
Netlist director Jun Cho sells $41,600 in company stock
Netlist director Jun Cho sells $41,600 in company stock
Ginnie Mae pauses delinquency rules amid FHA waterfall shift
Government mortgage-backed securities guarantor Ginnie Mae announced that it’s changing how it will be tracking delinquencies in monthly issuer reporting to account for impacts from a rule update.
Processing Content
To address the uptick in a large number of older loans entering trial payment plans as a result of the Federal Housing Administration’s adjustment to
“Ginnie Mae will temporarily exclude loans on TPPs when calculating delinquency ratios for compliance purposes,” the government guarantor said in an
The exclusion is effective for monthly reporting due April 2. Ginnie plans to provide at least 60 days notice before returning to standard delinquency reporting, and may consider changes to its threshold requirements.
FHA Commissioner Frank Cassidy had identified the post-pandemic waterfall change made in October as
Ginnie’s Global Market Analysis report recently examined the impact of the FHA change by examining changes in delinquency rates between October 2024 through September 2025, and comparing them to what’s happened since the new waterfall started.
Delinquency rates between October 2025 and February 2026 were little changed from the previous year for 30 and 60-day arrears inching up by less than 10 basis points while those that ran three months jumped by more than a percentage point.
The waterfall change required borrowers who previously could repeatedly request partial claim relief under pandemic rules without a TPP to now go through a trial payment plan if still distressed. Borrowers now also have limits on how often they can request relief.
‘Spray and Pray’ Is the New Go-To for Job Seekers (and Employers Are to Blame)
Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared on Monster.
Monster’s latest Job Application Behavior Report found that 48% of job seekers say they frequently or regularly apply to many roles quickly rather than focusing on a smaller number of opportunities that closely match their skills.
But this isn’t just a numbers game driven by impatience. The job application statistics from this report reveal deeper trends shaping how people search for work and what employers might do differently.
Key Findings
- 48% of job seekers say they apply broadly rather than selectively.
- 76% would apply more strategically if employers provided feedback.
- 25% say they now apply to any job that seems remotely possible.
- 45% say applicant tracking systems (ATS) make them more likely to send out many applications.
- More than half use Easy Apply/Quick Apply tools for at least some applications.
Why Candidates Spray and Pray
It’s easy to assume that people who apply to dozens of jobs aren’t being strategic, but the data suggests something else is at play.
Many job seekers are reacting to a lack of communication, not laziness. When employers offer little or no feedback, people often feel they need to cast a wider net just to get noticed. In fact, over half (51%) of job seekers say they’ve changed how they apply because they aren’t hearing back.
Without updates, interviews, or clear next steps, job seekers often assume silence means “no,” which pushes them to submit more applications just to stay in the game.
- 25% now apply to any job that seems even remotely possible.
- 26% say they apply to more jobs than they used to.
Technology Is Shaping Application Behavior
Applicant tracking systems were built to help employers sort resumes, but they’re also influencing candidate behavior.
Nearly half (45%) of job seekers say ATS technology makes them more likely to apply broadly:
- 21% assume many resumes are screened out automatically, so they apply to more roles.
- 22% rely on Quick Apply just to save time.
- 14% focus on keywords instead of job fit.
When candidates believe their resume might never be seen, they often choose quantity over quality.
What Do Job Seekers Really Want?
Improved communication. According to the data, 76% of job seekers say they’d apply more selectively if employers provided feedback during the hiring process. This suggests that many people aren’t opposed to targeted applications—they just don’t feel like they have enough information to be selective.
Clearer updates, status messages, or even brief feedback could help job seekers focus on roles that truly match their skills and reduce the need to apply everywhere.
The Bottom Line
The “spray and pray” trend isn’t just a buzzword; it reflects real job seeker behavior statistics in 2026, showing how candidates respond when the hiring process feels opaque. When candidates don’t hear back, they apply to more jobs. When systems feel like black boxes, speed and quantity become survival tactics.
For job seekers, the takeaway is simple: Focus on roles that truly fit your skills and experience. And remember that tailored applications often get better results than volume alone.
Methodology
The findings in this report are based on a survey conducted by Monster using the Pollfish platform among 1,006 U.S. job seekers on March 21, 2026.
Respondents answered a series of single-selection and multiple-choice questions about their current job search strategies, application behaviors, and experiences with employer communication during the hiring process.
The sample included job seekers across a range of industries, age groups, genders, and education levels to reflect the diversity of the U.S. workforce.
DoorDash/Stablecoins, Spot Bitcoin ETFs, And DeFi’s Reputation: Web3 Thoughts Of The Week
This week’s Web3 Thoughts of the Week tackles DoorDash and stablecoins, spot Bitcoin ETFs, and DeFi’s tattered image.
DoorDash stablecoin use
“It hasn’t ever been about DoorDash adopting crypto. It’s about the fact that money is finally starting to behave like the Internet.
“Stablecoins are just a better version of dollars. They move instantly, globally, and without all the friction we’ve just gotten used to over time. When companies like DoorDash start using them, it’s less a big announcement and more a signal that the underlying system is already changing.
“Stripe and others are basically turning payments into software. Once that happens, everything gets cheaper and faster by default.
“What’s underappreciated is that stablecoin reserves don’t just sit there. They can be put to work in short-term treasuries or other low-risk strategies, which means companies can earn yield passively on what used to be idle cash. Payments stop being a pure cost center and start looking more like a balance sheet asset.
“The bigger picture is that financial infrastructure is opening up again. Historically, when that happens, the incumbents lose their grip and users get a better deal.”
– Sid Sridhar, founder and CEO of BIMA Labs
“DoorDash’s move to integrate stablecoin payouts through Stripe-backed Tempo represents a notable shift in how global marketplaces handle payments. By replacing fragmented regional rails with blockchain-based settlement, DoorDash is effectively bypassing legacy banking infrastructure that has long introduced delays, fees, and currency friction.
“This development also demonstrates how stablecoins are rapidly evolving from niche crypto tools into practical financial infrastructure. For gig workers and cross-border participants, faster and more consistent payouts could materially improve liquidity and earnings visibility. More broadly, it underscores a growing trend: large-scale platforms are beginning to treat blockchain not as an experiment, but as a more efficient alternative to traditional financial systems.”
– Joshua Kim, CEO and founder of DonaFi
“DoorDash moving to integrate stablecoin payouts feels like a practical inflection point around real infrastructure replacing inefficient payment rails. For the broader market, this kind of adoption validates stablecoins as a utility layer, not just a trading instrument. When platforms at this scale normalize blockchain-based payouts, it quietly accelerates mainstream adoption without needing a major narrative shift.”
– Nathaniel Szerezla, chief growth officer of Naoris Protocol
Spot Bitcoin ETFs
“For us, the headline is not that last week’s inflows were big, it’s what they happened against. Close to $1B into spot BTC ETFs in a week where the US seized an Iranian vessel, oil ripped 6%, and the ceasefire is set to expire Wednesday.
“In prior cycles those events would put BTC down 10-15%; instead it held $75K and closed the week higher. Two things explain why institutions kept buying through that tape.
“The tail bounds are now known. After eight weeks of ceasefire declarations, violations, and naval blockades, the extremes are legible rather than unbounded. Allocators can size against a known distribution, which is different from optimism and more durable, and it has freed up allocation back into risk assets.
“The calendar sets up favorably. Midterm year, fiscal still warm, the Fed under visible pressure on its inflation framework. Risk assets are positioned for performance into year-end, and bitcoin as a reserve-adjacent trade fits cleanly into that setup.
“We, alike most, are monitoring what happens Wednesday as the ceasefire was slated to expire.”
– Jonathan Yark, head of Quant Trading at Acheron Trading
DeFi is running out of time to fix its image
“After a cluster of hacks and $9 billion of outflows, DeFi is facing another existential crisis. But this time, it’s competing directly with major institutions entering this space and it has little to offer in return for the risk. With rates available on stablecoins barely above 5%, there are other ways for investors to eke out such returns without the risk of losing all of their funds.
“The problem is that operators in the DeFi space are still acting as if this is a tech experiment, but it’s not. The technology works and offers genuine benefits. What’s still broken is the security culture.
“Bridges have been notorious for hacks for years, yet they’re still being used as an exploit vector. At this point, it’s less about innovation and more about failure to prioritize basic safeguards.
“Any serious institution looking at DeFi right now sees an amateur operation. This is a major problem for an industry that wants to be taken seriously. The window to fix DeFi’s image is closing quickly, and taking security seriously is where it starts. We’re no longer in testnet, and the traditional financial world doesn’t have the patience for incompetence.”
– Nic Puckrin, macro analyst and co-founder of Coin Bureau
National Institute of Standards and Technology and post-quantum security
“The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s draft SP 800-230 indicates that the world of post-quantum security will be dynamic well into the future. It makes clear that the future of cryptography isn’t about selecting a single ‘quantum-safe’ algorithm, but about applying different levels of security based on risk, context, and time horizon.
“More specifically, the NIST SP 800-230 draft proposes six new variants to the FIPS-205 (SPHINCS+) post-quantum algorithm standard; this adds to the 15 variants already standardized as DILITHIUM and SPHINCS+, making a total of 18 algo variants.
“If you add the current FALCON digital signature PQC algo they are reviewing, by next year, we may be looking at 20 digital signature variants in about 24 months’ time. And, that’s just the US PQC standards.
“Much of the blockchain industry is still approaching the post quantum transition as a one-time upgrade. But quantum security isn’t a one-and-done fix—it’s a logistical challenge that requires flexibility at the transaction level, rather than rigidity at the protocol layer.
“At BOLTS Technologies, we built QFlex as a cryptographic logistics layer—an architecture designed to bring NIST’s multi-level framework into blockchain environments without requiring protocol-level changes. With QFlex, control over security is placed in the hands of asset holders, allowing them to select the level of security appropriate for each transaction.
“A low-risk transfer can use lightweight cryptography, while a high-value institutional settlement can invoke stronger post-quantum protections. In our model, security aligns with risk in real time. Importantly, this approach allows security to evolve independently of the underlying blockchain infrastructure—without relying on coordinated network upgrades.”
– Yoon Auh, founder of BOLTS Technologies
how I plan to make millions investing in crypto 2026 (again)
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0:56 Table of Contents
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33:38 Words of Wisdom (Bible Verse of the day)
34:21 Outro
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Data centers are finding a surprising way to deploy batteries
The scramble to find enough power for artificial intelligence has data center operators looking for any solution. An unexpected one taking root pairs batteries — long seen as a key to adding more renewables — with fossil fuels.
BloombergNEF has tracked 4.9 gigawatts of energy storage announcements that are co-located with on-site fossil fuel generation at data centers. That’s about 32% of announced global on-site data center battery capacity. The sites include some of the largest AI data center complexes under development, such as Elon Musk’s Colossus supercomputer in Memphis, Tennessee, and the combo has become so popular that companies such as Caterpillar Inc. and GE Vernova Inc. have announced products or partnerships pairing energy storage with gas generation.
Batteries are a linchpin for unlocking solar and wind energy’s full potential by soaking up excess green energy and then discharging it when the wind isn’t blowing or the sun isn’t shining. However, the steep drop in battery costs is now allowing energy-storage technology to be deployed in conjunction with natural gas to provide more reliable power for data centers.
While gas can provide round-the-clock power, not all plants work 24/7. For many behind-the-meter facilities, data centers are choosing gas turbines that run for shorter periods and don’t ramp up quickly enough to meet computing needs. That has hyperscalers turning to batteries, which can rapidly discharge power, to fill these gaps. The batteries also help prevent damage to gas turbines that aren’t designed to be used for frequent ramping cycles.
“I assumed batteries would be a tool for decarbonization,” said Michael Thomas, founder of clean energy research firm Cleanview who has also been tracking the rise of energy storage paired with gas. “What we are learning in this new AI era is that they can also be used as a tool for fossil fuel power because their technological advantages make it possible to build and operate an off-grid power plant.”
While data centers now face an average of four years to get power from the grid, they are turning to gas generators paired with energy storage as a bridge source of energy, said Allison Weis, Wood Mackenzie’s global head of energy storage. As long interconnection queues delay requests for utility-connected power, data center developers are finding it faster to bring their own generation.
Data centers also have sharp demand spikes driven by computing-intensive tasks, such as training models. Batteries paired with gas can help provide power rapidly enough to ensure smooth operations. Energy storage is projected to support 9.8 gigawatt-hours of gas generation at data centers through 2030, according to BNEF.
Some of the largest US data center projects are deploying batteries alongside gas generators. At xAI’s Colossus facility, rows of Tesla Inc. Megapacks are being installed next to gas turbines as part of a 1.2 gigawatt off-grid power plant that will supply the massive data center. In West Texas, Pacifico Energy’s GW Ranch off-grid data center will have 1.8 gigawatts of battery storage installed next to 7.65 gigawatts of gas-fired power generation.
Williams Cos., a natural gas pipeline operator, plans to install Tesla batteries along with natural gas-fueled power plants its building for several data center projects. “Batteries really help support the turbines and give us the 99.999% reliability,” said Executive Vice President Rob Wingo at the S&P Global Power Markets Conference in Las Vegas last week.
Using natural gas will add more planet-warming emissions into the atmosphere while also contributing to local air pollution. The West Texas project recently received the largest air pollution permit ever granted in the US, while Musk’s Memphis project has faced multiple lawsuits arguing the gas turbines are worsening air quality in historically Black communities.
Pacifico Energy and xAI didn’t respond to requests for comment on the environmental impact of their projects. A Williams spokesperson touted the use of “modern, high‑efficiency natural‑gas turbines with advanced emissions controls and continuous monitoring” at its off-grid sites. “Pairing gas generation with batteries improves how those generators operate — smoothing load swings and reducing start‑ups and ramping, which are the most emissions‑intensive conditions,” the spokesperson wrote.
Utilities are also building more energy storage facilities on the grid next to power plants “to help maximize the megawatts” and support data center load growth, said Noah Roberts, executive director of the US Energy Storage Coalition. Large batteries help utilities make the most of power that would otherwise be wasted and also help meet power demand while also lowering costs, he said.
Roberts pointed to the example of NIPSCO Generation, a utility in northern Indiana that is building two 1.3 gigawatt gas-fired power plants and an energy storage system with 400 megawatts of capacity to serve planned Amazon data centers.
And in Michigan, utility DTE Electric Co. has plans to build six energy storage systems to complement a 1.4 gigawatt data center for Oracle Corp. Doing so will help the utility boost the capacity of all generating resources by 25%, he said. Roberts called that project “a great example of where energy storage is completely agnostic to the type of energy that is providing electrons to the grid.”
Michigan regulators recently approved that project despite a challenge from the state’s attorney general over customer cost concerns.
Fluence Energy Inc., a global energy storage provider, is in talks with large natural gas companies to supply batteries that can help get data centers up and running before turbines arrive, said Chief Growth Officer Jeff Monday.
“We are seeing massive demand coming out of the hyperscalers and data center operators,” Monday said, noting that projects pairing batteries with gas generation are part of the fastest-growing part of the company’s energy storage pipeline.
Coupling batteries with natural gas also promises to extend the life and usefulness of fossil fuel plants. That is setting batteries up for a dual role as an enabler to putting more green energy on the grid and delaying the phase-out of fossil fuels.
“There is nothing about batteries that are inherently clean,” said Thomas. “Batteries are just a technology.”
From 75,000 AI tracks hitting Deezer daily to UMG’s copyright lawsuit against Quince… it’s MBW’s weekly round-up
This week, Deezer revealed that 75,000 AI-generated tracks are now flooding the platform every day – representing 44% of all new music uploaded to the streamer daily.
Meanwhile, MBW examined a pair of UMG-linked patent filings that lay out a blueprint for AI-powered copyright enforcement – including a bot that could send its own cease-and-desist letters.
Elsewhere, a Chord Music Partners-linked ABS vehicle is planning a $500 million deal, backed by an $830 million catalog featuring rights from Suicideboys, Morgan Wallen, and Ryan Tedder.
Also this week, Universal Music Group and Concord Music Group sued $10 billion-valued fashion startup Quince over alleged “rampant and brazen” copyright infringement in TikTok posts featuring music from Sabrina Carpenter, Billie Eilish, and more.
Plus, UK-based Bella Figura Music acquired the publishing catalog of Grammy and Academy Award-winning producer Paul Epworth, including his work with Adele, Florence + The Machine, and more.
Here are some of the biggest headlines from the past few days…
1. 75,000 AI-GENERATED TRACKS NOW FLOOD DEEZER DAILY, REPRESENTING 44% OF ALL NEW MUSIC UPLOADED TO THE PLATFORM, SAYS STREAMER
The volume of fully AI-generated music being uploaded to Deezer has surged again – with the Paris-headquartered streaming service now receiving nearly 75,000 synthetic tracks every day.
That’s more than 2 million AI-generated tracks hitting the platform each month, according to the company, and it means AI-made music now accounts for 44% of all new tracks delivered to Deezer daily.
The new figures, revealed by Deezer on Monday (April 20), mark a sharp escalation from the 60,000 tracks per day the company reported in January, when synthetic content represented 39% of daily deliveries.
It also marks a significant jump from the 50,000 AI tracks Deezer was receiving per day in November, 30,000 in September, and just 10,000 when it launched its patent-pending AI detection tool in January 2025… (MBW)
2. HOW WILL THE MAJOR LABELS OVERCOME THE COPYRIGHT THREAT FROM AI MUSIC? BY TURNING TO THE MOST POWERFUL WEAPON AVAILABLE: AI ITSELF.
Allow us to make a prediction.
In five years, the major music companies will not only be scouring the web for AI infringement, they will also be issuing legal letters directly to the perpetrators…
Sound far-fetched? It isn’t. It’s sitting inside a pair of patent applications published by the US Patent and Trademark Office on February 12, 2026.
MBW unearthed the filings while researching our recent story on the patent portfolio being built by Music IP Holdings, the entity formed last year through Universal Music Group‘s partnership with IP asset management firm Liquidax Capital… (MBW)
3. CHORD MUSIC-LINKED ABS VEHICLE PLANS $500M DEAL, BACKED BY $830M CATALOG LED BY SUICIDEBOYS, MORGAN WALLEN, AND RYAN TEDDER RIGHTS
A new issuing vehicle linked to Universal Music Group-backed investment platform Chord Music Partners is set to raise $500 million in debt through an Asset-Backed Securitization (ABS) transaction.
That’s according to a pre-sale report published by Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA) on April 16, which assigns a preliminary A (sf) rating to the $500 million Series 2026-1 Notes to be issued by Canon Music Issuer Trust.
Canon is a newly established vehicle that sits beneath the broader Chord platform, with its collateral pool representing a specific portion of Chord’s assets.
The notes are collateralized by royalties from a catalog of more than 3,750 works from artists and songwriters, including Suicideboys, Morgan Wallen, Ryan Tedder, Diplo, and Twenty One Pilots… (MBW)
4. UMG SUES $10B-VALUED FASHION BRAND QUINCE FOR ‘RAMPANT AND BRAZEN INFRINGEMENT’ IN TIKTOK POSTS
Universal Music Group and Concord Music Group have filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against Quince, the direct-to-consumer fashion startup that, according to the complaint, has “found its success by eliminating ‘middlemen’ usually used by traditional retailers.”
Starting in fashion, the company has since expanded into luggage, bedding, and other product categories. From its inception, “social media has been Quince’s key advertising and promotional tool,” the complaint states, noting that the company’s growth has been attributed specifically to its presence on platforms including TikTok and Instagram. Quince’s Instagram account alone has 1 million followers.
The company raised a $500 million Series E in March at a $10.1 billion valuation — more than double the $4.5 billion valuation it achieved in its Series D less than a year earlier… (MBW)
5. BELLA FIGURA MUSIC ACQUIRES PAUL EPWORTH PUBLISHING CATALOG, INCLUDING WORK WITH ADELE, FLORENCE + THE MACHINE AND MORE
UK-based music rights company Bella Figura Music has acquired the publishing catalog of Grammy, Academy Award, and Golden Globe-winning producer and songwriter Paul Epworth.
Founded by former BMG UK President Alexi Cory-Smith in 2022, Bella Figura Music says it has more than $200 million in music rights under ownership and management.
The company’s latest acquisition covers Epworth’s publishing catalog and producer income, including some of his co-writes and productions on Adele‘s 21 album, such as Rolling in the Deep, and the Academy Award and Golden Globe-winning Skyfall, which he co-wrote with Adele.
The deal also covers Epworth’s work with Florence + The Machine across Lungs and Ceremonials, and collaborations with Rihanna, Arlo Parks, Glass Animals, Paul McCartney, and many more… (MBW)
Partner message: MBW’s Weekly Round-up is supported by BMI, the global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music. Find out more about BMI here. Music Business Worldwide
Geopolitical Risk and Portfolio Oversight
We used LCTD for this illustration because it offers:
- A diversified, developed market equity portfolio
- Sector weights broadly similar to global ex US benchmarks
- A modest tilt towards lower carbon and transition ready companies
The five largest weights are HSBC at 1.9% (Banks), AML at 1.7% (Semiconductors), AstraZeneca at 1.7% (Pharma), Iberdrola at 1.4% (Utilities) and Allianz at 1.3% (Insurance). All issuer-level references that follow use these real names and weights, drawn directly from the public holdings file.
Industry Breakdown and Vulnerability
Each security is mapped to one of 12 Fed industries (e.g., machinery, computers, depository institutions). For each industry we compute:
- Portfolio weight (%)
- Estimated GPR beta (sensitivity to the GPR factor)
- Impact score for the June 23 spike, translated into basis points of expected effect on the portfolio’s return for that event
Based on the sign of the impact score and economic reasoning, industries are classified as:
- Vulnerable (expected to be hurt by the shock), or
- Resilient (expected to benefit or provide ballast).
For the June 23 spike and the LCTD portfolio, the overlay estimates:
- Total negative impact: ≈ 33.8 bps
- Total positive impact: ≈ +15.3 bps
- Net GPR impact: ≈ 18.4 bps
In other words, conditional on a shock of this severity, the portfolio is tilted modestly toward GPR-sensitive industries, with an expected drag of roughly 18 basis points compared with a GPR-neutral configuration.
The vulnerability composition is summarized as:
- 39% of portfolio weight in vulnerable industries
- 61% in non-vulnerable or resilient industries
- five of 12 industries classified as vulnerable by the model
Exhibit 3: Industry-Level GPR Impact for the June 23, 2025, Spike
Home sellers’ profits slide as rates bite and cash buyers retreat
North Port‑Sarasota fell from 57.9% to 35.5%. In Arizona, Prescott’s margin eased from 69.4% to 47.1%.
At the same time, Flint, MI saw margins climb from 65.5% to 81.8%, Evansville, IN from 40.9% to 53.5%, Lansing, MI from 48% to 57.8%, Canton, OH from 55.5% to 60.2% and Syracuse, NY from 67.6% to 72%.
In major markets, margins stayed widest in San Jose, Hartford, Providence, Rochester and Buffalo, all above 70%. They were thinnest in New Orleans, San Antonio, Houston, Dallas and Austin, where returns ranged from 14% to 27.4%, underscoring the pressure in large Texas metros.
The broader deal mix also shifted. Lender‑owned sales inched up to 1.6% of transactions nationwide, while all‑cash deals fell year‑over‑year to 41.7% of sales, with the highest cash shares in parts of Hawaii, Georgia, Florida and New York.
Institutional investors bought 6.6% of homes, down from a year earlier, and FHA‑backed purchases slid to 7.4%, the lowest in nearly four years.
Earn 15,000 Points with Wyndham’s New Extended Stay Promotion
Wyndham’s New Extended Stay Promotion
Wyndham Rewards has launched a new incentive for extended stays. Travelers who stay 5+ consecutive nights at Hawthorn Extended Stay or WaterWalk properties will earn 15,000 bonus points. Check out the details below.
Offer Details
For a limited time, stay five or more consecutive nights at WaterWalk Extended Stay by Wyndham or Hawthorn Extended Stay by Wyndham hotels and earn 15,000 Wyndham Rewards bonus points.
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Booking Window: Now through June 30, 2026.
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Travel Window: Stays completed by September 30, 2026.
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Brands: Valid at Hawthorn Extended Stay and WaterWalk (Note: ECHO properties are excluded).
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Guru’s Wrap-up
If you’re planning a stay at one of these properties, then the extra 15,000 should be a nice bonus. You must stay at least five or more consecutive nights.
