We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode U.S. tariffs and Canadian elections

U.S. tariffs and Canadian elections

2025/4/29
logo of podcast Marketplace All-in-One

Marketplace All-in-One

AI Deep Dive Transcript
People
A
Alex Suskind
A
Amazon
D
David Portolatin
G
Gad Alon
J
Jeff Bezos
M
Mark Carney
Topics
Priscilla Gima, Ruchir Patel 和 Doug Lee:美国对加拿大的进口商品征收关税,导致许多加拿大人担心工作和经济放缓,认为这不仅威胁到加拿大的主权,也威胁到加拿大的经济。他们认为贸易战给他们的生活带来了负面影响,并对未来感到担忧。 Corrine White 和 Christopher Wolney:他们希望加拿大拥有一个能够有效应对美国总统特朗普政策的强有力的领导人。他们认为特朗普的政策不仅威胁到加拿大的利益,也威胁到全球和平,因此加拿大需要一位能够维护自身利益并与盟友合作的领导人。 Mark Carney:面对美国带来的新挑战,加拿大需要更多地依靠自身,并与其他盟友(特别是欧洲)建立更强的联系。他认为加拿大不能过度依赖美国,需要增强自身的经济实力和国际影响力,才能更好地应对未来的挑战。 Gad Alon:基于应用程序的送货业务利润率低,公司必须持续增长,而美国市场的增长潜力有限。因此,收购竞争对手并拓展海外市场是必要的策略,以确保公司的持续发展和盈利能力。 David Portolatin:DoorDash是美国第三方应用程序送货服务的市场主导者,收购Deliveroo可以帮助其拓展国际市场,加速增长,巩固其市场地位。 Alex Suskind:收购Deliveroo是DoorDash面向未来的战略举措,有助于其在全球范围内扩张,满足日益增长的第三方送货服务需求,尤其是在年轻一代中。这体现了公司对未来市场趋势的准确判断和积极应对。 Jeff Bezos:尽管建设地球轨道网络成本高昂,利润难以保证,但卫星宽带业务市场空间巨大,存在竞争机会。亚马逊将继续投资Kuiper项目,以期在这一新兴市场中占据一席之地,并为偏远地区提供宽带服务。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Trading shouldn't have barriers. When Robinhood started, it was built to make trading more accessible. Now, Robinhood offers more sophisticated trading tools. Experience the future of trading on Robinhood Legend, the all-new desktop platform that harnesses intuitive design to deliver a seamless experience for traders, free to use with a Robinhood account.

The future of trading is fast, powerful, and precise. Experience it now on Robinhood Legend. Sign up today.

Investing is risky. Robinhood Financial LLC member SIPC is a registered broker-dealer. Other fees may apply. It's called protein degradation. And if you're a bad protein in a cancer cell, you'd better get your affairs in order. Because now, thanks to Dana-Farber's foundational work, protein degradation can target cancer-causing proteins and destroy them right inside the cell.

This take-no-prisoners approach is making a difference in multiple myeloma and other blood cancers, and it's how Dana-Farber is working to treat previously untreatable cancers. Learn more at danafarber.org slash everywhere. Tariffs, sovereignty, and Canada's big election.

I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles. More now on how the trade war is cited as a key reason Canadians have now voted to keep liberals in power after rival conservatives had been polling so strongly until recently. It has to do with the policies of a leader south of the Canadian border who's been in office for exactly 100 days now. Marketplace's Kimberly Adams went to polling places in the province of Ontario yesterday and joins us this morning. Hey, Kimberly. Kimberly.

Good morning, David. The U.S. putting import duties on stuff from Canada that had been a close U.S. trade partner. It's on voters' minds. But would you say top of mind, Kimberly? It was certainly top of mind for a lot of the voters I talked to yesterday. Almost everybody brought it up at those several polling places I visited in various electoral districts, which they call ridings here, by the way. And here's a bit of what folks said when I actually asked them about their top issue influencing their vote.

Honesty is a terrorist. It's causing all of us grief. Because of the trade war, a lot of people are scared for their job. And now, because of the trade war, everything has slowed down. Clearly, we have some threats from the U.S. that we're not used to, and that's not only threatening our sovereignty, but also threatening our economy.

Voters Priscilla Gima, Ruchir Patel and Doug Lee there. So under Canada's parliamentary system, you vote for a member of parliament for your district you're riding. But then that adds up to the leader of the country. What did voters tell you they want in a new leader? I definitely heard about wanting action on domestic issues like crime, immigration and housing. But again, the relationship with the U.S. and how Canada's new prime minister will manage it came up a ton.

I would hope we have a strong leader who can stand up for the foolishness that he's putting forward. If he goes to the war with the whole world, or at least China, he needs some friends. The best friends he's got here.

But he's making everything not to have a France. Talking about Trump there, obviously, voices of Canadian voters, Corrine White, a nurse, and Christopher Wolney, a retiree. Now, Mark Carney, who on his resume had led central banks in both Britain and Canada, is the leader of the Liberals, now set to lead the next Canadian government. What's his trade and Trump approach going to be? He spent a lot of his victory speech last night talking about exactly this. President Trump...

is trying to break us so that America can own us. That will never, that will never, ever happen. Carney said Canada will need to learn to rely more on itself and also forge stronger ties with other allies, especially Europe, in light of this new dynamic.

Marketplace's senior Washington correspondent, Kimberly Adams, in Ontario, Canada, this morning. Thank you very much, Kimberly. You're welcome, David. I see S&P futures are up just slightly, but General Motors' stock is down more than 2% pre-market after its quarterly profits today beat expectations, but it withdrew its assessment of the company's road ahead, suggesting the effect of tariffs is too hard to predict.

DoorDash wants to buy a UK-based company that does the same thing for $3.6 billion. The logic is clear. DoorDash is big in the U.S. and Canada. Deliveroo does Europe and beyond. Marketplace's Samantha Fields has that.

For DoorDash, buying Deliveroo is all about growth. All these firms, their valuation are built on growth. Growth and margin. Gad Alon at the Wharton School at Penn says because app-based delivery is a low-margin business, companies have to keep growing. And after a while, there is a limit to how much you can actually grow in the U.S. People can only order that many times breakfast, lunch, and dinner. DoorDash started out doing restaurant delivery, but you can also use it to get things from grocery stores and pharmacies now.

David Portolatin at Circona says the company makes 54% of all third-party app deliveries in the U.S. They're already the dominant player there, and they're already growing within that space.

So how would you accelerate that? One way, acquire a competitor and expand into other countries. Alex Suskind at Cornell says it's a future-driven move. Third-party delivery is particularly important to the younger generation. It's the right move to be making to have a global footprint. In an industry that's in increasingly high demand.

I'm Samantha Fields for Marketplace. A bill with wide bipartisan backing and support from the industry it regulates has sailed through the House and the Senate. It forces platforms like TikTok and Meta to erase deep fakes, videos of a sexual nature created by artificial intelligence, faked to look like real identifiable people.

The measure, if signed by the president, authorizes federal regulators to crack down on companies that don't comply and is a rare concession by tech companies to the notion of content regulation by the government. This Marketplace podcast is supported by Commvault. Businesses can recover data as well as cloud applications and platforms after a cyber attack in just minutes with Commvault.

So they can become a continuous business.

Just fill out an intake form online and a licensed provider will recommend a customized plan just for you. The best part? Everything is 100% online. It prescribed your treatment ships right to your door. No pharmacy trips, no waiting rooms, and no insurance headaches. Plus, treatments start at just $35 a month.

Start your initial free online visit today at 4HERS.com slash listen. That's F-O-R-H-E-R-S dot com slash listen. Compounded products are not FDA approved or verified for safety, effectiveness, or quality. Prescription required. Price varies based on product and subscription plan. See website for full details, restrictions, and important safety information.

Are you okay with more artificial lighting in the night sky in return for a competing broadband internet and phone service from space? Amazon has just launched about three dozen low-Earth orbiting communication satellites, the first of thousands, to compete with the Starlink system from SpaceX. Starlink already has about 7,000 of these devices in orbit in the right position at night. You can see trains of them, even without binoculars, which annoys some and delights others. Marketplace's Nova Sappho has more.

Amazon has positioned its satellite internet plan, called Project Kuiper, as an effort to bring broadband internet to remote and rural areas. The company says it will spend $10 billion and launch 3,200 satellites into orbit. SpaceX's Starlink service has some 7,000 satellites. They beam internet to mobile antenna terminals that look like square or rectangular plastic slabs. Amazon's Kuiper will have a similar setup.

Starlink has received multiple government contracts, and its terminals have been instrumental in Ukraine's war effort to expel Russia's invasion. Amazon's executive chairman Jeff Bezos told Reuters that there's plenty of broadband satellite business to go around.

But building a network orbiting Earth is expensive and profits are not guaranteed. Bloomberg last year said Starlink regularly spends more money than it brings in because of the costs of launching satellites and replacement satellites into space. I'm Neva Safo for Marketplace. All this rhymes with hyper, but it's K-U-I-P-E-R after Gerard Kuiper, legendary Dutch-American planetary scientist. In Los Angeles, I'm David Brancaccio. You're listening to the Marketplace Morning Report.

from APM American Public Media. If there's one thing we know about social media, it's that misinformation is everywhere, especially when it comes to personal finance. Financially Inclined from Marketplace is a podcast you can trust to help you get serious about your money so you can build a life you've always dreamed of.

I'm the host, Janelia Espinal, and each week I ask experts important money questions, like how to negotiate job offers, how to choose a college that you can afford, and how to talk about money with friends and family. Listen to Financially Inclined wherever you get your podcasts.