Index // MRKT Weekly Roundup  ·  Week of June 29 – July 5, 2026

A Federal Judge Ordered $127 Million Restored to Black Farmer Groups. GM Replaced Over 1,000 Detroit Workers With Robots.

Plus, Black-owned Crowned Skin crossed $50 million in sales, Megan Thee Stallion put a fragrance line in Ulta, and a new Black-owned comics alliance launched with an exclusive DC variant.

The Window

The bars score how locked-in a story is — 1 = barely a proposal, 5 = done and hard to undo. The space between where it stands now and where it's headed is the room to act, and each one comes with a real way in.

Back it · with your dollars
A Black-owned comics alliance just landed an exclusive DC deal — 1,000 copies decide what comes next
Now2 / 5
Could become5 / 5
⏳ ~90 days — the sales data decides whether the partnership grows

What's at stake: Ink Alliance launched as a Black-owned network with an exclusive DC Comics variant cover — a new procurement pathway for Black comic retailers and artists. Right now it's a 2: one deal, one cover, one print run.

What a 5 looks like: Black-owned shops carrying exclusive releases as a standing program — not one cover, a permanent lane in how comics get distributed. That's the ceiling, not the promise. A sold-out first run is the only thing that starts the climb.

Your move: Visit a participating Black-owned comic shop on August 19 and buy the New Titans #38 variant. Sales data is the argument. · Popverse · BDI-SIG-2026-10209

Back it · with your voice
The CROWN Act is law in 30 states — 20 to go
Now2 / 5
Could become5 / 5
⏳ ongoing — state legislative sessions set the pace

What's at stake: The CROWN Act — the legal right to wear your own hair to school and work without discrimination — has passed in 30 states, and Dove put a new creator series and petition push behind the remaining 20 this week.

What a 5 looks like: hair-discrimination protection as law in all 50 states — a right you carry into any classroom or workplace in the country, not just the ones on the right side of a state line.

Your move: Check whether your state is one of the 30. If it isn't, the petition lives at Dove.com/CROWN — and your state legislators are the ones who move it. · Globe Newswire · BDI-SIG-2026-10202

BDI Read · The Credit-Score Bill Cuts Both Ways

Two records landed on the board this week about the same bill — and they point in opposite directions. The Credit Access and Inclusion Act (H.R. 5402) cleared the House Financial Services Committee. The case for it: about 26 million Americans are "credit invisible" — no credit file, no score — and counting rent and utility payments would let reliable payers finally build one.

The case against it came from the National Consumer Law Center, which is urging a no vote: the bill would override state privacy and tenant-screening protections — including laws that seal eviction records — and open the door for landlords and utilities to report negative payment data too. The number that gives the warning weight: 45% of Black renters missed or were late on at least one rent payment in the year beginning July 2020. For them, this bill could turn a hard year into a lower score that follows every future housing application.

Same bill, two live outcomes: credit built for millions, or late months that never stop counting against you. This is one to understand before cheering or booing — know where your representative stands, and know which protections your state has today that this bill would override.

Sourcing: committee passage and the 26M credit-invisible figure from Index // MRKT Signal · BDI-SIG-2026-10194 (Rep. Young Kim's office); the preemption warning and the 45% figure from Index // MRKT Signal · BDI-SIG-2026-10235 (National Consumer Law Center).

On the Clock

Time-sensitive info worth acting on.

NowUtz recalled 650,000+ bags of Zapp's and Dirty chips under the FDA's most serious recall class (salmonella risk). Check your pantry for the affected best-by dates, toss them, and contact Utz for a refund.
By July 12The Postal Regulatory Commission decides on USPS's proposed 4.8% price hike, including a 4-cent stamp increase. If you mail regularly, Forever stamps bought now hold their value.
Open nowThe Energy Department proposed ending appliance efficiency mandates — the standards that hold down running costs on fridges, ACs, and washers. The public comment window is open; that's where consumers get a say.

Locked In

Two things that happened recently worth knowing.

Gain
$127M

A federal judge ordered the USDA to reinstate $127 million in grants to Black farmer organizations — money for land, equipment, and community food systems that had been cut off.

What you can do — If your organization held one of these awards, verify the reinstatement and restart the purchases the freeze paused.

Capital B News · BDI-SIG-2026-10219

Cost
90%

Share of staff at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) that its new leadership tried to terminate. The federal consumer watchdog — built to police junk fees and predatory lending — is being reshaped: fewer investigations, fewer referees on the field.

What you can do — With the watchdog thinned out, read your own statements harder: dispute junk fees in writing and keep the records.

POLITICO · BDI-SIG-2026-10233

The Shared Value Scoreboard

BDI's weekly accountability read: when companies come out ahead, do Black stakeholders share the win? The Shared Value Ratio is the running number — shared wins over all corporate wins.

28Companies came out ahead this week
1Won at Black people's expense
46%Shared Value Ratio · 13 of 28 wins shared

Shared — the company won, and Black people gained too

  • Crowned Skin — the Black-owned skincare brand hit $50M in sales and expanded across TikTok, Amazon, Walmart, and Macy's.
  • Ulta Beauty — launched Megan Thee Stallion's Hot Girl Summer fragrance as an exclusive.
  • DC Comics — gave Black-owned Ink Alliance an exclusive variant cover, opening a procurement lane for Black comic shops.
  • Signed — Savannah James and April McDaniel launched the Black-owned holding company with Jay-Z's MarcyPen Capital.
  • TCB Drones Academy — the Black-owned academy launched a national HBCU aviation and drone initiative.
  • MLB — expanded its Black talent pipeline around the Swingman Classic, with HBCU partnerships and broadcast/photography mentorships.
  • Dove — put its CROWN-icles series behind Black creators and the CROWN Act, now law in 30 states.
  • Warner Records — partnered with Black executive Sickamore's imprint Three Times LOUDER.
  • UnitedMasters — signed New Orleans rapper La Reezy to its Black-owned artist roster.
  • Dentsu X — partnered with Africa Creative Agency to amplify African cultural platforms globally.
  • Drax Group — appointed Dr. LeMia Jenkins VP of Government and Regulatory Affairs.
  • Off-White — launched an accessible luxury sub-brand ($45–$220), expanding talent opportunities.
  • Atlanta Hawks — added new fan experiences at State Farm Arena through a PrizePicks partnership.

Took — the company won at Black people's expense

  • General Motors — pushed out over 1,000 workers at its leading Detroit factory to make room for robots, in a city where 77% of residents are Black.

The Worker Beat

What happened to workers this week — the stories that usually get skipped.

The Squeeze

What's pulling money out of Black and working households this week.

What you can do — Audit the recurring bills this week: your electric rate, your phone plan, your bank fees. The line items move quietly; the only defense is reading them.

On the Ground

The close-to-home signal of the week. This week: Cleveland.

  • ClevelandNew federal work rules are cutting Medicaid for 90,000 Cleveland Metro residents — and SNAP enrollment in Cuyahoga County has already fallen by 12,000 since September. If you're in Cuyahoga County: verify your Medicaid and SNAP eligibility now and learn the new work and reporting requirements before a missed form becomes a lost benefit.

Opportunities

Where the money, jobs, and openings are this week — sorted by who they're for.

For founders & Black-owned businesses
  • Newport News' Bridge-Forward program — the city documented disparities in its own contracting and is building a business-access program in response. If you sell to the city, watch for the rollout details.
For job seekers
For students
For parents
  • Trump Accounts are live — the Treasury launched the tax-deferred children's accounts, seeding 1.5 million newborn accounts with $1,000. Review the eligibility rules to see if your family qualifies.

Watch List

  1. USDA compliance. The judge ordered a status report on the $127M reinstatement — watch whether the money actually moves to the Black farmer organizations.
  2. Sheila Johnson's Salamander DC. Whether the deal to join Marriott's Autograph Collection closes, and what it means for one of D.C.'s highest-profile Black-owned hotels.
  3. The PECO strike. Contract talks between PECO and IBEW Local 614, the federal mediator's involvement, and the investigations into alleged assaults on workers.
  4. The 5% OpenAI stake. Whether the administration's floated public wealth-fund stake in OpenAI becomes a formal proposal — and who a "public" AI dividend would actually reach.
  5. Kroger–Giant Eagle. Regulatory clearance on the $1.65B acquisition and any required store divestitures across the five states affected.

Amplify

Close on power: Darrell Spencer built Crowned Skin to $50 million in sales in roughly two and a half years — a Black-owned skincare brand now selling across TikTok Shop, Amazon, Walmart, and Macy's. Not a pledge, not a pilot: a receipt.

What you can do — Buy through whichever channel you already use. A Black-owned brand holding shelf space across four major retailers is leverage: every sale, on every channel, is the number that keeps that space — and helps make the business case for the next Black-owned brand to get it.

Freshness this issue: timely (The Window · BDI Read · On the Clock · Locked In · The Shared Value Scoreboard · The Squeeze · On the Ground · Opportunities · Watch List) with the rotating slot going to The Worker Beat — it fired on real news (GM automation, the PECO strike, Meta's cuts) and overrode the calendar pick. Protected slots — On the Clock, The Squeeze, On the Ground, and Opportunities — carried the week's deadlines, household costs, local news, and openings. Bench held for later: The Board, Performative Watch, Hidden Figures, The Systemic Read.

In Case You Missed It

Every other signal from the week, one line each.

Black economy

Broader economy

Index // MRKT Signals Cited
  • 10219 — Federal judge orders USDA to reinstate $127M to Black farmer organizations (Capital B News)
  • 10229 — GM replaces over 1,000 Detroit factory workers with robots (Futurism)
  • 10224 — Crowned Skin hits $50M in sales (ShoppeBlack)
  • 10223 — Megan Thee Stallion launches fragrance with Ulta (PRNewswire)
  • 10209 — Black-owned Ink Alliance launches with exclusive DC variant (Popverse)
  • 10194 — House committee advances rent/utilities credit-score bill (Rep. Young Kim's office)
  • 10235 — NCLC warns H.R. 5402 threatens Black renters' credit and housing access (National Consumer Law Center)
  • 10188 — Utz recalls 650,000+ bags in FDA Class I warning (USA Today)
  • 10131 — USPS proposes 4.8% price hike; PRC decision by July 12 (The Sun)
  • 10190 — DOE proposes ending appliance efficiency mandates (Utility Dive)
  • 10179 — Federal work rules cut Medicaid for 90,000 Cleveland Metro residents (cleveland.com)
  • 10225 / 10228 — 1,600 PECO workers strike; alleged assaults reported (NBC Philadelphia)
  • 10214 — Meta's $145B AI bet falters; job cuts called "unclean" (TechCrunch)
  • 10203 — Peter Jackson sued over AI "whitewashing" of Black model's image
  • 10178 — Appeals court blocks termination of 19 DEIA officers (The Independent)
  • 10195 — Judge rules against UNC professor in discrimination suit (Carolina Journal)
  • 10181 — Walmart expands no-cost career programs (Walmart)
  • 10222 — Seven Black administrators appointed across US universities (JBHE)
  • 10183 — Richmond-area 25% electricity rate increase (Henrico Citizen)
  • 10161 — T-Mobile auto-upgrades legacy plans (CNET)
  • 10198 — KFF links racial discrimination to Black consumer health costs (KFF)
  • 10233 — CFPB reshaped; 90% staff cut attempted (POLITICO)
  • 10197 — Newport News plans Bridge-Forward business access program (City of Newport News)
  • 10210 — Urban Outfitters' $150M PA expansion, 1,050 jobs (PA Governor's office)
  • 10226 — TCB Drones Academy launches HBCU aviation initiative (EINPresswire)
  • 10193 — MLB expands Black talent pipeline with Swingman Classic (MLB)
  • 10216 — Treasury launches Trump Accounts, $1,000 newborn seed (USA Today)
  • 10151 — Salamander DC in talks to join Marriott Autograph Collection (AFROTECH)
  • 10185 — Administration eyes 5% OpenAI stake for public wealth fund (CNN)
  • 10192 — Kroger's $1.65B Giant Eagle acquisition (Kroger)
  • 10202 — Dove's CROWN-icles series; CROWN Act in 30 states (Globe Newswire)
  • 10204 — Drax appoints Dr. LeMia Jenkins VP (Jackson Advocate)
  • 10211 — Savannah James, April McDaniel launch Signed (Fast Company)