Companies that successfully integrate AI will prioritize leading human-centric transformation.
Companies that successfully integrate AI will prioritize leading human-centric transformation.
Nubank’s (NYSE: NU) latest milestones highlight its accelerating momentum across Latin American markets, blending customer growth with new payment technology that aims to put users in control of their finances. In Mexico, the digital bank has now surpassed 15 million customers, firmly establishing itself among the nation’s three largest financial institutions by user base. This landmark comes after the company tripled its scale in only two years, welcoming roughly 12,000 new account holders each day and posting 36 percent year-over-year expansion—outpacing even its record-breaking Brazilian origins.
Daniel Rojas, Nu Mexico’s Chief Growth Officer, credited the milestone to the millions of Mexicans who have embraced the platform.
“In just seven years we have earned a level of trust that once required decades,” he noted, emphasizing the bank’s promise to keep innovating so customers retain full command of their money.
The expansion reaches far beyond big cities. Nu’s footprint now rivals the third-largest fan base in Mexico’s top soccer league, with especially strong adoption in Mexico City, Quintana Roo, Nuevo León, Tabasco, and Baja California Sur.
By operating entirely through a 24/7 digital platform without physical branches, the bank handles more than 30,000 customer requests daily while preserving a personal touch.
This model fuels a self-reinforcing cycle: larger user numbers generate richer data, which sharpens risk models, lowers costs, and lets the company reinvest in better rates and smoother experiences.
The results speak volumes—credit balances rose 61 percent and deposits climbed 21 percent in the past year alone, making Nu the go-to choice for both saving and borrowing.
At the same time, Nubank is redefining everyday transactions in Brazil with a major upgrade to contactless payments.
The new “Pay by Tap” feature, now rolling out to Android users with NFC capability, lets customers complete purchases by simply tapping their phone at any compatible terminal—no physical card required.
What sets it apart is the seamless integration of three payment methods into one fluid action: instant Pix transfers, Pix installments stretching up to 12 months, debit, or credit.
Users can access the tool directly from the “My Cards” or Pix sections of the app; setup happens automatically by creating a secure virtual card behind the scenes. A tap at checkout then handles everything, while device biometrics or passwords add an extra layer of protection.
Tokenization ensures merchants never see actual card details, sharply reducing fraud risk and eliminating the need to carry plastic.
Fausto Ibarra, Vice President of Digital Ecosystem at Nubank, explained the thinking behind the update: the goal is to collapse every payment option into the simplest possible flow, especially for the millions who rely on Pix daily.
Customers can even set the bank as their default wallet or pin a shortcut to their home screen for instant access.
The feature will continue expanding gradually, but early adopters already report faster checkouts and greater peace of mind. Together, these developments paint a clear picture of Nubank’s business strategy, which focuses on scale in new markets paired with streamlining digital banking.
Nine months ago, Sam Brown was out of a job. The reason, he’ll tell you without a sense of bitterness, was artificial intelligence. The company he’d spent years building a career inside decided it needed fewer people, and he was one of them.
“I got laid off nine months ago, and it was AI-related,” said Brown, 48, with a career that stretches back to 2000, aside from a few months as a ball boy for the Denver Nuggets in his youth. “I had to sit there and say, ‘This is a blessing, because I get a head start on everyone else that’s going to have to go through this in a little while.’”
He didn’t spend long feeling sorry for himself. Instead, Brown joined a three-person startup with no venture funding, no engineering team, and no traditional software infrastructure. What they did have were 12 AI agents.
Fathom AI, an Austin-based sales enablement platform built specifically for the medical aesthetics industry, launched in early 2026. Within 12 weeks, it achieved an estimated annual recurring revenue of $300,000, gross margins north of 90%, and operating costs under 10% of revenue, according to records reviewed by Fortune. And the total capital invested to start the company was just $300.
“We launched 2.5 months ago, and right now, we have $300,000 in ARR,” said Brown, who manages the three-person company’s finances as the president of Fathom AI.
The company has taken no outside funding. When venture capitalists came calling, Fathom got all the way to the finish line on a term sheet and walked away—not because the deal was bad, but because they genuinely couldn’t figure out what they’d spend the money on.
“The VC said, ‘You’re going to need an engineering team of this size, a customer success team of this size,’” Brown recalled, adding that when he and Fathom’s founder and CEO Ben Hooten walked out of the meeting, they basically said, “We’re not going to need that.”
courtesy of Fathom AI
By year-end, Fathom projects $5 million in ARR across 15 to 18 enterprise customers. The team is structured as a partnership specifically to distribute profits now, a deliberate decision to get paid rather than hold out for a distant exit in a market none of them can predict.
Brown explained to Fortune that the partnership is essentially like collecting a paycheck. “We’d rather take the money now and then, there’s not a lot to reinvest in, because we don’t have huge costs.”
“Hell,” added Dan Crump, the senior member of the trio, at 56 years old, “we got paid today, as a matter of fact. We’re cash-flow positive.”
Kirk Gunhus has been in the medical aesthetics industry for 30 years. He has gray hair and, by his own cheerful admission, is “not a technology guy.” He wasn’t interested when Fathom AI first pitched him on switching vendors.
The origin story starts with a frustrated rant. The CEO, Hooten, then still a sales rep, was sitting in one of Gunhus’ meetings when Gunhus, a couple of beers in, unloaded on the state of sales technology. “You’ve got all this stuff here, and none of it really works well,” Gunhus said. “Someone needs to just put it all together, so when I walk into a zip code, I know exactly what accounts are perfect for us to go after.”
He forgot about his rant immediately, but Hooten didn’t. Gunhus said he got a call the very next weekend from Hooten, who said he put a plan together.
Gunhus agreed to a pilot with six sales reps. The company, he said, couldn’t afford the subscription, but every one of those six reps paid individually to work with Fathom AI. That’s “because it works,” Gunhus said. “It’s making them so much money.”
The results bore him out. In all of 2024, one of Gunhus’ consulting clients, Tiger Aesthetics, did not open a single net new account. Within one quarter of deploying Fathom, he said they had opened 225. “The bosses over at Tiger are like, ‘[Give them] whatever they want.’ They just saved a ton of money.”
The medical aesthetics industry is a multibillion-dollar world of plastic surgeons, dermatologists, med spas, and device manufacturers and, according to Fathom AI and their clientele, it’s ripe for disruption. Sales have historically been entirely manual. Reps cold-called, drove routes blind, and relied on memory and intuition to figure out who to see and when.
Fathom replaces all of that. A rep enters a zip code, and the platform surfaces every nearby account that fits their product profile, ranked by fit. It layers in real-time Google search data so a rep can walk into a doctor’s office and say, with specificity, what that physician’s patients are searching for. It also serves as a live training tool: new hires roleplay sales scenarios against an AI that corrects their technique in real time, flagging wrong answers and asking follow-up questions.
Hooten, the CEO and the junior member of the group at 39, explained to Fortune that his 12 agent co-workers hold real operational roles—one runs customer success for a national sales force; another wakes up every two hours to scan the competitive landscape and file a briefing.
His background was in sales, not software, Hooten explained, and so he looks at the AI agent era as a chance to build things that he never had the skills to, before. When a colleague told him that he couldn’t build an automated sales tool that actually worked, he built it anyway, and on his first day using it in the field, he closed $440,000 in a single day.
Gunhus said he had firsthand experience with the customer service bot: a Tiger Aesthetics rep called with a support issue, was walked through the solution by what they believed was Hooten on the line, and had no idea they’d been talking to an AI. “The rep has no idea what’s going on, literally.”

courtesy of Fathom AI
Crump, the senior member of the group, at 56 years, is a former Marine with decades in tech sales experience at companies including GE and IBM. He has watched every major tech cycle from the early internet to the smartphone era. He recalled one morning about 25 years ago visiting Enron, when he was working as a sales rep for HP, the exact time when the famous accounting fraud was going belly-up. “The elevator door opened, and a lady had a plant and a Herman Miller chair, and she was rolling it out of there, cussing,” Crump recalled. “I go up, and my buddy says, ‘Hey, somebody just tried to throw a chair through the window.’” He’d been on the phone with his manager minutes earlier to confirm Enron owed his company $27 million—and that it had cleared the Friday before. “So I was like, ‘Okay, thank God we’ll get paid,’” he said. “I’ve seen a lot of stuff.”
In this industry, he added, sometimes tech sales is “just uninspiring.” With Fathom, he said he feels like they’re making “something that makes a difference.”
Fathom isn’t the only small team rewriting the economics of what a company can be. Half a continent away, in Toronto, Yatharth Sejpal is running a strikingly similar experiment, and he’s 23 years old.
Sejpal is the CEO of KNOWIDEA, a predictive intelligence platform that advises executives on decision-making. He has no computer science background—”never written a line of code in my life,” he said—but within six months of launching he said he has closed $500,000 in ARR with six enterprise clients spanning energy, manufacturing, professional services, and financial services. He co-founded the firm with Brian Zhengyu Li, who is completing a PhD and previously worked as an applied scientist intern at Amazon Web Services.

Like Fathom, KNOWIDEA is a three-person operation. And like Fathom, Sejpal passed on early VC money. “If I wanted to exit, I would have taken VC money really quickly,” he said. He turned down a spot in Antler, one of the world’s largest startup accelerators, because he didn’t want to dilute equity before proving his model. Instead, he took a strategic investment check, from a consulting firm, not a venture fund, at a $15 million valuation.
His pitch to enterprise clients is almost a philosophy as much as a product. “Leaders need clarity,” Sejpal told Fortune from a hotel room (he said he spends nearly all his time traveling). “That’s it. There is no other reason, a dashboard, a report, all of it is just to bloody get clarity.” His platform ingests decentralized data and produces ranked, risk-weighted insights for C-suite decision-makers.
Crucially, Sejpal is careful about what his platform won’t do. On the question of AI hallucinations, a persistent concern among executives considering high-stakes AI tools, he draws a clear line. “At the core of decision-making is clarity plus judgment,” he said. “Our job is to give clarity. Your job is to make the judgment.” His system flags predictions that deviate dramatically from market norms and filters them out before they reach a client.
Sejpal, who grew up in India and moved to Canada to attend the University of Waterloo, spent years inside some of the largest people consulting firms in the world before deciding the industry was ripe to be disrupted. His vision of where the three-person company model leads is more radical than his current headcount suggests. He doesn’t think three-person teams are the endgame: he thinks they represent the beginning of a total restructuring of how work gets organized.
“I don’t want to ever hire an account executive or a customer success manager,” he said. “The only two roles that we want to hire are FDEs and FDCs, forward deployed engineers and forward deployed consultants.” One person who understands what data to select, and one who understands what context to apply. “Everything else,” he said, “can be automated using artificial intelligence.”
That logic extends to his larger argument about the enterprise. Take 20-person project teams, for example: “I think that is going to slim down to a two-person team. FDC plus FDE can do all of the work, and then one supervisor who can overlook. That’s it. It’s as non-complicated as that.”

It hasn’t been as lucrative for Sejpal as it has for the Fathom co-founders, but he’s not concerned about that yet. His savings dwindled for months until the spring of 2026, when he finally started drawing a salary, but he cheerfully said that his excitement about what he’s doing is more than enough for him. “If I if I wanted to make money, there are much simpler, less strenuous, mentally and body-exhausting tasks that I can do. I’m worried every single night, I have night sweats thinking how I’ll make salary for my employees, how I’ll grow my team and 20 other headaches. I could have made much more money without having a single of those stress.”
Brown was careful to say that the Fathom story isn’t primarily about Fathom. It’s about what Fathom represents: the first wave of a much larger shift in who gets to build a software company and who has the advantage doing it. In fact, thanks to AI, businesses have exploded in recent years, and it looks like there’s no chance of stopping what innovations can come next, according to financial firm Apollo.
The VC model was built around the assumption that you needed massive capital to build technology: engineering teams, customer success departments, sales headcount. That assumption is now structurally broken. A platform that once required $10 million in seed funding to staff can be assembled by three experienced operators and a suite of AI agents for the cost of a dinner out.
That changes who wins. Gunhus, for his part, said he’s not interested in launching his own three-person AI startup. “I’ve done all that, I don’t want to go through all that mess again.” But he’s watching carefully and telling everyone he knows to pay attention to the AI agent revolution. “If you don’t use it,” he said, “it’s gonna run you over anyway.”
That’s more or less the same conclusion Sam reached nine months ago, sitting with a pink slip and a decision to make about what came next. He doesn’t sound like a man who was laid off. He sounds like a man who got lucky.
“Everyone’s going to have to go through this to some extent,” Sam said. “I just think I got to go through it a little earlier than most.”
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Key Points
The U.S. Department of Education is moving forward with a proposed rule that would strip federal student loan eligibility from college programs that consistently fail to boost graduates’ earnings above what they’d make without the degree.
The 394-page Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (PDF File) represents the final piece of the Trump Administration’s overhaul of student aid under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA).
The proposal arrives as the federal student loan portfolio approaches $1.7 trillion, and it would for the first time apply a uniform earnings accountability standard to programs at every type of institution: public universities, private nonprofits, and for-profit colleges.
“The Trump Administration’s proposed accountability framework is grounded in common sense: if postsecondary education programs do not leave graduates better off, taxpayers should not subsidize them,” said Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent in a statement.
According to a recent analysis by Preston Cooper at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), 95% of all programs would pass this new test.

For undergraduate programs, the Department compares the median earnings of graduates (measured four years after completion) against the median earnings of working adults aged 25-34 with only a high school diploma in the state where the school is located. If fewer than 50% of students come from that state, national data is used instead.
For graduate programs, the comparison group shifts to working adults aged 25-34 with only a bachelor’s degree. The earnings threshold is the lowest of three benchmarks:
The earnings data comes from the IRS: wages, self-employment income, and other earned income as reported on tax returns.
Programs need at least 30 completers (expandable through cohort aggregation) and at least 16 matched earnings records for the test to be calculated. A program passes if its median graduate earnings equal or exceed the threshold. It fails if earnings fall below it.

A program is classified as a “low-earning outcome program” if it fails the earnings premium test in two out of any three consecutive years. Once classified, the program loses eligibility for federal Direct Loans but not necessarily Pell Grants or other Title IV aid, at least initially.
The period of ineligibility is two years. After that period, a school can seek to re-establish the program’s eligibility but only if the program has not continued to fail the earnings test in either of the two most recent award years.
Schools are also blocked from gaming the system by shutting down a failing program and restarting a nearly identical one. Under the proposed rule, an institution cannot establish Direct Loan eligibility for any program sharing the same 4-digit CIP code and overlapping occupational classification (SOC) codes as a program that lost eligibility.
There is one other option for schools: the “orderly program closure” option. If a program fails the earnings test in a single year but hasn’t yet been classified as a low-earning outcome program, the school can voluntarily agree to wind down the program over the lesser of three years or the program’s full-time duration. During that time, the program keeps Direct Loan access so current students can finish, but the school must stop admitting new students immediately and inform students of their options to transfer.
While individual programs initially lose only Direct Loan access, the rule includes a broader institutional trigger. If more than half of a school’s Title IV students or more than half of its Title IV funding comes from low-earning outcome programs in two out of three consecutive years, the Department would place the institution on provisional status and all of its low-earning outcome programs would lose eligibility for all Title IV aid, including Pell Grants.
This provision is designed to address situations where failing programs aren’t isolated issues but reflect a systemic problem at the institution. In practice, this means that students at affected schools could lose access not just to federal loans but to grant aid as well.
Schools are required to warn both prospective and currently enrolled students when a program is at risk of losing Direct Loan eligibility. These warnings must be updated if a student re-enrolls more than 12 months after receiving a previous warning.
The rule also adds new Pell Grant disclosure requirements. Institutions must inform Pell-eligible students of their remaining lifetime Pell Grant eligibility and explain that any Pell funds used in a failing program still count against that lifetime limit.
The Department is also expanding its Student Tuition and Transparency System (STATS), which will require institutions to report program-level data including tuition, fees, and financial aid details. This data will feed public-facing disclosures about net program costs and earnings outcomes.
The American Enterprise Institute (AEI) has also put together a dataset that you can search and see if your school is at risk. Check out the data here.
For families evaluating college programs right now, this rule won’t take effect immediately.
The Department will calculate the first round of performance data in early 2027 and the second in early 2028. Because two consecutive failing years are required, the earliest a program can lose student loan eligibility is the 2028-29 academic year.
The public comment period runs through May 20, 2026, and the Department could make changes before finalizing. That said, the AHEAD negotiated rulemaking committee reached full consensus on the regulatory text, which suggests the framework is unlikely to change substantially.
When it does take effect, the practical impact will depend on what program a student is enrolled in and at what type of school. While 95% of programs are expected to pass, there’s a big gap between eligible certificate programs vs. graduate programs.
The rule also creates a strong incentive for schools to either improve underperforming programs or shut them down.
That’s good news for future students who might otherwise enroll in a program with poor earnings outcomes. But it could create disruption for students currently enrolled in programs that end up on the chopping block.
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Editor: Colin Graves
The post Trump Administration Proposes New Rules To Cut Federal Loans For Low-Earning College Programs appeared first on The College Investor.
Smart entrepreneurs build tech stacks that bend, not break.
2026.4 Update: There is now a $900 signup bonus available for opening just a checking account. Compared to the usual $900 bonus that requires opening both a checking and a savings account, this version saves you the hassle of opening a savings account (after all, with a 0.01% APY, there’s really no point parking money there anyway). Expiration date: 07/15/2026. HT: DoC.
2023.10 Update: The $300 checking + $200 savings + $400 for both offer has returned! HT: DoC.
Regular use of the account for direct deposits, cashing checks, transferring between banks in the US is fine. For more details, please see “How to avoid getting your account closed by Chase”.
Here is a comparison and contrast on the official website.
Chase is a major national bank with a large branch footprint, so for many people around the country, it can work perfectly well as a primary checking account. In my view, opening and closing it once for the signup bonus is still reasonable, but I would not recommend repeatedly cycling their accounts just to farm bank bonuses. After all, Chase’s credit card lineup is simply too valuable, and it would be a terrible trade if you somehow annoyed them and ended up hurting your relationship. One thing to keep in mind is that Chase Checking accounts can be quite sensitive, so do your best to avoid cash transactions and unusually large transfers whenever possible. Be sure to read “How to avoid getting your account closed by Chase” carefully. The signup bonus is very generous, and if you have never earned this bonus before, this is a great time to go for it.
“I think it’s that people are becoming more familiar with it,” Gromowski said. “They’re seeing the value. They understand the power. It’s so powerful, and I’m constantly reminded that I turn to it all the time, multiple times a day. I’m always fascinated by how it works and how powerful it is. So when you start to get more and more confident or comfortable with the idea that it is powerful, it’s likely going to be here to stay, then you go to where is it actually going to start infiltrating?”
Gromowski said mortgage pros who are integrating AI into their customer-facing processes will not only need to explain that to the customer, but also explain how that’s going to help make their lives easier. Customers also want to know that there will still be a person behind the AI to offer support.
“Because now it’s a real concept that people are wrapping their minds around,” she said. “It’s going to happen, and so will I have control? Will I know when it’s going to be a part of decisions on something very important, like buying, selling, transacting, or getting into a home?
“I think that’s where the confidence is lacking. They think, ‘I don’t want that train to move without me having control of it in some way. I just don’t want to be on the ride without having volunteered for it, knowing that it’s going to be a reality or assuming that it’s already here.’”
For brokers, when considering how to use AI and the impact on customers, it comes down to how much the technology will impact the potential homebuyer. The more impact there is, the more transparency those customers expect.
Sandisk (SNDK +0.15%) stock’s 2,000% gain just since August of last year makes enough superficial sense. Sandisk is one of only a handful of companies that make computer memory chips, and the proliferation of artificial intelligence (AI) data centers is driving insatiable demand for computer memory. Stunningly, even with this huge run-up, Sandisk shares are still reasonably priced at just over 20 times this year’s projected per-share earnings of $42.57. They’re expected to more than double next year.
Nevertheless, it would be naïve to ignore the ever-changing rhetoric that’s pushing and pulling on this and other AI-related stocks. This bullishness could fade just as quickly as it materialized, unwinding a sizable chunk of this rally.
Even then, there’s a decent value-based argument to be made.
It’s cliché to be sure, but Benjamin Graham is right nonetheless — in the long run, the stock market may reflect companies’ underlying fundamental values. But in the short run, it’s a voting machine, reflecting investors’ fear, greed, and feelings about a company… no matter how misguided those assumptions may be.
Ignore those short-term, ever-changing knee-jerk moves at your own peril, though, particularly for well-watched volatile stocks like Sandisk. They can be opportunities, or curses, affecting your long-term results.
There’s the rub for anyone eyeing SNDK as a potential investment right now, or for that matter, any current shareholder mulling an exit while the stock’s still near its recently reached record high. This high follows last year’s spinoff from Western Digital (and subsequent relisting) early last year.
Not only are the company’s fiscal results changing too quickly to make a meaningful value-based assessment of the stock right now, Sandisk is clearly caught up with the market’s top artificial intelligence stocks. Most investors aren’t quite sure how to price them anymore. Unfortunately — out of necessity — the scenario is forcing even the most diehard of fundamental-minded investors to become speculators.
Image source: Getty Images.
There is clear long-term value here, though, if you can look far enough down the road. Even as the industry’s current pricing power deflates in the foreseeable future once the supply/demand imbalance gets sorted out, there’s still money to be made in this business in the short and long run. Analysts expect 2028’s per-share profits to hold near 2027’s estimate of $105.63, peeling back to a still-solid $91.85. The stock’s currently valued at less than 10 times that long-range number right now.
Great. So, buy or hold the stock despite the recent rally?

Today’s Change
(0.15%) $1.39
Current Price
$920.86
Market Cap
$136B
Day’s Range
$886.28 – $930.40
52wk Range
$28.94 – $965.00
Volume
466K
Avg Vol
20M
Gross Margin
34.81%
Not necessarily. Plan on a pullback in the short run, in fact, which could evolve into an intermediate-term lull… especially if other artificial intelligence stocks do the same. That wouldn’t be an indictment of the company’s current and future results, or the stock’s value. It’s just the way the ebb and flow of trendy growth stocks works.
Once that cool-off is complete, however, don’t be afraid to step in. Artificial intelligence isn’t going away. Neither is its need for memory chips. Sandisk’s current pricing power will fade, but that’s seemingly already factored into the stock’s price.
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