Canada's two largest railroads formally locked out more than 9,000 workers at midnight on Thursday — grinding freight rail in the country to a halt — as labor talks with the Teamsters reached an impasse.
The latest: On Thursday evening, Canada's labor minister ordered employees back to work and both sides into binding arbitration — bringing the work stoppage to end.
Cava today hiked its same-store sales growth projection for this fiscal year from 4.5%–6.5% to 8.5%–9.5%.
The Mediterranean restaurant chain also reported revenue of $231.4 million in the period that ended July 14, up 35% from a year earlier and beating S&P Capital IQ's expectation of $219.5 million.
The company's shares, which have risen by more than 167% since its IPO last summer, are popping over 6%after the bell.
Here's what's new on Peacock, Netflix, Fuse, Hulu and Apple TV+.
What we're watching: A documentary about the death of Laci Peterson, a new season of "Like a Girl" and a new documentary covering the life of Tennessee Titans legend Steve McNair.
Data: Reproduced from Public Citizen based on OpenSecrets.org. Chart: Axios Visuals
Crypto companies are unabashedly rewriting the playbook for how American corporations influence elections, according to a new report from Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy group.
What they're saying: "No industry has ever before so wholeheartedly embraced raising as much directly from corporations and openly using that political war chest ... to discipline lawmakers toward adopting an industry's preferred policies," the report's author, Rick Claypool, writes.
Bitcoin has been walking sideways interminably lately, but two pieces of political/policy news perked up the original cryptocurrency yesterday, and they happened at basically the same time.
"She's going to support policies that ensure that emerging technologies and that sort of industry can continue to grow. Obviously, they've expressed that one of the things that they need are stable rules, rules of the road."
— Brian Nelson, advisor to the campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris, in comments about the blockchain industry at a press round table in Chicago
Flashback: We discussed Nelson on Tuesday. He was at the Treasury under President Biden and goes way back with Harris.
💭 Our thought bubble: It's not much to hang your hat on.
As central bankers from around the world gather in the Grand Tetons, they plan to discuss a massively important yet surprisingly unsettled question: How do the policies they make really affect the economy?
The big picture: Central banks shoulder the main burden of stimulating the economy during a recession and fighting inflation when conditions become overheated. But the ways that their interest rate policies achieve those goals are less clear than you might think.
Financial markets headlines right now are dominated by talk of Jackson Hole.
Why it matters: Jackson Hole is shorthand for an annual gathering of central bankers in Wyoming that inevitably makes big-time economic news. To set the scene, here are the basics you need to know about the event and what makes it worthy of so much attention.
China's sputtering economy has become glaringly evident in financial markets in recent months: A historic bond market rally has been underway, driving the longer-term interest rates down. Beijing officials have forcefully tried to stamp it out.
Why it matters: The lackluster economic backdrop makes China's safest assets, government bonds, more appealing. The result is record-low borrowing costs that could give the economy a boost — except China's government has stepped in to push rates in the opposite direction, fearful of financial risks generated by low rates.