1 00:00:03,200 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Broadcasting live to New York, Bloomberg eleven Brio to Washington, 2 00:00:07,600 --> 00:00:12,639 Speaker 1: d C, Bloomberg to Boston, Bloomberg twelve hundred to San Francisco, 3 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:17,920 Speaker 1: Bloomberg nine to the countries general one and around the 4 00:00:17,920 --> 00:00:21,000 Speaker 1: globe the Bloomberg Radio plus SAP and Bloomberg dot Com. 5 00:00:21,440 --> 00:00:26,320 Speaker 1: This is taking stock the US Postals Service. They deliver 6 00:00:26,760 --> 00:00:31,480 Speaker 1: five hundred and thirteen million pieces of mail a day. 7 00:00:31,720 --> 00:00:35,919 Speaker 1: That's more than forty of the world's total volume. They 8 00:00:35,960 --> 00:00:38,760 Speaker 1: have the largest fleet of trucks more post offices in 9 00:00:38,840 --> 00:00:42,239 Speaker 1: the combined retail outlets of McDonald's, Starbucks, and Walmart. We're 10 00:00:42,240 --> 00:00:44,280 Speaker 1: gonna talk to the author of a new book neither 11 00:00:44,479 --> 00:00:48,279 Speaker 1: snow now a rain, Devin Leonard. He'll be joining us 12 00:00:48,479 --> 00:00:50,559 Speaker 1: right now. Let's go to Catherine Cowdy in the Bloomberg 13 00:00:50,560 --> 00:00:54,240 Speaker 1: newsroom for a Bloomberg business flash. Thank you, Pam and Bloomberg. 14 00:00:54,240 --> 00:00:56,120 Speaker 1: Taking Stock is brought to you by s c I. 15 00:00:56,600 --> 00:00:59,840 Speaker 1: In the future, the asset management business will be profoundly different. 16 00:01:00,240 --> 00:01:03,640 Speaker 1: Find out how SEIS Global Operating Platform can help you 17 00:01:03,920 --> 00:01:07,720 Speaker 1: navigate the new operational frontier at se i C dot com. 18 00:01:07,920 --> 00:01:11,200 Speaker 1: Slash imagine well. The stock market is clawing back some 19 00:01:11,319 --> 00:01:14,440 Speaker 1: of the ground at lost last week. The benchmarks are advancing, 20 00:01:14,520 --> 00:01:18,200 Speaker 1: helped by games and banks and consumer discretionary companies. Traders 21 00:01:18,240 --> 00:01:20,959 Speaker 1: have lowered their expectations for higher interest rates in June 22 00:01:20,959 --> 00:01:24,319 Speaker 1: after day to show manufacturing slowed last month. Tom lee 23 00:01:24,480 --> 00:01:27,319 Speaker 1: Had of research at fund Strat Global Advisor says the 24 00:01:27,440 --> 00:01:30,760 Speaker 1: SMP five foundered can still post double digit games this year. 25 00:01:31,080 --> 00:01:34,759 Speaker 1: Click economic data has improved um. The technicals are certainly 26 00:01:34,800 --> 00:01:37,919 Speaker 1: a lot stronger, but I think the hyably the single 27 00:01:38,040 --> 00:01:40,720 Speaker 1: easiest thing to focus on is is how good conditions 28 00:01:40,720 --> 00:01:44,120 Speaker 1: are in credit markets. Uh, you know, high yields on 29 00:01:44,200 --> 00:01:46,320 Speaker 1: track to have a double duty here, and I think 30 00:01:46,319 --> 00:01:49,040 Speaker 1: that's all equity investors need to know. Stocks basically followed. 31 00:01:50,000 --> 00:01:52,480 Speaker 1: We tag the markets every fifteen minutes throughout the trading day. 32 00:01:52,520 --> 00:01:55,360 Speaker 1: Down industrial average is up one points the game of 33 00:01:55,440 --> 00:01:58,240 Speaker 1: six ten seven percent, trading at seventeen thousand, eight D 34 00:01:58,560 --> 00:02:01,559 Speaker 1: two smps I found it up fourteen point seven tenths 35 00:02:01,600 --> 00:02:04,440 Speaker 1: of a percent to two thousand seventy nine. The Nazak 36 00:02:04,560 --> 00:02:06,559 Speaker 1: is up thirty two points two thirds of a percent, 37 00:02:06,560 --> 00:02:09,120 Speaker 1: trading at forty eight oh seven less Texas in do 38 00:02:09,200 --> 00:02:11,120 Speaker 1: we need of crude oil? Down a dollar eighteen a 39 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:13,959 Speaker 1: barrel two point six percent to forty four seventy four. 40 00:02:14,240 --> 00:02:17,320 Speaker 1: SPI gold is up sixty cents announced to twelve nine, 41 00:02:17,600 --> 00:02:20,120 Speaker 1: and the Tenure Treasury is down eight thirty seconds, with 42 00:02:20,160 --> 00:02:23,600 Speaker 1: the YELD at one point eight six percent. Among today's 43 00:02:23,639 --> 00:02:26,960 Speaker 1: top business stories, constructions spending increased in March to its 44 00:02:27,000 --> 00:02:29,560 Speaker 1: highest level in more than eight years. Games in home 45 00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:33,359 Speaker 1: building and non residential construction offset a drop in government projects. 46 00:02:33,639 --> 00:02:36,760 Speaker 1: The Commerce Department reported construction spending increased three tens of 47 00:02:36,800 --> 00:02:39,800 Speaker 1: a percent in March after a one percent increase in February. 48 00:02:40,400 --> 00:02:41,800 Speaker 1: And now let's get an update of some of the 49 00:02:41,800 --> 00:02:45,799 Speaker 1: other stories were following today on Bloomberg Radio. Catherine, thank 50 00:02:45,840 --> 00:02:48,840 Speaker 1: you from the Bloomberg News roommin Mark Crumpton. This news 51 00:02:48,960 --> 00:02:52,600 Speaker 1: update is brought to you by Mercedes Ben's outstanding offers 52 00:02:52,600 --> 00:02:55,400 Speaker 1: are in full bloom at your Mercedes Benz Tri State 53 00:02:55,440 --> 00:02:59,360 Speaker 1: dealers take advantage of limited time lease and finance programs 54 00:02:59,360 --> 00:03:02,920 Speaker 1: on select models this spring season. Visit m b usa 55 00:03:03,080 --> 00:03:07,280 Speaker 1: dot com for details. Today, campaigning in Indiana ahead of 56 00:03:07,280 --> 00:03:11,280 Speaker 1: tomorrow's primary, Democrat Bernie Sanders is making it clear he's 57 00:03:11,320 --> 00:03:14,400 Speaker 1: trying to persuade the party's so called super delegates to 58 00:03:14,480 --> 00:03:18,600 Speaker 1: switch allegiances. He told supporters in Evansville, Beating the Republican 59 00:03:18,680 --> 00:03:21,760 Speaker 1: Party has to be the priority. The point that we're 60 00:03:21,760 --> 00:03:24,799 Speaker 1: gonna make to the super delegates in an area where 61 00:03:24,840 --> 00:03:28,520 Speaker 1: Hillary Clinton and I agree, and that is, it will 62 00:03:28,560 --> 00:03:31,960 Speaker 1: be a tragedy for this country if we end up 63 00:03:32,000 --> 00:03:34,440 Speaker 1: with a Donald Trump or some other Republican of the 64 00:03:34,440 --> 00:03:39,600 Speaker 1: White House. Mr Trump is once again leveling charges that 65 00:03:39,760 --> 00:03:43,200 Speaker 1: his party is working to block his nomination. The bosses 66 00:03:43,240 --> 00:03:45,160 Speaker 1: are trying to run it. You know, it's a Ridge party. 67 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:49,440 Speaker 1: It's a whole rigs situation. The bosses like an Arizona 68 00:03:49,520 --> 00:03:52,040 Speaker 1: the busses. I win Arizona in a landslot. I beat 69 00:03:52,080 --> 00:03:55,400 Speaker 1: Pruce so badly it's almost ridiculous. And then the bosses 70 00:03:55,800 --> 00:03:59,120 Speaker 1: have delegates to have a delicate, a crooked delegate system 71 00:03:59,480 --> 00:04:01,920 Speaker 1: where the going and may try and get delegate so 72 00:04:01,960 --> 00:04:04,880 Speaker 1: they can play games. New York Senator Chuck Schumer is 73 00:04:04,880 --> 00:04:08,800 Speaker 1: calling for federal probe into an outdoor advertising company's latest 74 00:04:08,840 --> 00:04:12,880 Speaker 1: effort to target billboard ads to specific consumers. Schumer is 75 00:04:12,920 --> 00:04:16,640 Speaker 1: dubbed Clear Channel outdoor Americans so called radar programs spying 76 00:04:16,680 --> 00:04:20,880 Speaker 1: billboards wanting the service may violate privacy rights. Global News 77 00:04:20,960 --> 00:04:23,640 Speaker 1: twenty four hours a day, powered by our two hundred 78 00:04:23,680 --> 00:04:26,719 Speaker 1: journalists in more than one hundred fifty news bureaus around 79 00:04:26,760 --> 00:04:30,000 Speaker 1: the world from the Bloomberg News Room by Mark Crumpton. Katherine, 80 00:04:31,400 --> 00:04:33,159 Speaker 1: Thank you. Now, let's get a quick update of the 81 00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:36,320 Speaker 1: equity benchmark Stale Industrial averages up one hundred three points 82 00:04:36,360 --> 00:04:39,480 Speaker 1: at seventeen thousand, eight hundred seventy six. Smp F I 83 00:04:39,520 --> 00:04:42,719 Speaker 1: founded up fourteen points to two thousand, seventy nine. NASDAC 84 00:04:42,800 --> 00:04:45,480 Speaker 1: higher by thirty points, is trading at forty eight oh five. 85 00:04:45,680 --> 00:04:50,400 Speaker 1: And that's a Bloomberg Business flash. You're listening to taking 86 00:04:50,440 --> 00:04:54,480 Speaker 1: stock with pim Box at Kathleen Hayes on Bloomberg Radio. 87 00:04:55,080 --> 00:05:00,000 Speaker 1: The US Postal Service, it is much maligned, but yet 88 00:05:00,080 --> 00:05:05,840 Speaker 1: it does deliver of the world's total mail volume. And 89 00:05:06,000 --> 00:05:10,520 Speaker 1: if you rely on Amazon to purchase your goods, chances 90 00:05:10,560 --> 00:05:13,839 Speaker 1: are the US Postal Service has a hand in getting 91 00:05:13,839 --> 00:05:17,240 Speaker 1: them to your door. Here to tell us everything about 92 00:05:17,320 --> 00:05:21,760 Speaker 1: the US Postal Services Devin Leonard, reporter for Bloomberg Business Week, 93 00:05:22,240 --> 00:05:24,440 Speaker 1: and he's here to tell us about his new book 94 00:05:25,400 --> 00:05:31,159 Speaker 1: entitled Neither Snow nor Rain. A landmark century spanning social, political, 95 00:05:31,160 --> 00:05:34,560 Speaker 1: and economic history of the United States Post Office. Devin, 96 00:05:34,600 --> 00:05:36,960 Speaker 1: always a pleasure. Thanks for coming out, Thank you, and 97 00:05:37,000 --> 00:05:39,520 Speaker 1: congratulations on the book. Thanks well, well, you know, it 98 00:05:39,560 --> 00:05:41,400 Speaker 1: came out of an article that I wrote for bloomber 99 00:05:41,400 --> 00:05:43,039 Speaker 1: Business Week in two thousand and eleven. It was a 100 00:05:43,040 --> 00:05:46,000 Speaker 1: cover story called the End of Mail, and that got 101 00:05:46,040 --> 00:05:48,680 Speaker 1: a ton of response, and it led led to doing 102 00:05:48,680 --> 00:05:51,240 Speaker 1: this book, which is, I guess, not just the end 103 00:05:51,279 --> 00:05:52,880 Speaker 1: of mail, but the beginning of mail too. It goes 104 00:05:52,880 --> 00:05:55,800 Speaker 1: on the way back to the ancient Abyssinians and uh, 105 00:05:55,880 --> 00:05:58,520 Speaker 1: you know, two thousand BCS. So I was gonna make 106 00:05:58,600 --> 00:06:02,880 Speaker 1: you say a motto, I guess of letter carriers everywhere, 107 00:06:03,279 --> 00:06:05,920 Speaker 1: you know, neither ring nor snow, nor gloom of night 108 00:06:05,960 --> 00:06:08,320 Speaker 1: and so on. But tell us a little bit about 109 00:06:08,400 --> 00:06:11,160 Speaker 1: your researches for the book, and then we'll get into 110 00:06:11,200 --> 00:06:13,800 Speaker 1: some of the things you found out. Well, it was really, 111 00:06:13,960 --> 00:06:16,479 Speaker 1: really fascinating. I I and I spent a lot of 112 00:06:16,480 --> 00:06:20,560 Speaker 1: time talking to former postmaster generals um and I spent 113 00:06:20,560 --> 00:06:22,200 Speaker 1: a bunch of time in Washington. I went out to 114 00:06:22,240 --> 00:06:25,480 Speaker 1: Detroit and looked at the archives with the National Letter 115 00:06:25,480 --> 00:06:28,400 Speaker 1: Carriers Association, you know, the union for the letter carriers 116 00:06:28,440 --> 00:06:31,160 Speaker 1: and also the postal workers side the clerks union. I 117 00:06:31,200 --> 00:06:33,000 Speaker 1: guess they have a big archive in New York too 118 00:06:33,000 --> 00:06:35,120 Speaker 1: that I sent her researcher too was actually my son 119 00:06:35,360 --> 00:06:37,000 Speaker 1: who did a lot of work on this too. But 120 00:06:37,400 --> 00:06:39,240 Speaker 1: it's just there's a lot of reading, a lot of talking, 121 00:06:39,240 --> 00:06:41,480 Speaker 1: a lot of studying, and the whole thing is pretty fascinating. 122 00:06:41,480 --> 00:06:43,040 Speaker 1: And you went into the back rooms of a lot 123 00:06:43,040 --> 00:06:46,680 Speaker 1: of the postal service operations. Correct, yes, I have. I 124 00:06:46,960 --> 00:06:48,320 Speaker 1: wish I could go to go to even more, but 125 00:06:48,360 --> 00:06:50,080 Speaker 1: I've been to a bunch of them in New York 126 00:06:50,120 --> 00:06:52,279 Speaker 1: and it's and and it's just really interesting because what 127 00:06:52,360 --> 00:06:54,800 Speaker 1: everybody tells you it is, you know, is that you 128 00:06:54,839 --> 00:06:57,039 Speaker 1: have all these letter carriers pointing to these stacks of mail, 129 00:06:57,040 --> 00:06:59,080 Speaker 1: and they're just saying they used to be three or 130 00:06:59,120 --> 00:07:01,920 Speaker 1: four or five times is higher, and and everybody's walking 131 00:07:01,960 --> 00:07:04,200 Speaker 1: around with much less mail in their bags, and and 132 00:07:04,320 --> 00:07:07,000 Speaker 1: it's you know, it's it's it's disappearing, even though there's 133 00:07:07,080 --> 00:07:09,880 Speaker 1: they're still they still delivered. I guess a hundred and 134 00:07:10,240 --> 00:07:14,560 Speaker 1: fifty four billion pieces. That's down from uh two hundred 135 00:07:14,560 --> 00:07:18,560 Speaker 1: and thirteen billion just a decade ago. So um, so 136 00:07:18,760 --> 00:07:21,480 Speaker 1: you know, the future of the postal services kind of uh, 137 00:07:21,520 --> 00:07:24,560 Speaker 1: in in doubt, in jeopardy. So now there are people 138 00:07:24,720 --> 00:07:26,080 Speaker 1: I don't know any of them, but I do know 139 00:07:26,200 --> 00:07:29,920 Speaker 1: people that they love to sort of heap abuse on 140 00:07:30,120 --> 00:07:33,960 Speaker 1: the US Postal Service. Tell us a little bit about this. 141 00:07:34,800 --> 00:07:37,840 Speaker 1: In some words, just lumbering bureaucracy. But you say it's not, 142 00:07:37,920 --> 00:07:40,640 Speaker 1: it's it's efficient. Well, it depends on how you want 143 00:07:40,640 --> 00:07:43,400 Speaker 1: to look at it. I mean, clearly, clearly they are 144 00:07:43,520 --> 00:07:48,160 Speaker 1: lumbering sometimes, but they deliver more mail per employee than 145 00:07:48,200 --> 00:07:50,720 Speaker 1: any other postals, you know, postal service in the world. 146 00:07:50,720 --> 00:07:53,280 Speaker 1: So if you just look at efficiency, you know, you know, 147 00:07:53,280 --> 00:07:55,720 Speaker 1: measured in in that way, there by far and away 148 00:07:55,760 --> 00:07:58,200 Speaker 1: the most efficient postal service in the world are and 149 00:07:58,400 --> 00:08:02,040 Speaker 1: in history, paying for your mail to be delivered has 150 00:08:02,120 --> 00:08:05,200 Speaker 1: changed since the postal service began. Tell us a little 151 00:08:05,240 --> 00:08:08,680 Speaker 1: history about the stamps and the postal service. No, I 152 00:08:08,720 --> 00:08:10,800 Speaker 1: think that's one of the things that that I was 153 00:08:10,880 --> 00:08:13,720 Speaker 1: fascinated by. You know what sort of led me want 154 00:08:13,760 --> 00:08:15,960 Speaker 1: to write the book was that Pete, there was no 155 00:08:16,000 --> 00:08:18,160 Speaker 1: home delivery for a long time. Everybody had to go 156 00:08:18,200 --> 00:08:20,880 Speaker 1: to the post office to get them. Imagine what the 157 00:08:20,880 --> 00:08:22,480 Speaker 1: lines were like then. I mean they're not so that, 158 00:08:22,760 --> 00:08:25,400 Speaker 1: you know, they're pretty long now. But there's no home delivery, 159 00:08:25,760 --> 00:08:29,040 Speaker 1: I guess, are very limited home delivery until the Civil 160 00:08:29,120 --> 00:08:33,360 Speaker 1: War when Abraham Lincoln's Postmaster General, Montgomery Blair, he saw 161 00:08:33,960 --> 00:08:36,560 Speaker 1: all these women, wives and girlfriends of soldiers just waiting 162 00:08:36,559 --> 00:08:38,439 Speaker 1: and waiting for the post office for letters to come, 163 00:08:38,480 --> 00:08:40,520 Speaker 1: and he just thought that that was wrong. So he 164 00:08:40,559 --> 00:08:44,520 Speaker 1: started city delivery. And then and then John Wanamaker towards 165 00:08:44,600 --> 00:08:47,520 Speaker 1: the end of the nineteenth century started pushing for rural 166 00:08:47,559 --> 00:08:50,640 Speaker 1: free delivery, and and and that that uh that passed 167 00:08:50,640 --> 00:08:52,959 Speaker 1: about a decade after you left. But but I guess 168 00:08:52,960 --> 00:08:55,840 Speaker 1: all of those things are are relatively new, especially especially 169 00:08:55,840 --> 00:08:58,600 Speaker 1: free rural delivery. For the longest time, people in uralaries 170 00:08:58,640 --> 00:09:00,440 Speaker 1: still had to go to the post office even when 171 00:09:00,480 --> 00:09:04,040 Speaker 1: there was home delivery in cities now, postal carriers used 172 00:09:04,080 --> 00:09:07,240 Speaker 1: to make multiple deliveries a day. You say that in 173 00:09:07,320 --> 00:09:10,920 Speaker 1: some places seven times a day, well, and there was 174 00:09:11,120 --> 00:09:15,440 Speaker 1: there was at least twice a day delivery until uh nine, 175 00:09:16,160 --> 00:09:18,079 Speaker 1: So for so from for most of the postal service 176 00:09:18,120 --> 00:09:21,000 Speaker 1: history there were multiple deliveries a day. And in places 177 00:09:21,040 --> 00:09:23,000 Speaker 1: like New York that you know there were as many 178 00:09:23,040 --> 00:09:26,240 Speaker 1: as as seven deliveries. So no, it's just incredible. You 179 00:09:26,360 --> 00:09:28,360 Speaker 1: just saw your your your mailman all the time, and 180 00:09:28,400 --> 00:09:29,840 Speaker 1: you could send a letter in the morning and get 181 00:09:29,880 --> 00:09:32,160 Speaker 1: a response in the afternoon. So who need the email? 182 00:09:33,080 --> 00:09:35,640 Speaker 1: By law? You say, the US Postal Service has to 183 00:09:35,760 --> 00:09:40,360 Speaker 1: visit every address in the country six days a week. 184 00:09:41,120 --> 00:09:44,880 Speaker 1: Is that under threat? Well, it's under threat. It's sort 185 00:09:44,880 --> 00:09:47,240 Speaker 1: of unsustainable because the problem is that the amount of 186 00:09:47,240 --> 00:09:49,600 Speaker 1: mail is going down, but the number of addresses goes up. 187 00:09:50,040 --> 00:09:52,640 Speaker 1: There are a million new addresses every year every time 188 00:09:52,640 --> 00:09:55,080 Speaker 1: there's another housing development, and you know, that's a bunch 189 00:09:55,080 --> 00:09:58,120 Speaker 1: of new mailboxes. So that's that's going to kill the 190 00:09:58,160 --> 00:10:01,000 Speaker 1: Postal Service unless they unless they change they changed their 191 00:10:01,000 --> 00:10:02,480 Speaker 1: business model, and they've been trying to do it, but 192 00:10:02,520 --> 00:10:06,040 Speaker 1: Congressman left and so I just stand also that people 193 00:10:06,120 --> 00:10:11,000 Speaker 1: trusted the postal Service so much that they actually sent 194 00:10:11,080 --> 00:10:13,360 Speaker 1: their children through the postal system. I know that blows 195 00:10:13,360 --> 00:10:17,440 Speaker 1: everybody's mind. No, I mean this was after after the 196 00:10:17,480 --> 00:10:22,440 Speaker 1: Postal Service began delivering parcels, and that was in Uh. 197 00:10:22,600 --> 00:10:24,400 Speaker 1: People just started sending all sorts of things to the 198 00:10:24,440 --> 00:10:26,000 Speaker 1: mail just to see sort of you know, what they 199 00:10:26,120 --> 00:10:29,720 Speaker 1: get away with. And there's some famous cases. A famous 200 00:10:29,720 --> 00:10:33,320 Speaker 1: case in Idaho where the family sent there their young 201 00:10:33,400 --> 00:10:36,520 Speaker 1: daughter May May Piersdorff was it was her name. Rather 202 00:10:36,559 --> 00:10:38,400 Speaker 1: than buying a train ticket for it to go visit 203 00:10:38,400 --> 00:10:40,760 Speaker 1: her grandmother, they went to the post office and paid 204 00:10:40,800 --> 00:10:44,120 Speaker 1: fifty three cents uh to send her to sender in 205 00:10:44,160 --> 00:10:47,080 Speaker 1: the mail the post the postmaster actually put the put 206 00:10:47,080 --> 00:10:49,240 Speaker 1: the stance on her coat. They put on the train, 207 00:10:49,240 --> 00:10:51,280 Speaker 1: and they took her to see her grandmother. And there 208 00:10:51,320 --> 00:10:53,760 Speaker 1: you go, there you go. Devin Leonard, the author of 209 00:10:53,800 --> 00:10:56,280 Speaker 1: the new book Neither Snow nor Rain, a History of 210 00:10:56,320 --> 00:11:02,480 Speaker 1: the United States Postal Service. Bloomber Taking stock is brought 211 00:11:02,480 --> 00:11:05,040 Speaker 1: to you by Sector spider ets. Why by a single 212 00:11:05,080 --> 00:11:07,400 Speaker 1: stock when you could invest in the entire sector. Visit 213 00:11:07,480 --> 00:11:10,080 Speaker 1: sector spdrs dot com or call one eight six six 214 00:11:10,400 --> 00:11:11,480 Speaker 1: sector et f