A new Mercer survey finds businesses facing a 6.7 percent hike on coverage costs this year, leading over half to plan employee premium increases in 2027.
A new Mercer survey finds businesses facing a 6.7 percent hike on coverage costs this year, leading over half to plan employee premium increases in 2027.
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When it comes to AI, much has been made of its democratizing potential. Many proponents believe that access to affordable models will act as a leveler, allowing smaller enterprises to innovate, test, and gain insights in ways previously that were previously much more challenging.
But, according to Delphine Viguier-Hovasse, chief innovation and prospective officer at L’Oréal, the reality may be more complicated. “We operate in a buoyant beauty market because it has never been easier to create a new brand,” she says. “You have AI inventing images and brand names, vendors providing formulas and molecules at a very fast pace—but you also have a lot of brands dying. Every two years you have a new brand and then it disappears.”
Contrary to the prevailing wisdom, Viguier-Hovasse says, “AI is fantastic for old companies.” As the executive responsible for innovation at a company which has been defining and redefining the beauty market for nearly 120 years, she knows what she’s talking about.
Despite its age, L’Oréal is routinely celebrated for its groundbreaking innovations—it has registered 725 patents and placed sixth on Fortune’s 2026 list of Europe’s Most Innovative Companies. This ability to consistently innovate relies less on speed and more on the decades of accumulated knowledge and the organizational structure to turn these insights into innovations customers want.
L’Oréal’s organization is structured in a matrix. In practice, this means having cross-functional departments which include both technical and non-technical disciplines. Every employee has two managers—one who is concerned with brand strategy and one who takes care of function or region-specific operations. Collaboration between departments is strongly encouraged.
“We are a company where we talk a lot and we challenge each other,” says Viguier-Hovasse. “So, the R&I [research and innovation] team will come up with a new formula, this is challenged by the business and legal divisions, and then you go back and rework the formula. We really are all working together.”
Viguier-Hovasse’s own innovation team comprises scientists, who create the products, and marketers, who can tell the story behind the science in a clear and compelling way. “Going back to the beginning of L’Oréal, we have always been strong on advertising and explaining what products can do,” she says. “We’re storytellers and we talk to the consumer in their own language.”
This culture of innovation is further supported by having a clear goal for the organization to focus on. “We have one KPI at L’Oréal,” she says, “gaining market share with new products. It’s very simple for everyone to follow.”
And this commitment is backed by investment—3% of L’Oréal’s turnover is reinvested into research. In 2025, this amounted to €1.3 million of investment. Viguier-Hovasse says: “Sometimes people question whether it’s too much, but that’s why this is a great job. At L’Oréal we really have the chance to invest a lot in research, it’s one of our big strengths.”
AI is also helping L’Oréal to innovate at pace. Historically, testing new formulations was a slow and expensive process. “To test 20 molecules on hair used to take several years,” says Viguier-Hovasse. “With AI, you can test a molecule in three months, so the cost of a mistake is considerably smaller now. It allows us to skim out the bad formulas much faster.” AI, she says, has given L’Oréal’s people the “luxury to fail.”
Employees also have a dramatic head start on competitors due to the sheer levels of data the organization has built over its long history. “We have accumulated a lot of data, not necessarily over the past 120 years, but over the past 40 years,” says Viguier-Hovasse. “We need AI to be able to read it and sort through it.”
“We have one KPI at L’Oréal. Gaining market share with new products. It’s very simple for everyone to follow”
Delphine Viguier-Hovasse, chief innovation and prospective officer at L’Oréal
This data has been meticulously cleaned and de-duped to a point where L’Oréal’s scientists now have a database of the skin color of women all over the world, information on how hair reacts to different environments, and what Viguier-Hovasse describes as an “atlas on wrinkles.”
“Last year, we ran 40,000 stability tests on our formulas. We’ve done 44,000 tests on people’s reaction to one skin cream,” says Viguier-Hovasse. “If you don’t have AI to organize all of this to show that a formula is safe, good, and efficient, you cannot manage at this scale.”
Having these vast quantities of data means L’Oréal can glean vital insights by looking backwards, but this becomes more powerful still when combined with a philosophy which has guided the company since its earliest days.
“Saisir ce qui commence” or “seize the moment” was a motto coined by the brand’s second CEO, François Dalle, who took over the company from L’Oréal’s founder in 1957.
This motto continues to underpin the company’s approach to innovation today. Viguier-Hovasse explains that her team uses this to describe their approach to trend detection, relying not only on forecasting reports or big data but also paying attention to what she terms “weak signals.”
“We very often listen to what one consumer is saying,” she says. “Everyone is actively listening to the market at L’Oréal. One of our strengths over the local or independent companies is that we are global—you might have a weak signal coming out of the U.S. but our teams notice the same in China and in Korea and it starts mushrooming.”
To illustrate, she uses the example of longevity. “We started working on longevity a long time ago, before the field was hot.” Her team noticed that, in the U.S., there began an obsession with the concept of living longer, characterized by the increasing popularity of hyperbaric oxygen therapy—where patients breathe in pure oxygen in a pressurized environment to promote cellular regeneration.
L’Oréal is developing its own longevity treatments at Episkin—its Lyon-based innovation center. Scientists at the center use reconstructed skin to test products, improve its understanding of skin biology, and accelerate innovation. The techniques and technologies it develops have also been used to help burn victims.
“We look to seize on trends early,” says Viguier-Hovasse. “It’s accelerated by AI but we work on them for several years before issuing anything publicly.”
Identifying these trends is only the first step. Translating them into meaningful commercial insights for the business requires a dedicated leader who can weave the various threads together.
Although the role of innovation officer is not a new one at L’Oréal, its recent elevation to the executive committee demonstrates the company’s continuing commitment to innovation as a strategic priority.
“Innovation is now really at the crossroads of tech, science, marketing, legal, safety, and sustainability,” says Viguier-Hovasse. “Being on the executive committee, I am involved in conversations across all functions. It’s a way to make sure I don’t have a blind spot on tech or sustainability.”
By bringing together ideas and capabilities from across the organization, she believes she can help L’Oréal innovate faster than its competitors. While the AI era may bring opportunities for startups, some of its greatest beneficiaries could be legacy companies with decades of accumulated knowledge.
L’Oréal’s approach suggests that winners may not necessarily be those who move the fastest, but those who combine long-term investment with institutional memory and the ability to learn. Innovation may no longer be about simply creating something new, but about making better use of the knowledge held within the organization.
Most colleges charge application fees of around $50 per application, but they can sometimes be as high as $90. This can really add up if you’re applying to 4-7 colleges. However, there are also plenty of free college applications as well – you just have to know where to look.
These free college applications can take several forms:
Here’s where you can find each of these free college applications or fee waivers.
There are a few ways to get a college application fee waiver. The most common starting point is to apply for the SAT or ACT fee waiver, which requires any of the following:
If you’re eligible for the SAT or ACT fee waiver, you’ll also be eligible for the following college application fee waivers:
You can also ask your college for a fee waiver, and they may provide you with a waiver code.
Some states also have their own fee waiver programs. While they all match the general criteria above, they may have different forms.
Many state college systems also offer free college applications by hosting “free college application week” or “free college application month”. While not all colleges in these states may offer it, most of the state college systems will.
There are roughly 170 colleges in the United States that offer free college applications (yes, they don’t even bother with an application fee -thank you!). Here’s the list by state:
None!
None!
None!
We work hard to keep this list updated. If you know a state or college that has a free college application week or month, please let us know!
If you’re not seeing your state and want to apply, it doesn’t hurt to reach out to the financial aid office first to see if they can provide you an application fee waiver.
Also, don’t forget to check out our guide to Student Loans And Financial Aid By State to see about any state-specific financial aid programs you may qualify for.
Editor: Colin Graves
The post Free College Applications: Colleges With No Fees Or Fee Waivers appeared first on The College Investor.
Spiking gasoline prices pushed Canadian inflation to the highest in over two years, while the breadth of price pressures narrowed and core measures were little changed.
I spent a decade on the Senate Intelligence Committee getting briefed on every way America could lose its technological edge to China. I heard all about stolen intellectual property, compromised supply chains, spies in our research labs, you name it. But in all those years, nobody ever warned me that the thing standing between America and leadership in artificial intelligence (AI) might just be a shortage of plumbers and electricians.
Yet that is where we find ourselves.
Last week Meta, the National Urban League, the Associated Builders and Contractors and CBRE announced America’s Workforce Academy, a $115 million program that will train Americans for the skilled trades at no cost, pay them while they learn, and guarantee every graduate a job building AI infrastructure – mostly data centers. The first sites open this year in Louisiana, Ohio, Indiana and Texas, and graduates leave with an industry-recognized credential that travels with them for the rest of their careers.
This is the largest private-sector commitment to the skilled trades with a job guarantee in American history. And it forces a conversation we should have started three years ago.
We’re about three years into this AI era, and we’ve spent most of that time treating it as a contest of software. It is not. America’s Workforce Academy is the clearest signal yet that the limiting factor in this race is not just algorithms or chips. It is people who can bend conduit and pull fiber.
Think it through: models run on chips, chips run in data centers, and data centers run on electricity moving across a grid built when I was a young man. Every link in that chain is built by welders, electricians, pipefitters, and linemen. China understands this. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is adding power and transmission capacity at a pace we haven’t approached in decades. Until two new reactors finally came online at Plant Vogtle in my home state of Georgia, America had gone some 30 years without building a nuclear reactor from scratch.
At the heart of the problem is a crippling labor shortage. The construction industry needs nearly 350,000 additional workers this year just to keep pace, the average American welder is now 55 years old, and by 2030 more than two million skilled-trade jobs could sit unfilled. This is a real problem and increasingly a strategic vulnerability.
There is a second lesson, and it cuts close to home for both political parties in Washington. Politicians have spent decades promising and trying to bring manufacturing back. President Trump, to his credit, is making some progress on this front. But times have changed, and we need to rethink what a skilled workforce looks like for the modern era.
The way I see it, AI infrastructure is the new manufacturing. This is what “Made in America” actually looks like in the 21st Century, and it isn’t an assembly line in 1965. It is a data center campus in rural Louisiana and a power plant in Toledo, Ohio. These are the new factory jobs, and they’re stable, well-paid, impossible to offshore, and open to folks without a college degree.
Finally, the most important thing about this program is not the dollar figure. It is the design. When a participant is accepted, a contractor issues a job offer on the spot, conditioned only on finishing the course. The job comes first and the training follows. This is what serious industrial policy looks like. But this time you have the private sector, not the government, taking the lead.
That private sector self-interest is why this program will succeed compared to other government-led efforts. It’s not designed to serve every possible need, but is instead tied to real demand and financial stakes will focus it on accountability and getting the right outcomes.
So what should government do? Speed up the permitting that holds energy projects hostage for years. Make sure trade credentials transfer across state lines. Extend Pell grants to short-term credential programs. And rather than answering with some sweeping federal initiative thrown together for a press release, Washington should find subtle ways to incentivize other companies to follow suit.
The part of South Georgia I called home got electric power because skilled hands strung wire across farm country plenty of people had written off. The same kind of hands will now build the infrastructure that decides whether this century and the internet of the future will be led by free people or by Beijing.
This is a bet on American workers. The rest of the private sector should be fast followers.
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The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.
Update 6/21/26: Some people are seeing Giftcards.com with Paze checkout on mobile. It should work for the 10x promo with Chase cards. (It’s not showing the $10 off banner, so might not be eligible for that promo.)
Update 6/16/26: Chase has excluded Newegg from the 10x promo from June 30, 2026 and onward.
Original Post 5/14/26:
Chase quietly added a new points earning benefit to their Sapphire Reserve, Sapphire Preferred, Freedom, Freedom Unlimited, and Freedom Flex cards:
Check the full list of retailers who currently allow Paze at checkout here. Some notable ones:
Paze is the big banks (behind Zelle) trying to create a digital wallet where you pay online using the cards/accounts already associated with those banks.
You can check if you card has the benefits by going to the Benefits & travel tab > Benefits to see which merchants your card has a multiplier.

Full Terms:
From 05/01/2026 to 12/31/2026, you will earn 10 additional points when you check out with Paze at a participating online merchant, on up to $1,500 in total combined purchases each month (thatˇs 10 additional points on top of the points you earn on these purchases in the card rewards program, up to 15,000 additional points each month). Purchases posted to your account with a transaction date during the offer period are eligible for this offer. Delays by the merchant could extend the transaction date beyond the offer period. Please allow up to 8 weeks after qualifying purchases post to your account for bonus points to post to your account. (“Purchases” do not include balance transfers, cash advances, cash-like transactions including, but not limited to: travelers checks, foreign currency, money orders, wire transfers, cryptocurrency, other similar digital or virtual currency and other similar transactions; lottery tickets, casino gaming chips, race track wagers, or similar offline and online betting transactions; person-to-person money transfers and account-funding transactions that transfer currency, any checks that access your account, interest, unauthorized or fraudulent charges, and fees of any kind, including an annual fee, if applicable.) To qualify for this bonus offer, account must be open and not in default at the time of fulfillment. This bonus offer is non-transferable and applies only to cardmembers who receive marketing communications for this offer. See your Rewards Program Agreement for more details. Paze℠: Existing Chase consumer customers with a digital profile (i.e., if you signed in to Chase Online℠ or the Chase Mobile® app) and have recently made an online purchase using your Chase debit or credit card are eligible for Paze℠ . If you open a new credit card or deposit account with a debit card and have a digital profile, your new card will be automatically added to your Paze℠ wallet. Paze℠ isn’t currently available to Chase customers under the age of 18, business customers, commercial customers, or credit card authorized users. Chase First Banking℠ debit cards, Chase High School Checking℠ debit cards, Chase business credit cards (such as Ink Business℠), and Private Bank credit and debit cards aren’t eligible. Message and data rates may apply. Paze℠ and the Paze℠ related marks are wholly owned by Early Warning Services, LLC and are used herein under license.
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Over the last six weeks, investors have been privy to the tail-end of earnings season, the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history, and have witnessed the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI +0.14%), S&P 500 (^GSPC +1.08%), and Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC +1.91%) rocket to record highs. But arguably, no event has been more meaningful than the changing of the guard at the Federal Reserve.
May 15 marked Jerome Powell’s final day as Fed chair, while May 22 was the official swearing-in ceremony of his successor, Kevin Warsh. Given that Warsh was a former Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) member (Feb. 24, 2006 – March 31, 2011), he brought some level of experience to the position.
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh at his first post-FOMC meeting press conference. Image source: Official Federal Reserve Photo.
What Wall Street didn’t know, entering his first FOMC meeting as head of the Fed on June 17, was how he planned to lead America’s foremost financial institution. It took just six words for Warsh to lay out his game plan and to potentially spoil Wall Street’s party.
As expected, Warsh and Powell have very different leadership styles. Powell’s FOMC statements were often lengthy, detailed, and contained forward-looking projections. Meanwhile, Warsh favors concise statements that avoid forward-looking guidance and stick solely to the facts.
One of Warsh’s statements during his press conference after the FOMC meeting perfectly sums up his current mission at the central bank:
Persistently high prices are a burden for the American people. But the recent past need not be prologue. I am pleased to report that members of the FOMC are unambiguous and unanimous. This committee will deliver price stability.
Despite the Fed upholding the dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability, these six words, “this committee will deliver price stability,” show that Warsh intends to focus on inflation.
“If Trump wants someone easy on inflation, he got the wrong guy in Kevin Warsh.”@AnnaEconomist pic.twitter.com/FGMfeSqHpU
— Daily Chartbook (@dailychartbook) January 31, 2026
This shouldn’t come as a huge surprise, given that Kevin Warsh exhibited monetary hawk tendencies during his previous tenure on the FOMC. Even as the unemployment rate soared during the financial crisis, Warsh cautioned against lowering interest rates for fear of sparking inflation. He’s consistently favored higher interest rates as a tool to suppress inflation.
Between February and May, trailing 12-month inflation has jumped from a modest 2.4% to a three-year high of 4.2%. Though the price stickiness of President Trump’s tariffs has played a small role in this increase, the lion’s share of this inflationary surge can be traced to the Iran war. The largest crude oil supply disruption in modern history has wreaked havoc on energy markets.
According to the quarterly filed Summary of Economic Projections, nine of 18 FOMC members — Warsh abstained from providing forward-looking guidance, and not all 18 are voting members — expect interest rates to increase by the end of this year.
At the start of the year, the bond market was pricing in 2 Fed rate CUTS.
After today’s FOMC meeting, it is now pricing in 2 Fed rate HIKES.
That’s a 1% swing in expectations.
The 2-Year Treasury yield entered the year at 3.48%. It ended the day at 4.21%. pic.twitter.com/zvVru7ValQ
— Charlie Bilello (@charliebilello) June 17, 2026
A rate hike would signify that the central bank is serious about stabilizing prices. However, it would also represent a dagger in the proverbial heart of a historically expensive stock market.
When 2026 began, investors were looking for two rate cuts this year and a continuation of this easing cycle into 2027. Now, the forecast potentially calls for two rate hikes. With debt helping to finance the artificial intelligence data center build-out, one of Wall Street’s key growth drivers is at risk of being upended by the Warsh’s and FOMC’s mission of delivering price stability.