
Onyx opens chocolatey café in Springdale
The big picture: Onyx's addition to downtown Springdale is part of a string of restaurant-and-renovation development taking place over the past few years.
There's a "rising tide" mentality among the hospitality community here, Onyx co-owner Jon Allen told Axios, meaning there's a shared belief that everyone will do better as more people visit the area for these new offerings.
State of play: The new location opens fully on May 5. It occupies three stories of the former First Security Bank complex on Emma Avenue and has been two years in the making.
The walk-up window and outdoor seating opened to the public a couple of weeks ago and is already more popular than the owners expected, Allen said.
The intrigue: The new space dwarfs its typical locations, clocking in at a whopping 6,400 square feet. And Onyx's Terroir chocolate brand will also be headquartered here.
Andrea and Jon Allen started Onyx in 2012 in Springdale, but they had been without a location there since 2019, so their new mega-cafe is a homecoming of sorts. The coffee company's headquarters and roastery will remain in Rogers.
Zoom in: The ground floor hosts the primary café and most of the seating, but guests can also head down to the basement bar and watch Terroir chocolate being made. The basement will host wine and chocolate pairing events, along with talks from farmers from all over the world.
Onyx wine club members will also be able to stop by for their monthly bottles curated by Andrea Allen, offering club members a second location beyond Hail Fellow Well Met in Johnson.
Diners can expect full entrées for breakfast and lunch, plus desserts and chocolate.
Zoom out: For some, working remotely means plopping down all day at a coffee shop, and some businesses mitigate that with time limits or asking people to leave.
But Onyx is offering a free space upstairs with desks for those who want workspace, featuring a 16-seat boardroom table.
What they're saying: Allen said he hopes the new Onyx site will draw visitors from neighboring cities like Bentonville.

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The unwinding of this trade led to a slump in Japanese assets, with the Topix (TOPIX100.T) falling more than 12% in a single day. This also rattled other markets and at the height of the turmoil, the VIX hit an intraday peak of 65.73 points, which was its highest since March 2020. Stocks: Create your watchlist and portfolio Allen said that another example was in the third quarter of 2022, when markets fell after Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell gave a hawkish speech at the annual Jackson Hole Economic Symposium in late August, followed by the US central bank delivering another 75 basis-point interest rate hike in the September. This came as gas prices surged in Europe and governments stepped in to cushion the impact on consumers. In August that year, the S&P 500 fell 4.2%, followed by a 9.3% loss in September. Other examples Allen pointed to included 2015 when fears mounted about a Greek exit from the eurozone, which occurred alongside a sell-off in China's Shanghai Composite ( index. Meanwhile, stocks fell in the late summer of 2011 on the back of a dispute over the US debt ceiling and a US credit rating downgrade by S&P. This happened as fears grew about debt sustainability in Spain and Italy. Prior to this, Allen highlighted that markets faced turmoil in the third quarter of 2008 when he said the global financial crisis (GFC) moved into its most critical phase and in 2007 when the first signs of the crisis became evident. So, what could prompt a bout of turmoil in the third quarter of 2025? After postponing sweeping tariffs announced on "Liberation Day" on 2 April for 90 days, Trump has further extended this deadline from 9 July to 1 August. Allen pointed out that alongside Trump's reciprocal tariffs, there are still other sectoral duties potentially in the pipeline, with investigations underway into semiconductors, pharmaceuticals and critical minerals. "Markets currently aren't pricing this in at all," he said, explaining that a number of tariff deadlines had already been shifted. And if tariffs did return in full, Allen said that they would be starting from the 10% baseline that has been in place since April, rather than nothing. In addition, he said the expectation is that further deals would be reached which prevent duties from reverting to the rates announced on 2 April. Allen said: "While it's reasonable for markets to be sceptical, we've seen a few times already where markets were surprised by how aggressive the administration were, including on 'Liberation Day' itself (April 2), and also when Trump announced and ultimately implemented 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico before that. "So a sharper-than-expected tariff spike in August would certainly fit in that category and could spark a fresh sell-off." Rob Morgan, chief investment analyst at Charles Stanley, similarly said that so far "markets have taken a 'glass half full' view of US tariffs, assuming president Trump's bark is worse than his bite. "But with valuations looking stretched, there's plenty of room for a downside correction if trade negotiations — especially with China and the EU — go south." Deutsche Bank's Allen said that another risk is that the inflationary impact of tariffs becomes obvious, leading markets to price out interest rate cuts. "So far, it's not obvious that tariffs have had a major impact on US consumer prices," he said. "There've been a few categories like major appliances that have seen an impact, but it hasn't been widespread." 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Allen said that this shows that it could "just take a few days in a row of underwhelming data releases to ramp up those recession fears, even if subsequent data doesn't justify it." "That's particularly so given the broad optimism that there isn't going to be a recession at the moment, in a situation where global equities are near record highs and credit spreads are tight by historic standards," he added. Different countries have seen the yields – which are effectively interest rates – on government bonds spike at various points this year. This means the cost of government borrowing increased, at a time when there are already concerns about high public debt levels. For example, the yields on US government bonds, known as Treasuries, rose in May after Moody's downgraded America's credit rating. Meanwhile, last week, speculation about UK chancellor Rachel Reeves' position prompted a rise in yields on UK government bonds, known as gilts. Read more: Bitcoin price hits record high of $112,000 "The problem with fiscal concerns is market dynamics can become self-fulfilling," said Allen. "If bond yields start to rise, that raises doubts about debt sustainability, which can trigger a further rise in bond yields." Neil Wilson, UK investor strategist at Saxo Markets, said: "Bond and equity markets are not telling the same story – one will have to give – either we have stronger growth and higher yields or lower growth and yields and stocks fall." Another potential trigger for turmoil is if a geopolitical shock causes a significant rise in oil prices, Allen said. "Geopolitics is a factor that hasn't really affected markets much over 2023 and 2024," he said. "We've seen some brief wobbles but they've not been sustained." "But, if that changed, to the point where oil prices did see a durable increase, e.g. sustained above $100/bbl, then that would create a stagflationary shock of the sort we saw in 2022. "That did represent a big problem for markets, because it made inflation worse, forcing central banks to hike rates aggressively, whilst growth also took a hit (particularly in Europe) given the terms of trade shock." The second quarter earnings season is about to kick off and as previous quarters have shown, markets have become highly sensitive to results that even only slightly miss expectations, particularly from popular mega cap companies. Charles Stanley's Morgan said that in addition to tariff talk risks, "disappointing earnings guidance from Q2 results, or a flare-up in inflation paired with sluggish growth, and you've got a recipe for a bumpy ride as the year progresses." At the same time, Deutsche Bank's Allen said that markets have remained resilient this year for a couple of reasons. One of which is that none of the shocks so far have created a durable change in the macro fundamentals. The other is that policymakers have shown consistent willingness to adjust policy in response to market turmoil. "So, in the current climate, as long as markets believe that policymakers are willing and able to adjust in response to turmoil, then that in itself should limit the extent to which markets can sell off aggressively," he said. "That means for a summer crisis to prove longer-lasting, and for the current resilience to end, it would take something that affects the macro fundamentals, but policymakers can't easily fix." Read more: How your health can affect your pension How to start investing with an employee share scheme What are premium bonds and what are the odds of winning?Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data