptions of the world,” as Ark’s Big Ideas 2022 report put it.

It felt like a plausible bet until recently, and it could still come to pass one day, but Ark’s funds have meanwhile fallen heavily in value amid the tumult. More investors want cash now rather than enticing visions of the future, as Khosrowshahi told Uber’s employees: “Market size is irrelevant if it doesn’t translate into profit.”

Uber is still burning cash, along with Rivian, the electric pick-up truck company that has dropped to less than a quarter of its market value at its initial public offering last November. In contrast, Ford, which has just launched its own F-150 Lightning electric truck, has been around since 1903 and has billions in free cash flow.

Uber is mature enough to adjust and survive, and Airbnb is producing cash. But the rupture will make life harder for start-ups with bright ideas that would take time to flourish. Tiger Global, a hedge fund that eagerly pumped money into early-stage companies, has lost $17bn in value and valuations of venture capital portfolios are down.

A small example of what is at stake is Bounce, a US start-up that offers travellers short-term storage for luggage at shops and offices through a phone app. It is a modestly useful consumer innovation, and in April raised $12mn in a funding round led by Andreessen Horowitz, the Silicon Valley venture capital group.

Bounce will not change the world in itself, but consumers have gained from thousands of such tiny inventions, backed by eager investors, over the past decade or more. They have made travel, shopping and entertainment easier and more convenient, at a price that was invisibly subsidised by cheap capital.

It is hard to appreciate things in the moment, and the wealth of innovation that has been targeted at some consumers was not always available to all. But empty shelves have appeared in supermarkets, and we may one day pick up our phones and notice that the app store looks thinner. When that happens, remember the boundless choice we once had.

john.gapper@ft.com

Source: Financial Times

ADVERTISEMENT

Related Posts

Tech

China pledges support to tech companies after market rout

Tech

Twitter plans to enforce $44bn takeover price with Elon Musk

Tech

Mastercard launches controversial ‘wave to pay’ programme

Tech

Martin Sorrell’s S4 resumes acquisitions with TheoremOne deal

Tech

Social Media | Financial Times

Tech

Could cyber stalking be over for the rich and famous?

Tech

Is it time to leave Twitter for Mastodon?

Tech

Elon’s going to do whatever he wants

Tech

Donald Trump’s media venture warns of bankruptcy risk tied to ex-president

Popular News

  • The Office Beckons. Time for Your Sharpest ‘Power Casual.’

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tiger Global gets mauled by the bear market

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Woman Threw Tantrum Before Fatally Pushing Voice Coach, Prosecutors Say

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Bumble: dating app is no Match for Tinder

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Affirm struggles to convince investors of fintech bona fides

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Latest News

Politics

The F.D.A. authorizes Pfizer-BioNTech boosters for children ages 5 to 11.

News

Everytable, a California Chain With Sliding Scale Prices, Opens in New York

Business

An Allianz subsidiary agreed to plead guilty over a $7 billion investment implosion.

Politics

UFO hearing: Pentagon reveals 11 near misses with unidentified objects

About Us

The New York Ledger is an online newspaper for cosmopolitans, global entrepreneurs, management staff, influencers, and other modern leaders who care about wider aspects and broader opinions.

Category

  • Business
  • Climate
  • Companies
  • Lifestyle
  • Markets
  • News
  • Politics
  • Spotlight
  • Tech

Topics

Ivan Bednjicki LuxVerte Praimgest S.A Roberto Hroval Themis Ecosystem
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact

© 2021 All Rights Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Spotlight
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Markets
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Climate
  • Lifestyle

© 2021 All Rights Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.