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SpaceX Stock Edges Higher Today as Investors Brace for Historic Nasdaq-100 Entry Just 15 Days After IPO

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Elon Musk looks at his mobile phone

Shares of SpaceX ticked higher Monday morning, continuing a tentative recovery from a sharp post-IPO pullback as investors looked ahead to the company’s historically fast inclusion in the Nasdaq-100 index, a milestone set to arrive just weeks after the company’s record-setting public debut.

Shares of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., trading under the ticker SPCX, were at $155.03 as of 11:14 a.m. EDT, up $1.80, or 1.17%, on the day. The modest gain builds on a stabilization in trading after a turbulent stretch that saw the stock fall nearly 19% over the prior week, sliding from its all-time high of $225.64, reached June 16, down to an all-time low of $147.11 on June 23. The stock’s overall market capitalization, which stood at roughly $2.02 trillion as of late last week, had contracted by more than 16% over that same period.

SpaceX went public June 12 in what has been described as a record initial public offering, raising an estimated $75 billion. Shares were priced at $135 ahead of the listing and opened trading at $150, closing the first day at $160.95, a 19.2% gain from the offering price. The stock then continued climbing for several more sessions before peaking on June 16 and reversing sharply in the days that followed, a round trip that has made SpaceX one of the more closely watched, and most volatile, new entries on Wall Street this year.

The next major milestone for the stock is now just over a week away. Nasdaq announced on June 26 that SpaceX will join the Nasdaq-100 index beginning July 7, just 15 days after its public debut, an unusually fast turnaround driven by a rule change Nasdaq implemented in May. Under the previous framework, newly public companies typically waited months or longer before becoming eligible for index inclusion. The revised rules shortened that waiting period to just 15 days from a company’s IPO date, provided the company ranks among the top 40 Nasdaq-100 constituents by market capitalization, a threshold SpaceX cleared easily given its enormous valuation. The inclusion is expected to trigger a wave of mechanical buying from index funds and exchange-traded products that track the Nasdaq-100, including the widely held QQQ fund, with some estimates suggesting the forced purchasing could total several billion dollars within the index’s first weeks of holding the stock.

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That looming demand has factored into recent trading even before the formal inclusion date arrives. Cathie Wood’s ARK Invest exchange-traded funds added to their SpaceX position in trades disclosed for the session ending June 26, joining a broader group of institutional investors who have used the stock’s pullback from its post-IPO peak as an entry opportunity. At the same time, Quantum Cyber, a smaller defense-technology-focused company, has been reported to be pursuing an equity stake in SpaceX, going so far as to hire bankers to explore the transaction, according to TradingView-sourced reporting.

Beyond the index dynamics, several business developments have kept SpaceX in the headlines in recent days. Bloomberg reported that SpaceX and Charter Communications have held discussions about a potential mobile phone partnership in the United States, part of SpaceX’s broader push to expand Starlink’s reach beyond satellite broadband into direct wireless services. That ambition has not gone unnoticed by traditional telecom analysts; TD Cowen has flagged that SpaceX’s expansion into wireless could remain a persistent overhang on legacy carrier stocks, even as the firm has also suggested the development could fuel further upside for SpaceX shares themselves if Starlink succeeds in challenging established mobile providers. Separately, SpaceX was among the winning bidders, alongside Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile, in a recent Federal Communications Commission spectrum auction, and Reuters has reported that the company is constructing a natural gas pipeline intended to support fuel needs for future Starship rocket launches.

SpaceX’s business now spans considerably more than rockets and satellites. According to Morningstar, the company acquired xAI from its founder, Elon Musk, in early 2026, bringing the Grok large language AI model, the Colossus data center and related AI infrastructure under the SpaceX corporate umbrella alongside its existing Space and Connectivity segments. Morningstar analysts have noted that while SpaceX maintains a commanding, decade-long lead over competitors in orbital launch experience and payload volume, the company’s valuation implies that investors will need to wait years for earnings to catch up to its current trading multiples.

That valuation tension is reflected clearly in the spread of opinions among the relatively small group of analysts currently covering the stock. Among those tracked by Investing.com, six analysts recommend buying shares while one recommends selling, producing an overall Buy rating with an average 12-month price target of $187.80, a high estimate of $310 and a low estimate of just $62, implying upside of roughly 22.6% from recent trading levels. Argus, meanwhile, initiated coverage with a more cautious Hold rating, suggesting it could take years before SpaceX’s valuation multiples settle into levels considered typical for an established aerospace or telecommunications company. SpaceX’s first public quarterly earnings report is scheduled for Aug. 6, a date that should meaningfully expand the pool of analysts covering the stock once the underwriting banks’ quiet period concludes.

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For now, SpaceX shares remain in a period of active price discovery less than three weeks after going public, caught between mechanical demand tied to the upcoming Nasdaq-100 inclusion, continued interest from prominent institutional investors, and lingering questions from more cautious analysts about whether the company’s valuation has run ahead of what its current rocket, satellite and AI businesses can support. Monday’s modest gain offers little more than a pause in that broader story, with the company’s formal entry into the Nasdaq-100 on July 7 likely to serve as the next significant test of investor appetite for one of the most closely watched new listings in recent Wall Street history.

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Cobram Estate Olives Shares Surge 8% Today as Australia’s Top Olive Oil Maker Rides Global Supply Crunch

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The Intel Corporation logo is seen  in Davos

Shares of Cobram Estate Olives jumped Monday, climbing 33 cents, or 8.11%, to $4.40, pushing Australia’s largest extra virgin olive oil producer toward the upper end of its 52-week trading range as investors continued to bet on the company’s ability to capitalize on tight global supply and rising health-conscious demand for premium olive oil.

The gain extends a strong run for the stock over the past several months. Shares have climbed sharply from their 52-week low of $1.82, with the stock recently breaking above the $4 mark for the first time in some time after trading in a range closer to $3.60 to $3.95 for much of June. The rally has been significant enough to push Cobram Estate’s market capitalization to roughly $1.8 billion, with the stock now trading at a forward price-to-earnings ratio well above the average for Australia’s broader food industry, a premium analysts have generally attributed to the company’s structural growth story rather than near-term earnings alone.

Cobram Estate, formerly known as Boundary Bend Limited, owns Australia’s two top-selling homegrown extra virgin olive oil brands, Cobram Estate and Red Island, which together account for roughly half of all olive oil sold by value in Australian supermarkets. Founded in 1998 by Paul Riordan and Rob McGavin, the company has built what it describes as the largest vertically integrated olive oil operation of its kind, owning everything from olive groves and nurseries to mills, bottling facilities and a dedicated olive science laboratory. The company exports to 18 countries and has expanded its footprint significantly in the United States in recent years.

Much of the bullish sentiment surrounding the stock has centered on Cobram Estate’s positioning to benefit from ongoing supply disruptions in Europe, historically the dominant source of global olive oil production. Years of drought and extreme heat across major Mediterranean growing regions, particularly in Spain and Italy, have repeatedly squeezed European harvests, pushing global olive oil prices to elevated levels and creating an opening for diversified, geographically spread producers like Cobram Estate to capture market share, particularly in the lucrative U.S. retail and food-service channels. Analysts have pointed to the company’s year-round, multi-continent production base, spanning groves in Victoria, Australia, and California, as a structural advantage that allows it to smooth out the kind of single-region harvest volatility that has periodically hit European competitors.

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That U.S. expansion strategy took a major step forward late last year when Cobram Estate entered into a binding agreement to acquire California Olive Ranch for approximately $170 million, a deal structured with $88.5 million in cash, $70 million in vendor notes and a $15 million earn-out payment. The acquisition cleared U.S. antitrust review in March and was expected to complete by the end of that month, giving Cobram Estate a substantially larger footprint in the American premium olive oil market. Management has projected the deal would be roughly 9% accretive to earnings per share starting in fiscal 2027, the first full year following integration of the two businesses.

The company’s broader financial trajectory reflects that growth ambition. Cobram Estate derives the majority of its revenue from Australian operations, with the country contributing roughly $177.6 million in revenue against $60.8 million from its U.S. business in recent reporting, though that balance is expected to shift further toward the U.S. as the California Olive Ranch integration progresses. Consensus forecasts have pointed to annual revenue growth approaching 36%, well ahead of the broader Australian market, alongside projected earnings growth in the mid-20% range annually, underpinning much of the optimism reflected in the stock’s recent climb.

Cobram Estate has continued to invest in its leadership team to support that expansion. The company recently appointed Toni Brendish, a veteran of blue-chip consumer goods companies including Kimberly-Clark and Colgate-Palmolive and former chief executive of Westland Milk Products in New Zealand, as a non-executive director, bringing decades of fast-moving consumer goods and agricultural sector experience to the board. The company also added Daniel Masters as a non-executive director, whose involvement helped structure the California Olive Ranch acquisition, including securing US$25 million in debt funding from AGR Partners to support the transaction.

Not every signal surrounding the stock has been uniformly positive. Some technical and valuation-focused analysts have flagged that the stock’s rapid appreciation has pushed it toward, or in some assessments beyond, estimates of its underlying fair value, with at least one widely cited model placing fair value modestly below recent trading levels, suggesting the market may currently be pricing in a more optimistic scenario than some conservative earnings forecasts would support. Other analysts have offered more cautious longer-term revenue and earnings projections, citing the risk that climate-driven cost pressures and the capital intensity of an aggressive U.S. expansion could squeeze margins even as top-line growth remains strong. The central swing factors most commonly cited by analysts tracking the stock include actual harvest outcomes across both Cobram Estate’s Australian and Californian growing regions in any given year, along with the risk that today’s elevated global olive oil prices and tight European supply could ease more quickly than currently anticipated, potentially narrowing the pricing advantage that has supported the company’s recent earnings momentum.

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Cobram Estate has historically paid a single, partially franked annual dividend to shareholders, typically distributed in December, and offers a dividend reinvestment plan allowing investors to direct some or all of that payout toward purchasing additional shares rather than receiving cash. The company’s most recent annual dividend came in 36% higher than the prior year’s payout, reflecting the broader improvement in earnings that has accompanied its expanding operations.

Looking ahead, Cobram Estate is scheduled to report its full fiscal year 2026 results on Aug. 28, a release that will give investors a clearer picture of how effectively the company has converted its investments in U.S. production capacity, brand recognition and distribution into actual shelf space, sales volumes and sustained pricing power, particularly as the integration of California Olive Ranch progresses and global supply conditions in the broader olive oil market continue to evolve.

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Aussie shares fall as gold drops to eight-month low

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Aussie shares fall as gold drops to eight-month low

The local share market has ended the financial year with a whimper, ending on the lows of the day amid sharp losses for goldminers.

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Vedanta Iron & Steel shares extend winning streak, surge 10%; stock up 70% since listing

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Vedanta Iron & Steel shares extend winning streak, surge 10%; stock up 70% since listing
Shares of Vedanta Iron & Steel surged 10% to Rs 35.65 during Tuesday’s trading session, extending their winning streak to 11 consecutive sessions. The stock has now gained over 70% since its market debut earlier this month.

The company was listed on the NSE and BSE on June 15, 2026, following the Vedanta Group’s demerger. It debuted at Rs 20 per share on the NSE, giving it a market capitalisation of around Rs 7,821 crore. After the sustained rally, the company’s market value has nearly doubled to approximately Rs 13,941 crore.

Investor sentiment received an early boost after Azim Premji-backed Premji Invest’s PI Opportunities AIF V LLP acquired shares worth Rs 102 crore soon after the company’s market debut, signalling strong institutional confidence in the newly listed entity.

Vedanta Iron & Steel has outlined an ambitious growth strategy aimed at becoming a resource-backed integrated steel platform, leveraging its long-life iron ore reserves and operational integration. The company plans to expand capacity across key product segments, including ferro-silicon, ductile iron pipes, wire rods, and rebars.

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Backed by nearly 4 billion tonnes of iron ore reserves and resources, which provide over 50 years of raw material security, the company is building an integrated business model designed to create long-term value across the iron ore and steel value chain.


The company operates across India and Africa, with businesses spanning iron ore exploration, mining, and processing. Its product portfolio includes steel, wire rods, TMT bars, pig iron, ductile iron (DI) pipes, ferro-silicon, cement, and metallurgical coke.
The sharp rally in Vedanta Iron & Steel shares appears to be driven by a combination of strong institutional buying and positive investor sentiment surrounding the Vedanta Group’s demerger. Market participants are increasingly betting on the value-unlocking potential of the standalone steel business, with sustained buying interest keeping the stock firmly in the upper circuit.(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)

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A Boost for British Firms

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A Boost for British Firms

UK Export Finance has fired the largest single shot in its century-long history, setting aside a fresh £50 billion to bankroll British defence exports at a moment when the world is rearming faster than at any time since the Cold War.

The new Defence Export Fund takes the government’s export credit agency from an £80 billion ceiling to a total capacity of £130 billion, with the additional £50 billion ring-fenced to support large-scale defence sales and shore up Britain’s competitiveness in a market that is expanding at remarkable speed. For an agency that has spent 100 years quietly underwriting the deals that keep British goods moving across borders, it is a statement of intent.

The timing is no accident. Global military expenditure climbed to a record $2.7 trillion in 2024, a 9.4 per cent year-on-year jump that, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, was the steepest rise since at least the end of the Cold War. Spending rose across all five of the world’s regions, driven by the war in Ukraine, conflict in the Middle East and a broad reappraisal of national security among Western governments. Allies are not only spending more, they are actively shopping for the kind of advanced capability that British industry is well placed to supply.

The mechanics are straightforward enough. UKEF will guarantee the bank loans taken out by British defence exporters as they fulfil contracts, and it will provide or back the financing extended to other countries buying British defence products. In practice that means a UK manufacturer can compete for a major overseas order knowing the financing is underwritten by the government, while the purchasing nation gets access to a competitive, state-backed payment package alongside the kit itself.

That combination, world-leading hardware paired with government-backed finance, is what ministers hope will tip large contracts in Britain’s favour. The fund is open to defence businesses of every size, from established prime contractors to the smaller firms looking to break into international markets for the first time, a constituency that has historically found export finance hard to navigate.

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It is a theme UKEF has been building towards for some time. The agency has already widened its toolkit for smaller exporters, unveiling new products designed to help SMEs trade globally and to remove some of the friction that has long deterred first-time exporters from chasing overseas work.

The Defence Export Fund does not arrive out of nowhere. UKEF has been steadily deepening its defence portfolio, backing landmark deals that include air defence systems for Poland and Ukraine and submarine rescue vehicles for Indonesia, transactions that translate into skilled jobs and economic value spread across the UK rather than concentrated in a single region.

The numbers have grown accordingly. Defence transactions worth more than £5 billion are now routine for the agency, and it supported a total of £10 billion of defence business in the 2024/25 financial year alone. With that trajectory showing no sign of flattening, the new allocation is designed to let UKEF meet rising demand without running up against its own limits.

That ambition sits within a wider government push to treat defence not merely as a security obligation but as an engine of industrial growth. Westminster has moved to boost domestic weapons production and cut reliance on imports, while a separate drive aims to give smaller defence firms easier access to Ministry of Defence contracts. The export fund is the international-facing piece of that same strategy.

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‘Allies are actively seeking what Britain can build’

Tim Reid, chief executive of UKEF, framed the move as a response to genuine demand from partner nations. “Security is a strategic priority for governments worldwide, and the UK’s defence sector offers pioneering capabilities that allies are actively seeking,” he said. “With billions of pounds available in new export financing, we are strengthening the sector’s global competitiveness while backing skilled British jobs and supporting long-term economic growth.”

The agency, which sets out its broader approach in its strategic financing for industrial growth, has set itself a clear target. By 2029 it aims to help UK firms win more than £12.5 billion of new export contracts through its finance offer, with defence expected to account for a growing slice of that total.

For Britain’s defence businesses, large and small, the message is that the financing constraint which once kept them on the sidelines of the biggest deals has been substantially loosened. Whether that translates into the contract wins ministers are banking on will depend, as ever, on the firms themselves. But the cheque book has rarely been bigger.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Pankaj Tibrewal sees stronger top-line growth driving India’s next earnings cycle

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Pankaj Tibrewal sees stronger top-line growth driving India's next earnings cycle
With geopolitical tensions easing and crude oil prices retreating to pre-war levels, investors are shifting their attention to the upcoming earnings season for the next market trigger. The June quarter results are expected to provide clarity on whether Indian companies can navigate input cost pressures while sustaining growth.

Speaking to ET Now, Pankaj Tibrewal from IKIGAI Asset said the investment environment has steadily improved over the past few months as several earlier headwinds have started turning into positives.

“We have been constructive since March. Crude prices have returned to pre-war levels, and the AI-led markets have seen a significant shakeout. The next big trigger for markets will be the first-quarter earnings,” he said.

Revenue Growth May Beat Expectations

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While the Street remains cautious about margins because of elevated raw material costs, Tibrewal believes analysts are underestimating the potential for stronger revenue growth across Corporate India.

“The biggest disconnect is top-line growth. Many companies have already taken price hikes, and revenues could surprise positively, even if margins remain under pressure,” he said.
He expects operating leverage to cushion part of the margin impact and support earnings in several sectors.
Home Improvement Sector in Focus
Tibrewal identified the home improvement segment as one of the strongest opportunities, citing favourable industry dynamics in tiles and wood panels.

“Branded tile players are gaining market share as Morbi manufacturers struggle with higher gas costs. Dealer feedback points to a significant pickup in volumes,” he said.

He also expects strong performance from wood panel companies and sectors benefiting from import substitution.

“Chinese imports have reduced sharply in segments like MDF, while chemicals, textiles, engineering and auto ancillaries are also seeing improving momentum,” he said.

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A Stock Picker’s Market
Rather than expecting gains across the board, Tibrewal believes investors should focus on businesses with strong earnings visibility. “This is a stock picker’s market. The opportunity lies in identifying sectors and companies where growth is clearly visible,” he said.

Nifty Earnings Growth Seen at 10–13%
Despite near-term cost pressures, Tibrewal expects double-digit earnings growth for the benchmark index this year, supported by banks and cyclical sectors.

“I do not think 10% to 13% Nifty earnings growth will be a challenge. Banking, metals and cement should all contribute meaningfully,” he said.

He also expects nominal GDP growth to drive stronger corporate revenues.

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“Corporate India’s top-line growth should improve as nominal GDP remains healthy, and operating leverage will support earnings,” he said.

Demand Remains Healthy
According to Tibrewal, companies are no longer worried about weak demand despite higher prices. “Companies are not talking about demand destruction. The key challenges are supply chains and raw material costs, while demand remains reasonably good,” he said.

He remains particularly optimistic about the broader market.

“Many companies can compound earnings at 20% to 25% annually. That is where the best bottom-up opportunities lie,” he said.

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Private Banks Offer a Contrarian Bet
Although foreign investor selling has weighed on banking stocks, Tibrewal believes the sector’s fundamentals remain among the strongest in years.

“Private banks are very attractively valued. The challenge is technical because FIIs have been persistent sellers,” he said.

He expects sentiment to improve once foreign selling subsides.

“Bank balance sheets are in the best shape they have been in for years. Once FII selling stops, banking stocks could quickly return to favour,” he said.

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FII Flows Could Return
Tibrewal believes India could benefit if global investors rotate away from overheated AI-driven markets.

“I am hopeful FIIs will return in the second half of the fiscal year. India looks attractive in dollar terms, while the AI trade globally appears to be entering a mature stage,” he said.

With earnings season approaching, investors will closely watch whether stronger revenue growth and resilient demand can offset cost pressures and provide the next leg of the market’s rally.

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Berkshire Hathaway: The Alpha Is Gone (NYSE:BRK.A)

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Berkshire Hathaway: The Alpha Is Gone (NYSE:BRK.A)

This article was written by

Bears of Wall Street is a community of asset managers and traders who take a pragmatic approach to valuing companies. Bears of Wall Street provide unique research with a bearish sentiment on overvalued or weak companies with declining businesses and poor growth perspectives – companies whose likely depreciation can be capitalized on.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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U.S. declaration to exit USMCA to start a decade-long countdown for the pact

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U.S. declaration to exit USMCA to start a decade-long countdown for the pact


U.S. declaration to exit USMCA to start a decade-long countdown for the pact

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Fourth of July cookout costs hit record high as inflation rises 4%

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Fourth of July cookout costs hit record high as inflation rises 4%

Americans preparing to hold a Fourth of July barbecue this weekend will face higher costs for their burgers and hot dogs amid stubborn inflation, a new report finds.

The American Farm Bureau Federation’s Summer Cookout Cost Survey finds that in 2026, a classic Fourth of July cookout for 10 people will cost $73.82, or about $7.38 per person. That amounts to an increase of $2.90, or 4% compared with a year ago.

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The basket of goods used to measure the cost year to year includes cheeseburgers, chicken breasts, pork chops, potato chips, pork and beans, fresh strawberries, ingredients for homemade potato salad and fresh-squeezed lemonade, as well as chocolate chip cookies and ice cream.

“While this year’s total is the highest since Farm Bureau began conducting the summer cookout survey in 2016, the increase closely reflects broader inflation,” the group wrote.

INFLATION ROSE AGAIN IN MAY AS ELEVATED ENERGY PRICES SQUEEZE CONSUMERS

Blue Marsh Lake During Fourth of July Saturday

The cost of a Fourth of July barbecue rose to the highest level since the American Farm Bureau Federation began tracking. (Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images)

“The cost of the cookout basket rose about 4%, while overall inflation in the United States increased 4.2% over the 12 months ending in May,” the Farm Bureau said. “That means families are seeing higher prices at the grocery store, but this year’s cookout cost is generally moving in line with the broader economy.”

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The report noted that the cost of the basket is little changed from a year ago when deflating the value using the consumer price index (CPI) inflation metric, with the cost of this year’s basket at $22.03 in 1982-84 dollars, slightly lower than the $22.06 observation using last year’s data.

That means that “while families are paying more dollars at checkout, the purchasing-power cost of the basket is nearly flat from last year,” the Farm Bureau added.

Among the food items in the basket, the report noted that several of the main proteins cost more as the two pounds of ground beef are up 5.5% to $14.06, which is the highest beef price recorded in the survey’s history. Drought has caused the size of the national cattle herd to trend to a 70-year low, while ranchers also face higher operating costs.

SUMMER STICKER SHOCK: THE 14% ‘BURGER TAX’ HITTING YOUR BACKYARD BBQ THIS WEEKEND

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A cheeseburger and fries

The rise in beef prices has contributed to the rise in the cost of the Fourth of July cookout. (iStock)

Chicken breasts are also 3.5% more expensive than last year, with two pounds now costing $8.06. Pork chop costs also rose 4.7% to $14.79 for three pounds, though they remain below the 2024 price despite this year’s rise.

Strawberries had some of the largest price increases in the basket of goods, with two pints costing $5.27, an increase of 12.4% from last year. The Farm Bureau attributed part of that to a damaging frost in Florida that impacted young plants this spring, as well as higher costs of labor, fuel, refrigeration and transportation.

Lemonade costs have risen 3.9% in the last year to $4.54 for 2.5 quarts, mainly due to the rise in the price of lemons, given sugar prices holding steady.

The largest increase of any item in the basket was pork and beans, which rose 13.8% to $3.06 for 32 ounces. The Farm Bureau noted higher aluminum costs contributed to the rise.

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Bowl of ice cream

Ice cream costs have risen over 5% from a year ago. (Getty Images )

Desserts were also more expensive than a year ago. The price of a pack of chocolate chip cookies rose 6.3% to $4.25, while a half-gallon of ice cream rose 5.3% to $5.99 from a year ago.

Two items tracked by the Farm Bureau declined in price, with potato salad dropping 17.8% from a year ago to $2.91 amid the decline in egg prices with the recovery of egg-laying flocks from an avian flu outbreak.

Potato prices have also contributed to a decline in both the cost of potato salad and bags of potato chips, which are down 0.8% from a year ago to $4.76 apiece.

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The Farm Bureau’s analysis also noted that the cookout cost varies by region, with Americans in the West facing the highest cost at an even $80 this year, a figure which is $6 above the national average.

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The other three regions in the analysis were below the national average of $73.82, with the Northeast the cheapest at $71.35, followed by the Midwest at $71.45 and the South at $72.08.

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Kawhi Leonard, Jaylen Brown, Anthony Davis Headline Wild Offseason Buzz

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Former Philadelphia 76ers star Allen Iverson spoofs his infamous "practice" rant in a new Reebok "Retro Shop" commercial.

NBA free agency officially opens Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET, but the league’s rumor mill has already produced one of the more chaotic offseason stretches in recent memory, with several stars potentially on the move just as front offices begin negotiating in earnest. Here’s a look at five of the biggest trade rumors currently swirling around the league.

1. Kawhi Leonard and the Clippers appear headed toward a split, with Toronto emerging as the most realistic destination. According to ESPN’s Shams Charania, the Los Angeles Clippers and Toronto Raptors are “seriously engaged” in trade discussions involving the two-time Finals MVP, who turned 35 on Monday and is entering the final year of his contract at $50.3 million. Charania has reported that the Raptors, who Leonard led to an NBA championship in 2019, represent the only team outside the Los Angeles market that Leonard is currently willing to sign a long-term extension with, a detail that has significantly narrowed the realistic trade landscape and intensified momentum behind a potential reunion. Adding another layer to the situation, the Clippers themselves have reportedly expressed interest in acquiring Boston’s Jaylen Brown if a deal involving Leonard comes together, suggesting the team could attempt to pivot toward a different star rather than simply rebuilding around its existing core.

2. Jaylen Brown’s name continues to surface across multiple trade scenarios, with Denver among the most aggressive suitors. Brown has remained one of the most frequently mentioned names on the trade market throughout the early offseason, with several teams expressing interest in prying him away from Boston. According to NBA insider Chris Haynes, the Denver Nuggets have “deep interest” in trading for Brown, while podcast host Bill Simmons has floated a more elaborate scenario involving a Celtics-Nuggets swap that would also include Jamal Murray and other pieces, though ESPN’s Zach Lowe has expressed skepticism that such a deal is realistic in its current form. The Clippers’ interest in Brown, contingent on moving Leonard, adds yet another team to a crowded field of suitors circling the All-Star wing as Boston weighs its long-term roster direction.

3. Anthony Davis remains at the center of speculation involving the Golden State Warriors’ aggressive pursuit of LeBron James. Yahoo Sports’ Kevin O’Connor reported that the Warriors are exploring a trade for Washington Wizards center Anthony Davis as part of a broader strategy aimed at convincing LeBron James to leave the Los Angeles Lakers in free agency. Any deal for Davis would reportedly require Golden State to include injured star Jimmy Butler, who has indicated he would like to retire as a member of the Warriors, along with significant draft capital. Davis’ actual future with Washington remains uncertain even amid the rumors, with Wizards officials previously stating publicly that they want to retain him and plan to discuss a contract extension once he becomes eligible in August. The Warriors created additional flexibility to pursue this plan when Draymond Green declined his player option Monday, a move ESPN’s Shams Charania confirmed was directly tied to the team’s pursuit of both James and Davis.

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4. The Ja Morant blockbuster has already reshaped the trade landscape, with speculation now turning to what comes next for Portland. The Memphis Grizzlies traded two-time All-Star Ja Morant to the Portland Trail Blazers on Monday in exchange for Jerami Grant and Kris Murray, with no draft picks changing hands in the deal. The trade has fueled immediate speculation about Portland’s next move, with some analysts wondering whether the Trail Blazers might still pursue an additional blockbuster, potentially involving Jaylen Brown, given the team’s apparent willingness to make aggressive roster swings this offseason. Betting markets have largely shrugged off the Morant trade as a needle-mover for Portland’s title odds in the near term, with the team still priced near the back of the league’s championship contenders, suggesting oddsmakers view the move as more of a talent gamble than an immediate competitive breakthrough.

5. Jalen Duren and Domantas Sabonis are reportedly eyeing a potential trade that would essentially swap their current situations. According to Sam Amick, restricted free agent center Jalen Duren has expressed interest in joining the Sacramento Kings, while Domantas Sabonis has reportedly expressed a desire to play for the Detroit Pistons, raising the possibility of some form of sign-and-trade swap between the two teams. Chris Haynes has separately reported that the Kings are actively pursuing a sign-and-trade scenario for Duren with the Pistons, who currently hold his restricted free agency rights, adding momentum to speculation that the two big men could effectively change places this offseason as both teams look to retool their frontcourt depth ahead of the 2026-27 season.

Beyond these five storylines, the offseason has already produced significant activity even before free agency formally begins. Giannis Antetokounmpo’s trade to the Miami Heat was finalized the day before the NBA Draft, kicking off a cascade of subsequent moves, including the Detroit Pistons trading Isaiah Stewart to Memphis and the Charlotte Hornets sending LaMelo Ball to the Minnesota Timberwolves. Several notable veterans have also already committed to returning to their current teams, including Trae Young, Austin Reaves, and Kristaps Porziņģis, who is finalizing a two-year, $40 million deal to remain with Golden State.

With the formal negotiation window opening Tuesday evening, league insiders expect the pace of rumors and reported agreements to accelerate considerably over the coming days, particularly around LeBron James’ still-unresolved future with the Lakers, a decision that could ripple outward and influence how several of the trade scenarios above, including the Warriors’ pursuit of both James and Davis, ultimately play out. For now, with Leonard, Brown, Davis and James all hanging in the balance, the league appears headed into one of its more unpredictable offseason stretches in years, with several marquee names still genuinely uncertain about where they’ll be playing once training camps open in the fall.

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At Close of Business podcast June 30 2026

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At Close of Business podcast June 30 2026

Nadia Budihardjo and Mark Pownall discuss angst among wine producers with impending container-for-change amendments.

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