Brew Markets
VerifiedNewsletter (Digital)
Scaling audiences is hard. Creating lasting impressions and earning the audience’s trust is even harder. But at Morning Brew Inc., we do both. Every day.
We’ve built a media company that delivers business content people actually want —smart reporting, sharp wit, and voices that speak to people like, well, people. They come for the substance and stay for the story.
Our audience doesn’t just scroll. They seek out our content, spend time with it, and share it. That’s why we’ve earned a loyal, highly engaged following of next-gen business leaders who trust us. And you can’t build that kind of relationship by taking shortcuts.
Across newsletters, podcasts, video, and social, our reach is wide and our impact is deep. Partnering with us means positioning your brand in front of decision-makers who are paying attention—not because we told them to, but because they want to.
Now that’s engaging. Source
Actions
Media Outlet details
| Scope | Trade/B2B |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Country | United States of America |
|
Similarweb UVM |
Request pricing |
|
Comscore UVM |
Request pricing |
Recent Articles
Search ArticlesCircle is the first crypto bank
For any rising juniors still hunting for a banking internship after missing the bulge-bracket recruiting window, Circle may have an opening: The stablecoin issuer just got the OCC’s approval to operate as Circle National Trust Bank, officially joining the banking club. Well, sort of. The charter doesn’t let Circle operate like a traditional bank—it still can’t take deposits or make loans.
Small caps have big heart
Step aside Mag 7, the little guys are taking over the market. While shares of the biggest stocks on the market have failed to impress in 2026, their smaller peers have had a banner year: Small-cap stocks just wrapped up the best first half of a year since 1991. The Russell 2000 has rocketed to a 19.16% gain this year, lapping the S&P 500’s 10.66% climb. Whereas once investors focused their money on a handful of mega-cap hyperscalers, their search for stronger returns has taken them further afield.
A tale of two shoppers
As it turns out, denim really never goes out of style. Yesterday, Levi Strauss reported stronger-than-expected second-quarter earnings as resilient consumer demand continued to fuel growth. Its pivot into a direct-to-consumer business is going well: DTC sales rose 11%, with more than half of the company’s revenue now coming from its own stores and website.
Tobacco stocks are going up in smoke
For some investors, sin stocks such as alcohol makers, casinos, and gun manufacturers are to be avoided at all costs. But one member of this sinful bunch is rising straight to the heavens. Tobacco stocks are on a hot streak these days, thanks to a recent big break from the FDA.
Seoul slides, China climbs
AI investors are packing their suitcases. As US stocks slid today following the collapse of the Iran ceasefire, Chinese equities moved the other way, with investors rotating into the country’s increasingly competitive AI sector. The gains were led by Alibaba, which jumped 11.03% after reports ahead of earnings suggested its loss-leading e-commerce business isn’t losing as much money as it once was.
Airlines are keeping all their new money
Despite hosting the biggest sports tournament in history, the US is still in a vacation-destination recession. According to research group Tourism Economics, the US tourism industry lost out on roughly $16.6 billion last year from international travelers ditching the US—and that number could grow to $21 billion this year.
Wall Street <3 SpaceX
Wall Street pros are hoping SpaceX will give them a ride to the moon. It’s only been two weeks since the company’s launch, yet SpaceX has already managed to become the most talked-about (and most traded) stock on Wall Street. Now that the quiet period after its debut has ended, analysts are starting to talk about the stock, too. They have some pretty good things to say: Of the 15 firms currently issuing ratings for SpaceX, 14 say it’s a buy, while only one is neutral on the stock.
European defense stocks keep climbing
The NATO summit is officially in session, as President Trump joins leaders from all 32 member countries in Ankara, Turkey to tackle some of the alliance’s biggest security challenges. High on the agenda: Russia’s war in Ukraine after Kyiv launched one of its deepest drone strikes yet into Russian territory last night; Europe’s efforts to shore up defenses amid shrinking US military support; and a lasting peace agreement between the US and Iran.
The AI trade is shape-shifting
Wall Street agrees that the AI trade is far from over—but the pros just can’t decide which corner of the market is the next big thing. The semiconductor rally has been taking a breather on the heels of a mind-boggling run in the first half of the year: The popular Philadelphia Semiconductor Index soared 99% between the beginning of 2026 and its all-time high on June 22, but is now down roughly 12% from that peak.
Microsoft is making big changes
Despite spending billions on AI, Microsoft is the worst-performing member of the Magnificent Seven this year, with shares down 20% in 2026 as investors question its AI strategy. Now, the software giant is trying to turn things around by making big changes to one of its weakest divisions: Xbox. “Our business today is not healthy,” Xbox CEO Asha Sharma wrote in an internal email this morning.