The trend: In June, we covered how Gen Zers intended to prioritize planning for summer over their financial futures. They said they would return to their finances when summer is over but spend more on nonessentials in the meantime. CIT Bank’s 2025 summer vacation survey reveals they did just that.
What this means for banks: As we near the end of summer travel, financial institutions should prepare campaigns that advertise budgeting and savings products that can help their customers get back on track financially. Such products could include high-yield savings accounts, in-app budgeting tools, certificates of deposit, and automated savings features.
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| Aug 7, 2025
The news: President Donald Trump is expected to sign an executive order against alleged “debanking,” claiming that JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America discriminated against him by rejecting his company's deposits, per The New York Times.
The fallout: Some FIs may alter their risk management practices to avoid a personal vendetta.
But by mandating that banks cannot debank certain groups for fear of being accused of political bias, the order essentially limits their ability to manage risk. This could expose FIs to clients with legitimate compliance or reputational concerns.
It also forces FIs to choose between political and financial blowback and carries a long-term risk of losing young, socially conscious customers. Gen Zers particularly care about banks’ actions when it comes to what they deem as moral issues, like the environment or DEI. Diverting from prior commitments young consumers supported could risk their loyalty.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. canceled $500 million in federal mRNA grants, eliminating flu, COVID-19, and infectious disease research that used the technology. The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) agency nixed 22 contracts, including ones with Moderna, Pfizer, and AstraZeneca.
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| Aug 7, 2025
The pivot: Warby Parker launched as a direct-to-consumer (D2C) disruptor with a compelling pitch: It would ship up to five frames to consumers’ homes for free, allowing them five days to try them on. But like many of the most-visited digitally native D2C brands, the eyewear company has evolved beyond its online model to include brick-and-mortar stores.
With 300 stores and plans to open 45 more this year, including five Target shop-in-shops, the company is sunsetting its home try-on program in favor of in-person visits or its virtual try-on tool.
Our take: Retiring its hallmark try-on program marks a pivotal moment in Warby Parker’s evolution from digital upstart to well-established national brand. While the move risks losing some home try-on loyalists, redirecting those dollars toward targeted brand-building and customer acquisition initiatives will likely yield stronger long-term returns.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Eli Lilly’s stock plunged about 14% on Thursday as clinical results of its experimental obesity pill orforglipron fell short of Wall Street expectations. Our take: We think Lilly has the edge over Novo, despite Thursday’s market reversal due to Lilly’s obesity pill falling short in its trial. That’s likely just a near-term blip—12% weight loss in a little over a year validates that the medication is quite effective, especially when considering that most people would prefer a pill to injecting themselves. Lilly also has in its favor that Zepbound drives better weight loss results than Wegovy, while it faces less competition from the copycat GLP-1 market since semaglutide is more commonly compounded than tirzepatide.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Instagram added a host of new features for connecting with friends. The offerings could expand brands’ peer-to-peer visibility and location-based content and boost their chances of going viral.
Our take: Brands should lean into organic discovery by creating engaging, visual-driven content that encourages reposts and peer engagement. Prioritize geo-aware promotions to tap into Instagram’s shift toward real-time social discovery and exploration.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The trend: Over half of US adults with health insurance (51%) said they needed a prior authorization for a medical service or treatment in the past two years, according to a July 2025 KFF study. The final word: Prior authorizations can lead to delayed—or even denied—care. To date, health plans have not been held accountable for their increased frequency of coverage denials. That could soon change due to a flurry of bills on prior authorization reform at the state level—but for the time being, insurers’ promises and pledges are more PR spin than actionable improvement.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: The maker of the Cologuard at-home colon cancer screening test, Exact Sciences, is buying the rights to a promising blood test for colon cancer. The takeaway: As early colon cancer rates increase, more young people are becoming interested in screening. Blood tests adds another option, and for Exact’s Cologuard, known for irreverent ad campaigns for the at-home stool sample kits, another way to advocate for more screening.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Instacart’s efforts to win over more cost-conscious consumers and its growing suite of enterprise and advertising solutions helped the company handily beat Q2 expectations. Coming on the heels of record quarters for DoorDash and Uber, Instacart’s strong results point to resilient demand for delivery services in an otherwise challenging consumer environment.
Instacart’s strong Q2 shows that the company is well-equipped to manage any slowdown in US digital grocery sales—as well as fend off growing competition from Uber and DoorDash.
The surge in orders will be particularly reassuring to advertisers, particularly the many CPGs looking to increase marketing spend.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Marqeta’s total processing volume (TPV) hit $91 billion in Q2, a 29% YoY increase.
Our take: Marqeta’s success with buy now, pay later could help it finally wean off its dependence on Block, which still accounts for 46% of its business.
With planned expansions into Europe, Marqeta has the opportunity to put more distance between it and its competitors by leaning into solutions for alternate financing and currencies, like BNPL and crypto.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Booking.com launched the Genius Rewards Visa Signature co-brand credit card for Booking.com account holders.
Our take: Booking.com’s credit card offering should appeal to millennial and Gen Z consumers who are eager to travel and aren’t tethered to a specific airline’s or hotel franchise’s loyalty program.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: American Express and Toast launched a multiyear partnership to offer more personalized hospitality experiences across their combined network of Resy, Tock, and Toast restaurants locations in the US.
Our take: In a highly competitive environment for POS providers, extra tie-ups can help Toast stand out in the crowded field.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
Warner Bros. Discovery posted strong Q2 2025 results, with studio revenues rising 55% YoY to $3.8 billion and HBO Max adding 3.4 million subscribers. A major company split is planned for 2026, separating Max and the studio from WBD’s legacy TV networks. Max is gaining momentum in a crowded market, with restrained ad loads and projected 85% growth in US ad revenues by 2027. With $10.76 billion earmarked for original content next year and major IP releases coming, WBD is positioning Max and its studios for standalone success. The split could offer investors a clearer, more compelling growth story.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Google claimed that its AI summaries do not impact referral traffic from search after a Pew Research report showed that AI Overviews cut the number of users who clicked on links from overall search results by nearly half. Our take: Despite Google’s objections, AI Overviews inevitably harm sites that rely on search results and SEO for visibility. But with AI summaries showing no signs of going away, what matters is how brands adapt. Traditional keyword strategies are no longer sufficient in the age of AI.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: Wells Fargo is partnering with Google Cloud to equip the bank’s 215,000 employees with advanced generative and agentic AI tools, per American Banker. The phased implementation will span the next few months.
Why this matters: If Wells Fargo sees greater efficiency, a better customer experience, and savings from the wide AI rollout, it could set an industry trend. Competitors should at least begin exploring how they can implement agentic AI in their own operations.
And Google Cloud’s involvement serves as a reminder that these solutions don’t need to be developed internally. Third-party partnerships may be especially valuable for smaller financial institutions that want to catch up on AI innovation.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
High tariffs have become an unavoidable part of doing business in the US following the implementation of President Donald Trump’s sweeping reciprocal duties.
Retailers are slowly becoming resigned to the fact that higher tariffs are here to stay—for now. But their ability to minimize business disruption is severely hampered by the fact that new tariffs can be imposed at any time, which could immediately turn any attempts to adjust sourcing into sunk costs. As e.l.f. Beauty CEO Tarang Amin told CNBC, “It’s the uncertainty around the tariffs that make things more difficult.”
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
Ralph Lauren posted higher-than-expected quarterly results and raised its full-year revenue outlook, though it warned that tariffs could pressure consumer spending in the second half. Amid economic uncertainty, Ralph Lauren’s performance highlights the resilience of brands that sit at the intersection of aspiration and accessibility. The company appears better positioned than some of its luxury peers to weather volatility.
Its quarterly results offer a blueprint for its retail peers, showing the value of a diversified supply chain and brand equity over aggressive discounting and heavy dependence on a single market.
Article
| Aug 7, 2025
The news: WPP has taken another hit in earnings, underscoring the current unstable market defined by economic uncertainty.Profits dropped 71% pre-tax in the first half of the company’s financial year, falling to £98 million ($125.2 million), while operating profit fell nearly half (47.8%), reaching £221 million ($282.3 million). Our take: WPP’s profit plunge serves as a wake-up call for agencies to accelerate transformation and prove value beyond media buying. In an AI-dominated landscape, advertisers are demanding more for less.
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| Aug 7, 2025
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| Aug 7, 2025
Source: KFF (formerly Kaiser Family Foundation)
Ad spending on US commerce intermediaries is set to approach $4 billion by 2027, outpacing other nonretail media cohorts. Key players like DoorDash and Instacart are evolving from delivery apps into full-scale media networks, driving performance and reshaping the commerce media landscape.
Report
| Aug 6, 2025
Snap posted 9% YoY revenue growth in Q2 2025, reaching $1.35 billion, but fell short of expectations due to a technical ad platform error that temporarily underpriced inventory. DAUs rose 9% to 469 million and Spotlight engagement surged, yet global ARPU remained flat and margins tightened. Snap’s performance contrasted sharply with stronger ad results from Meta, Google, and Reddit, raising concerns about its ability to monetize growing usage—especially in fast-expanding but low-yield regions. Snap did see promising gains in subscription revenue and AI-driven commerce ads, but must execute better on monetization to remain competitive in a rebounding ad market.
Article
| Aug 6, 2025
The news: OpenAI is bringing its newest models to Amazon Web Services (AWS) for the first time, marking a major milestone in the ongoing battle for AI cloud dominance. Its open-weight models, gpt-oss-120b and gpt-oss-20b—available via Amazon Bedrock and SageMaker AI platforms—are able to handle complicated text-based operations and integrate into cloud-based systems.
Our take: OpenAI’s models are getting easier to access, meaning lower costs and fewer technical hurdles to trying powerful AI tools. AWS customers should start testing oss-120b and oss-20b for things like generating subject lines, social copy, and campaign variations and explore ways to fine-tune the models with company data.
Article
| Aug 6, 2025
The news: Cohere wants to ease enterprise concerns around AI adoption with the launch of North, its new flagship platform. North is a privately deployable agentic platform that lets companies create, manage, and deploy AI agents entirely behind their own firewall.
Our take: With the frenetic pace of AI model launches and the pressure for quick enterprise adoption, data governance and security can’t be an afterthought. Platforms like North give enterprises a path to adopt powerful AI tools without giving up control over sensitive information.
Article
| Aug 6, 2025
The news: Disney announced that it will merge Disney+ and Hulu in 2026, a move that could save it $3 billion. The news came after a mixed Q3 FY25 that beat expectations thanks to high spending at Disney theme parks and growth in streaming, but saw advertising revenues fall short of analyst estimates. Our take: Disney’s future success depends on whether merging its core streaming offerings boosts advertiser appeal and a successful sports push that can compete on a similar level as rivals with access to tentpole live events like the Super Bowl.
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| Aug 6, 2025
This is the first installment of our annual “Mexico Ad Spending Benchmarks” series, which helps ad buyers and sellers calibrate their spending and revenue mix against the market.
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| Aug 6, 2025