Home Blog

How to Fail at Real Estate Investing in 2026


If you want to generate passive income with rental properties, reach financial freedom, and make the most money with the least stress, do not do any of these six things. There are six ways to fail at real estate investing in 2026, and if you get even a couple of these wrong on your first or next deal, you could be out of the game for years to come.  Trust us, we’re now dealing with five-figure emergency costs because we didn’t follow the tips we’re sharing today.

Both Henry and Dave have reached financial freedom in around a decade by doing real estate the right way. But that doesn’t mean they haven’t made very costly mistakes. Whether it’s tenants, repairs, using the wrong calculations, or waiting to talk to this specific person, there are a few crucial landmines to avoid on your next investment property.

So, we’re going through the six ways to fail at real estate investing. If you do the opposite of these six, you’ll make money faster, with way less stress, scale smarter, and probably reach financial freedom even quicker than Henry or Dave.

Henry:
This is how you fail at real estate in 2026. Dave and I have more than two decades of combined real estate experience, and let me tell you, that means a lot. A lot of failures. I have a deal right now that I’m going to lose at least $10,000 on.

Dave:
We’ve all been there, dude.

Henry:
But the good news is we’ve learned enough to create an entire blueprint of real estate investing failures. Now, all you need to do is the exact opposite of these mistakes. The crazy part is I still achieve financial freedom in less than 10 years, even with all those errors along the way. So imagine how quickly you could do it if you learn from these failures first. What’s going on everybody? I’m Henry Washington and I am joined by my co-host, none other than Dave Meyer. What’s up, buddy?

Dave:
Not much, man. I’m excited to talk about this because hopefully everyone listening to this could just do the opposite of all the things we’ve done wrong and just coast through real estate investing with no issues.

Henry:
Yeah, that’ll be exactly what happens.

Dave:
You’ll be the first person to ever do that, but maybe at least reduce the amount of mistakes that you make.

Henry:
If anybody tells you they’ve never lost money in real estate, either they’re not doing deals or they’re lying to you. What we want to do is be transparent, share with you the mistakes that we’ve made so you don’t have to make them, and hopefully that makes your journey a little bit easier. Are you still going to screw up? Yeah. Yeah, you will. But hopefully those screw ups won’t be as impactful by learning from knuckleheads like Dave and I.

Dave:
Losing a little bit of money on one deal or not being perfectly optimized is part of the game. The goal in real estate is just don’t have a catastrophic error, and that is definitely possible.

Henry:
Well, with that, let’s jump right in. And Dave, I’m curious to hear what you think the number one way of how to fail in real estate is.

Dave:
The number one way to fail in real estate is overly trusting other people or random people.

Henry:
Yeah. Just trust no one.

Dave:
Yeah, I know it sounds incredibly cynical, but I am not saying that there are some people are trustworthy. It is me just not doing my due diligence on the people that I am going to be working with is probably the thing that has led to the most difficulties and losses in my real estate investing career.

Henry:
There’s some truth to this one. I hear you. And you know what I like about this one for real? Is that when you’re new, you depend heavily sometimes on other people’s analysis and perspectives and opinions. And I think you do need to weigh those things out. But I also think you’ve got to get yourself to a place where you can do enough analysis on your own and feel confident in doing a deal based on you and not what someone else is telling you.

Dave:
I see this all the time. I work with new real estate agents now when I’m looking at new markets and they’ll send me deals and probably earlier in my career, I would’ve just taken their word for what the rent comps were going to be or what the ARV of the project was going to be, or what vacancy was in that particular area. Now, I am much more skeptical, not that they’re always wrong, but I’ll talk to several agents and really do my due diligence almost more on them than the deal, especially if you’re building a permanent team like an agent or a lender. These are people you’re going to work with a long time. You should be learning about them, calling references, calling other people who have worked with them and gotten their experience. I know it sounds like a pain in the butt and it is a little later.
It is a pain

Henry:
In the

Dave:
Butt. But yeah, it is. But it is so worth it. And I want to be very clear here that I am not trying to blame other people for my failures. It’s my fault. I did not do enough due diligence. Or just as the simplest possible example, if you were to go out and just use the first quote you got on any deal, like you call a contractor, you call a tradesperson and they show up, they give you a quote and you’re like, “Oh, that seemed reasonable. I’ll take that quote.” As we all know, quotes can vary by tens of thousands of dollars. So those are the basic kinds of things you need to do and not just trust that the first person that you interact with is the right person for you and your business. All right. So then what’s number two? What is the number two way to fail in real estate?

Henry:
Man, Dave, I remember as I was getting started in real estate and I was seeing the things that people were buying and hearing how people were making this calculation. And I just remember thinking, “This is wrong. Why do so many people do this? ” And that is calculate cashflow the easy way. No. In other words, yes. They would just take their mortgage, subtract that from the rent they get and tell me that’s how much cashflow they were making. The amount of people that were doing this was just mind boggling to

Dave:
Me. It’s crazy. The

Henry:
Conversations I would have with people, oh, the agents too, everybody, this deal cash flows $1,000 a month. Your mortgage will be a thousand, the rent’s 2,000. And I’m like, “This is wrong.” That is not cashflow. What you want is net cashflow. Rent minus mortgage, minus taxes, minus insurance, minus expenses. All expenses
Equals net cashflow. All expenses includes things like vacancy, not just maintenance and repairs. Calculate vacancy and calculate real vacancy, not calculate, “I put 3% for vacancy.” That won’t cover one month’s rent. You need to figure out what does two to three months of vacancy look like? Be realistic with your expense numbers. Underwrite them so ridiculously conservative that if you’re cash flowing on top of your underwriting, it’s a bonus because you’re obviously hopefully going to perform better than that than the other expense. The other one people love to leave off is property management. Oh gosh. I’m going to self-manage. Yeah, you may. You probably are. Until you get to a certain point or until your job changes or until your spouse is like no more self-managing, you don’t know how long that’s going to last. Calculate management fees so that when and if you decide not to be your own property manager, you don’t give away all your cashflow because you didn’t underwrite properly.

Dave:
You want to ensure the highest probability of success, underwrite conservatively, and then you’ll know what could happen and the downside because you’re underwriting for that. You’re saying, “Hey, what if things don’t go well? That’s why you have a vacancy contingency. What if rents aren’t what I thought they were going to be? ” You already know what that’s going to look like. To me, the only times I’ve ever really gotten upset about a real estate deal is when I didn’t see the risks coming or didn’t account for them. I personally, I don’t know about you, I don’t get upset. If I’m like, “Oh, there’s a vacancy for a month.” It’s like, “Yeah, I plan for that. That’s fine. It’s frustrating. I’d rather not have it, but I planned for it. ” Or maybe the rent comps were 1,500, I got 1,400. Okay. I plan for that too.
I underwrote for that. And I actually put all of the line items in my underwriting, like Andrew said, vacancy and CapEx and all of these things drives me absolutely insane to see people say they’re getting 10, 12% cash on cash return where they’re just not counting half of the expenses.

Henry:
I think what makes it challenging is when you do underwrite conservatively and you start making offers based on those conservative numbers, obviously the offers that you’re making are lower than what maybe some other people are offering. And then you start to get beat out on deals that you really wanted and that’s when people make the mistake. That’s when they start going, “Oh, well, I can come up 10 grand on my offer. Oh, well, I can come up 20 grand. I’m tired of losing out on these deals.” It’s not the initial underwriting. It’s the monotony of making several offers, not getting a yes so that you’re like, “Well, these other investors seem to be doing it. They’re paying a little more, so maybe I’m missing something. I’m going to pay a little more because I feel like I’m missing out on deals.”

Dave:
Totally.

Henry:
You’re not missing out on deals. What you just signed up for is losing sleep.

Dave:
This is a hard balance to strike because we also say on the show all the time, we’re like, “Go out and get your first deal. Just go do a deal.” That is true. You should go do that and not expect a home run. I think that’s kind of the point. You can’t analyze your way out of any risk. You can’t analyze your way out of uncertainty, but you need to analyze your way out of the big risks, the known risks, the known things that you have some control over, which are things like doing your numbers right and your rents and your vacancies. When you find a deal that works with all those things, that’s when you go execute. Don’t just go out and buy anything, but also don’t expect to find some perfect deal that’s going to have every number perfectly lined up for you and you’re never going to have any chance of failure.
That’s also not going to happen. All right.

Henry:
Obviously, I think these are great points, but I’m curious to know what you think the third best way to fail in real estate is, and we’ll jump into that right after the break. All right. We are back on the BiggerPockets Podcast, and Dave and I are talking about how you fail in real estate in 2026. We’ve already covered Dave’s number one way to fail, which is don’t trust anyone. And my number one way to fail, which was the second item on our list, was to stop calculating cashflow the easy way and just subtracting your mortgage from the rent and calling it cashflow. So Dave, what is the next way people fail in real estate?

Dave:
The number three way to fail in real estate is not talking to a lender or agent until you are “ready to buy.” I get it. I know people want to think about the end in mind. They want to create these businesses and have a perfect business plan, but you need to go in a logical order of operations to get to your first deal and talking to a lender and talking to an agent, even if those conversations go poorly is an absolutely essential, I don’t know if you call it first step, but it’s in the first two or three steps to being a successful investor. And if you don’t do this, you will fail. You’re not going to get a deal if you are unwilling to talk to agents and lenders.

Henry:
What I would add to this is talk to more than one. Every lender is a little bit different, especially if you’re talking to local community bank lenders. And also, I think people just have a lack of understanding of exactly how many different types of loan products there are. So yes, go talk to a lender and find out how much you’re qualified for, but be specific and ask them, “Hey, are there any types of loan products that are specifically for the kinds of deals that I’m doing? Or are there any kinds of loan products that are new or that are coming out soon that I need to be aware of? ”

Dave:
What about asking them for down payment assistance programs or grants that are available in your area? Because that might mean you’re eligible or can borrow more or have down payment assistance that you never knew about.

Henry:
Absolutely. And lenders will talk to you as if they speak for every lender. So don’t take what they say as the holy grail of getting a loan. Take it, write it down, take the notes, and then go talk to another one. You’ll learn something different. But the more lenders that you talk to, A, the more you can prepare yourself and B, the more information you’ll have about what types of loan products are out there. Yep. And then the other key with this, guys, is it will help you figure out what it is that you need to go fix if you’re not getting the answer you want.

Dave:
Yep, exactly. Yes.

Henry:
Don’t just get a no or get a, “Hey, we can’t pre-qualify you, ” or, “Hey, we don’t think you’re ready.” Ask them why. “What is it that I need to fix? What would give you more comfort to lend to me so that now you at least have a plan for what to go fix to make you more bankable?”

Dave:
All right. Well, that was the number three way to fail in real estate. Henry, what is the number four way?

Henry:
This is, especially if you’re new, not getting an inspection.

Dave:
Oh.

Henry:
And I know that’s a lot for me to say because I do not get inspections when I buy properties

Dave:
Now. Really? I’ve always got an inspection.

Henry:
Yeah. Well, you buy mostly on the market, right?

Dave:
Yeah, and I don’t flip.

Henry:
And you don’t flip. I buy off market and I typically don’t get inspections because I’m experienced enough now to walk a property and feel comfortable on whether that thing is going to cost me a ton of money to fix.

Dave:
You’re your own inspector.

Henry:
I’m my own inspector at this point. But it takes a lot of looking at houses, a lot of buying houses, a lot of renovating houses, and a lot of dispositioning those houses before you can feel as comfortable as I am doing that. So if you are not in that boat, you better be getting an inspection. You just don’t know what to look for. And there are things that you can miss with the naked newbie that can literally price your deal out of being profitable and put you in a very tough financial position. It’s a few hundred dollars. Spend the three to $600 and sleep better at night. It is well worth it. Even if you get that inspection report back and there is nothing wrong, good. That’s what you wanted. I will pay three to $600 for peace of mind all day long.

Dave:
There’s no reason to do this anymore. During COVID, I guess you could have made the argument that things were so competitive and if you knew you had a great deal, maybe you waive the inspection. That has totally changed. Honestly, not only do inspections help protect you. Right now, they’re one of the best ways to save money. Most people are getting leveraged during the inspection period and negotiating concessions or discounts off of the sale price during the inspection. So for most people, this is not going to be true for everyone, but you’re actually going to probably make money by having an inspection because it’s going to cost you 500 bucks, but you’re going to get five grand back in concessions from the seller, or they’re going to fix something that you would’ve had to come out of pocket for. So there’s no reason to do it.
The one thing I will say that I have done that has been pretty effective when I’m trying to be aggressive about a bid is doing a pass/fail inspection where you basically say, “I’m not going to nickel and dime you on the inspection. I’m going to get one and then I’m going to tell you if I’m buying the property or not, but I’m not going to ask you for money.”

Henry:
Yeah, no, we have done that in the past where we said, “Look, I just need someone to get eyes on this property with a little deeper look. I’m not going to ask you for anything. I just need to know what’s going on. And I will give you a decision, buy or no buy right after I look at that inspection report.” Because you’re right, a lot of the fear that sellers have with buyers doing inspections, it’s just that most people understand that inspectors are paid to find things and they’re going to give you a list of things that they think is wrong with the property. And then the buyer’s going to want you to fix those things and that’s going to cost them time and money. But at the end of the day, if you’re new in this business and you want to do an inspection and you’re dealing with a seller who does not want you to do it, walk away.
There’s more deals. Yep, totally. Exactly. Even if you think it’s a great deal, don’t take that risk because there’s probably some reason. And if they’re not going to tell you what that reason is and they’re not going to allow you to at least get a professional’s eyes on it, just move on. There’s other deals.

Dave:
A hundred percent. All

Henry:
Right. So there’s my number four. Make sure you get those inspections. Dave, I’m curious to know what you think the fifth way to feel in real estate is, but again, we’ll find out after the break. All right, we are back on the BiggerPockets Podcast. Dave and I are breaking down our list of ways to fail in real estate. We are working on number five. Number one, don’t trust anyone. Number two, stop calculating rent the easy way. Three, don’t wait to talk to lenders. Talk to lenders as soon as you can. Number four is not getting inspections. That’ll kick you in the teeth every time if you’re new.

Dave:
Yep.

Henry:
Number five is what, Dave?

Dave:
All right. This is a mistake I’ve made in the past. I see it all the time, but the number five way to fail in real estate is to not repair things properly and allow deferred maintenance to accrue on a rental property.

Henry:
Are you talking directly to me right now? I feel personally attacked right now.

Dave:
My wallet is feeling personally attacked recently for some bad decisions I made about this. People love buying, right? It’s fun. You feel good. You get to tell your neighbor that you got more doors. But man, the way you make money in real estate or you fail in real estate is how you operate your business over time. Acquisitions are important. You got to do the underwriting, but a surefire way to screw something up is to ignore what’s going on at your property each and every day because these things compound. A problem that costs 200 bucks to fix a year later will probably cost $2,000 to fix. I know this because I’m replumbing a house that just costs me $80,000 to fix. Yeah. Just pay the money upfront. One of the reasons you need to underwrite and have cash reserves is to pay for this stuff upfront.
There is no point if you’re in your first or fifth or your 10th year of investing in real estate and saying, “You know what? I’m going to save 300 bucks and not do it right now.” You’re investing for 10 or 20 years from now, 30 years from now. Pay the money upfront. It is worth it every single time. Meet with a lot of contractors, find the best person to do the job and just do the job.

Henry:
There’s two ways that this has bit me in the butt. The first way is buying something that does need work that I planned on working on, but there was tenants in the property, right?

Dave:
Oh yeah. Oh yeah.

Henry:
Yes. So what that means is I bought it, but I didn’t put the tenants out because they’re paying decent enough rents. They’ve been living there. They want to keep living there. That’s cool. They do. What is supposed to happen is when they move out, then you do the renovation. But what happens guys is-
You forget. Right? By the time they move out, I’m flipping three houses and I’m renovating two other rental units and you just forget. And it just gets rerented. And so now I didn’t do the renovation and it’s lingered and it’s lingered. And the maintenance bills start coming in and this property’s costing me a ton of money. And I’m like, why? Oh yeah. I was supposed to spend $40,000 renovating that unit and I just didn’t. Bad operator problems. I wasn’t organized enough to be ready to jump on that renovation when it happened. And it ended up costing me more money and maintenance along the way. And I’ve sold properties because of that, because I just didn’t get to the renovation in time. And now I’m at a place where I don’t have the bandwidth to do it and I’ll sell that property. And is that the right thing to do?
Probably wasn’t. I should have jumped on it right when I needed to, but it requires you to be a good operator. So that’s one way it’s bit me in the butt. The other way is maybe you did renovate the property when you were supposed to, but it just got super maintenance heavy. And when you have a bigger portfolio, you get maintenance requests all the time. And sometimes you’re just approving things or you’re not approving things and you don’t realize like, “Hey, this is the sixth time I fixed something at this unit.” When you have 60 units, it’s hard to sometimes remember that like,

Dave:
“Oh,

Henry:
I’ve fixed this thing at this place several times, or I’ve spent money at this place several times.” And you realize that maybe this is a property that I should have stopped taking a holistic look at and figured out, how much money do I need to spend to stabilize this thing or do I need to sell this thing?

Dave:
Exactly.

Henry:
I am guilty of these things. So I am speaking from experience. You’ve got to stay on top of your maintenance. You’ve got to be able to look holistically at your properties and see how much you’re spending on maintenance and do it more than once a year so you can recognize these trends before you get that $7,000 bill and make informed decisions. But this is real. This is real right here.

Dave:
All right. So that was number five. But Henry, let’s finish it up. What’s the last way to fail in real estate?

Henry:
Number six on our list. And one of the ways that can absolutely cause you to fail in real estate is not screening your tenants. Dave, it

Dave:
Blows so bad.

Henry:
My mind when I talk to people who self-manage and I ask them, “Did you call your tenants references? Did you call your tenants past landlords?” Not just the one they just moved out of, but two landlords ago and they say, “Oh no, we didn’t.” It blows. I

Dave:
Don’t understand it. My mind.

Henry:
And I think it’s because it’s a tedious thing to do and calling random people sometimes is uncomfortable. Maybe that’s why they avoid it. But the amount of landlords that I talk to that don’t call tenant references, that don’t call tenant employers and that don’t call past tenants beyond just the one they just left, it is mind-boggling to me. But our job as landlords is not to rent properties. I mean, it is, but our job is to get really good at tenant selection. If you want to make money in real estate investing as a landlord, tenant selection is the way you do it because what kills you as a landlord isn’t just bad tenants who hurt your properties, but what really kills you is vacancies. And so finding good tenants with a good history who want to be in your properties, like it’s a skillset that you have to develop.
And part of that is due diligence. And part of that due diligence is uncomfortable, but it will literally put money in your pocket or keep you from bleeding money out. It just mind-boggling to me that people don’t do this consistently.

Dave:
Like you said, it’s not just about limiting vacancies, but when you have a good tenant, they’re going to let you know about the problems. The stuff we were just talking about, like the repairs, like when you have a good tenant, they’re going to come to you and be like, “Hey, this problem’s the issue. I really think we need to fix this and this and this. ” And you trust that because you know them, you’ve screened them, you have a good rapport with them. It saves on so many different things. I’ve had units where I’ve had tenants move in for four or five years. I’m not even talking about families. I’m talking about young professionals stay for a long time. They take responsibility for the property. They meet with contractors for me regularly because they’re people that I’ve built a rapport with. This is a business.
These are your customers. It is your job to be a good service provider to them and find people who you feel like you can work with. It is a mutually beneficial thing. This is someone’s home. This is where they live. It matters to them. Find someone who’s going to treat it and think about it in the same way that you can, and you’re both going to be so much better off.

Henry:
The best screening technique that I have found for tenants, the thing that’s usually worked out well for me is calling tenants current and past employers and asking them what kind of employee were they? Did they show up on time? They’ll tell you, they’re like, “Oh man, this guy, they were always late. They never did what they said they were going to do. ” That feedback has always translated well for me. And then one question I always ask them as I say, “If it was your house, would you let them live in your house?” And if they’ve said no to that and I’ve let them live in my property, I’ve regretted it. And if they’ve said yes to that and I’ve let them live on my property, it’s usually worked out pretty well.

Dave:
Yeah. I think this is just a no-brainer. It’s honestly crazy to me that people wouldn’t do this. This is someone who’s moving into your house. I dropped my car off to get a tire repaired and I was interviewing the person to make sure they were going to do it right. Maybe this is just me that I’m skeptical of everyone, but- Well, your number one

Henry:
Rule was don’t trust people. So this is not a surprise.

Dave:
I grew up in New York. This is such a New York

Henry:
Guy. Oh, that’s so true. I forgot about that. Yeah, that is very New York.

Dave:
It’s such a New Yorker.

Henry:
New Yorkers don’t talk to anyone. They don’t trust anyone.

Dave:
Yeah. It’s just like, “Oh, you’re talking to me? What do you want from me?

Henry:
” It’s so New York. You’re right about that.

Dave:
No, but I really mean that. I think I approach it in a friendly way, but I just want to make sure I know who these people are. This is the challenge of real estate is you were working with so many people. Yes. Work with great people. I am not saying don’t trust people because most people aren’t trustworthy. I actually find that most people are trustworthy and most people do a good job, but it is your job as the investor to make sure you screen out the people who are the exception to that rule.

Henry:
And you make a good point that typically once you get to the point of calling references, you already have a pretty good idea if you want to rent to this person and you’re doing some confirming. So it’s not like you got to go do this for every applicant. That is not

Dave:
What we’re saying. Exactly.

Henry:
Once you’ve gone through your normal application process and you’ve narrowed it down to a couple of people, even if you’ve got that good feel, even if they’ve given you the good vibes, confirm those vibes. If you’ve got the good vibes, somebody else should have the good vibes about them too. And if what you’re hearing doesn’t fit the good vibes, well, you’ve got a hard decision to make. But I’m telling you, when I have talked to past employers, that is where I’ve got the best feedback.

Dave:
All right. Well, we’ve given you six ways to fail. Any other last thoughts, Henry?

Henry:
The last thoughts for me is a lot of these just seem like trust, but verify. Verify these things. You’ve got to do due diligence, not just due diligence about the purchase process, but due diligence about the renovation process and inspection

Dave:
Process

Henry:
And due diligence about the tenant screening and tenant process. These are the places that are going to make or break you. These are the places that are going to either put money in your pocket or take money out of your pocket. And what can really hinder people, especially when they’re first getting started, is taking a big loss on your first deal. It can set you back years. If you’ve saved up a bunch of money to finally buy a deal and you stumble on one of these six items, it could set you back to where you’ve got to save up a whole lot of money again or just put a bad taste in your mouth so that you don’t end up investing and setting yourself up for a future of financial freedom. So trust us. We’re saying these things, not because they’re trendy things to say, but we’ve made these mistakes.
On some level, Dave and I have made all these mistakes. Don’t do it.

Dave:
Take that one extra little step. When you want to quit and you’re tired and you don’t want to make that extra phone call, that’s the way to not fail. If you had to summarize it is just take that one extra step and you can be successful. Your chance of failure, if you’re willing to put in that little tiny bit of extra work is pretty low. So that I think is super encouraging.

Henry:
And I know it’s going to be hard when you’re staring at a deal that you think could be profitable. And one of these things that we’ve talked about just isn’t computing and you’re like, “Man, do I really want to walk away?” Yeah.

Dave:
Yes, you do.

Henry:
Live to fight another day. There are more deals to buy. Just don’t bend on these six things and it will keep you safe. It will keep you in the game and it will keep you on the path to financial freedom.

Dave:
Well said.

Henry:
All right guys, thank you so much for joining us on this episode of the BiggerPockets Podcast. Hopefully you have learned from Dave and I’s mistakes or you will learn from Dave and I’s mistakes and it will keep you safe. It’s been great talking to you. We’ll see you on the next episode.

 

Help us reach new listeners on iTunes by leaving us a rating and review! It takes just 30 seconds and instructions can be found here. Thanks! We really appreciate it!

Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email [email protected].

From The Orchard acquiring Brazil’s OniMusic to the BMG-Concord merger… it’s MBW’s weekly round-up


Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s Weekly Round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines over the past seven days. MBW’s Round-up is exclusively supported by BMI, a global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music.


This week, BMG and Concord confirmed their long-rumored merger, with Bertelsmann as majority-owner and Concord boss Bob Valentine named CEO of the combined company.

Meanwhile, The Orchard acquired OniMusic, a prominent Brazil-headquartered Christian music label, distributor, and “digital intelligence” company.

Plus, Primary Wave Music closed its fourth flagship music fund at $2.225 billion in total commitments, which it says is the “largest dedicated closed-end music royalties fund raised to date in the industry”.

Elsewhere, Believe and TuneCore revealed that they are automatically blocking the distribution of AI-generated tracks produced on unlicensed “pirate studios,” while inking new licensing agreements with ElevenLabs and Udio.

Also this week, Universal Music Group confirmed it will sell half of its equity stake in Spotify, generating around $1.4 billion.

Here are some of the biggest headlines from the past few days…


1. BMG AND CONCORD CONFIRM MERGER, WITH BERTELSMANN AS MAJORITY-OWNER; BOB VALENTINE NAMED CEO OF COMBINED COMPANY

It’s been rumored since back in January, and now it’s official: BMG and Concord are merging.

Both companies confirmed the move on Tuesday (April 28), alongside some interesting details.

For example, Concord boss Bob Valentine will serve as CEO of the new combined company, with Thomas Coesfeld as Chairman. (Coesfeld, currently CEO of BMG, also steps up to become CEO of BMG parent Bertelsmann in January 2027.)

The newly combined company’s global headquarters is in Nashville (currently home to Concord’s HQ) while its European headquarters will be in Berlin (currently home to BMG’s HQ)… (MBW)


2. THE ORCHARD ACQUIRES BRAZIL’S ONIMUSIC, A PROMINENT CHRISTIAN MUSIC DISTRIBUTION PLATFORM

The Orchard has acquired OniMusic, a Brazil-headquartered Christian music label, distributor, and digital intelligence company, home to more than 120 associated artists.

According to a press release from The Orchard, the transaction “marks a landmark expansion into the Latin American gospel market,” which it said is “one of the fastest-growing segments in the global music industry”.

OniMusic was founded in September 2004 by Nelson and Christie Tristão in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais… (MBW)


3. PRIMARY WAVE RAISES $2.2 BILLION FOR FOURTH MUSIC FUND

Primary Wave Music has closed its fourth flagship music fund at $2.225 billion in total commitments. The fund exceeded both its original $1.5 billion target and its $2 billion hard cap, Primary Wave said on Wednesday (April 29).

Primary Wave Music IP Fund 4 is the fourth consecutive oversubscribed fund from Primary Wave, which says the vehicle is the “largest dedicated closed-end music royalties fund raised to date in the industry”.

The fund was backed by a global investor base spanning insurance companies, pension funds, endowments, and large family offices, according to a press release, which also noted that Primary Wave is a strategic partner of financial giant Brookfield Asset Management. The fundraise comes at a moment of rapid expansion for Primary Wave… (MBW)


4. BELIEVE AND TUNECORE ARE BLOCKING DISTRIBUTION OF GENERATIVE AI TRACKS MADE ON ‘PIRATE STUDIOS’ LIKE SUNO – WHILE INKING NEW PARTNERSHIPS WITH ELEVENLABS AND UDIO

Believe has unveiled a significant update to its Generative AI policy – one that simultaneously hardens the company’s stance on unlicensed music AI platforms, while deepening its investment in other AI tools.

On the first front: Believe and its global platform for self-releasing artists, TuneCore, are automatically blocking the distribution of AI-generated tracks partly or fully produced on unlicensed “pirate studios”.

Speaking to MBW, Believe founder and CEO, Denis Ladegaillerie, reveals that Believe (including TuneCore) has deployed Gen-AI detection technologies whose capabilities have become “99% reliable” – enabling them to identify the specific AI model and platform that spawned any given track. When said model/platform is identified as originating from an unlicensed service, Believe and TuneCore will block distribution of any content.

Meanwhile, Believe has also confirmed to MBW that it has inked new music licensing agreements with two notable Gen-AI companies: ElevenLabs and Udio… (MBW)


5. UNIVERSAL IS SELLING 50% OF ITS SPOTIFY STAKE, GENERATING AROUND $1.4 BILLION

Universal Music Group will sell half of its equity stake in Spotify and use the proceeds to help fund an expanded share buyback program totaling EUR €1 billion (USD $1.17 billion), the company confirmed on Wednesday (April 29) alongside its Q1 2026 results.

The decision comes three weeks after Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square launched a $64 billion takeover bid for UMG that proposed liquidating the company’s entire Spotify stake to help fund the deal. UMG’s board has yet to make a decision on the Ackman proposal.

A UMG press release on Wednesday confirmed: “Consistent with the Company’s approach to artist compensation, artists will share in the proceeds. UMG’s share will initially be directed towards its buyback program.”

That commitment to artist participation in any Spotify sale dates back to 2018… (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 hereMusic Business Worldwide

Jensen Huang says some CEOs have a ‘God complex’ when it comes to AI apocalypse warnings



Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has been pushing back against the popular narrative that AI will wipe out huge swaths of the workforce, but he also placed some blame on overly confident CEOs who assume they know everything.

In an interview this week with the Special Competitive Studies Project, he said that while people warning about an AI apocalypse are trying to be helpful, such predictions will backfire.

“If we convinced all the young college graduates to not be software engineers, and it turns out the United States needs more software engineers than ever, that’s hurtful,” Huang explained. “So we have to be mindful of how we communicate the importance of this technology and what it’s able to do.”

That’s as the advent of AI agents has made coding accessible to a broader range of users while also allowing engineers to write much more code. Investors have sold shares of software companies, fearing enterprise customers will use AI to create their own platforms.

Although it’s important to advocate for guard rails on AI, he added that scaring people into believing that the technology will pose an existential threat to humanity, destroy democracy or eliminate 50% of entry-level jobs is “ridiculous.”

He didn’t name names, though Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has previously said AI could wipe out roughly 50% of all entry-level white-collar jobs. 

“They’re made by people who are like me, CEOs, and somehow because they became CEOs you adopt a God complex, and before you know it you know everything,” Huang said. “And so I think we have to be careful and really ground ourselves to talking about the facts.”

In reality, he estimated that AI has created more than half a million jobs in the last few years. That’s because when companies incorporate AI, they grow faster and hire more people.

And data from hiring site Indeed shows that demand for software engineers is actually increasing. Huang said this demonstrates the difference between a job’s task and its purpose, which often get conflated by AI doomsayers.

In software engineering, for example, the task is coding, but the purpose is innovation, problem-solving, connecting disparate ideas, and identifying new needs.

Another flaw in AI apocalypse arguments is that it assumes demand for coding is somehow fixed at 1 billion lines of code a day, according to Huang.

“We need a trillion lines of code written,” he said. “We need way more code written than that because we have the imagination of solving problems whether it’s in healthcare or science or in manufacturing and retail.”

The difference is that humans don’t have to sit at a keyboard anymore to write code and can instead use AI to do it.

That also speaks to the so-called Jevons paradox, which says that greater efficiency can dramatically boost consumption. Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Slok applied it to the AI age, predicting that AI adoption will beget more jobs, not fewer.

When the cost of professional work falls as AI makes tasks more efficient, the market for those tasks will actually expand. The total number of firms and workers in those fields—from law to accounting to consulting—will grow.

“When steam engines made coal more efficient, Britain didn’t burn less coal, it burned more,” Slok wrote in a recent note. “The same pattern is happening for cheaper legal services, consulting services and financial services.”

Pmtbox Secures $15M For Enterprise Commerce Platform


pmtbox, an enterprise commerce platform built to unify payments, risk, and data for merchants, today announced $15 million in seed funding. It was led by Tandem Ventures, with participation from Element Ventures, Cynosure Investment Partners, and Aaron Skonnard, founder and CEO of Pluralsight.

For years, merchants have been forced to operate across a fragmented web of vendors, tools, and siloed data streams, with no single point of accountability. This patchwork infrastructure drives up costs, complicates risk controls, and prevents operators from fully leveraging their own data. pmtbox was built to eliminate that fragmentation and put control back in the hands of the merchant.

“Commerce has advanced, but the infrastructure behind it is still fragmented, expensive, and misaligned with the needs of merchants,” said Wayne Hamilton, CEO and co-founder of pmtbox. “The industry built around point solutions that solve individual problems, but collectively they created complexity, siloed data, and a lack of accountability.

“We believe merchants should own their data and fully understand their economics. pmtbox unifies payments, risk, and data into a single commerce layer, giving operators the control and leverage they’ve been missing.”

Ultimately, this gives merchants total control over their data, reducing the true cost of payments. While lowering implicit payment fees is an important first step, the highest costs are hidden deeper within the business. By unifying the commerce stack, pmtbox allows operators to tackle these larger expenses head-on: preventing fraud, minimizing chargebacks, eliminating manual dispute resolution, and ensuring customer acquisition dollars actually convert at checkout.

The funding will be used to expand pmtbox’s engineering, risk and enterprise teams while accelerating enterprise go-to-market efforts across verticals where commerce complexity is highest. In addition to the capital milestone, Alex Bean joins the pmtbox board of directors, and Nick Thomas, founder of Finicity, also joins as an independent director. These additions bring two of Utah’s most successful fintech founders to help guide pmtbox’s next phase of growth.



Spring housing market shows ‘cautious optimism’


The US spring housing market held up more firmly than many expected in April, even as geopolitical tensions, gas prices and mortgage rates rattled consumers.


Realtor.com’s latest Monthly Housing Trends Report showed new listings edging up and asking prices slipping for a sixth consecutive month, a mix that pointed to sellers meeting buyers closer to halfway rather than retreating.


New listings and pricing reset


New listings rose 8.7% from March and 1.1% year over year, with the Northeast and Midwest leading the rebound.


Inventory‑starved markets in those regions posted annual gains of 9.4% and 6.6% respectively, while the South barely budged and the West slid.


At the national level, 477,116 homes came to market and active inventory climbed 4.6% from a year earlier, though it remained 11.8% below 2017–2019 norms.


“The worry going into April was that history would repeat itself,” Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com, said.


“Last spring, tariff‑driven uncertainty and recession fears hit in early April, sidelining sellers and buyers and setting up a cruel summer marked by parties too far apart to transact. This year, different triggers like the Iran conflict, spiking gas prices, surging mortgage rates have threatened the same outcome. The hope was that sellers would continue coming to market at the strong March pace, and that buyers would keep engaging despite the volatility. By those measures, April delivered.”


The national median list price stood at $425,000, up seasonally from March but down 1.4% from April 2025, while the median list price per square foot fell 2.4% year over year.


All four major regions posted annual price declines, with sharper pullbacks in previously overheated markets such as Memphis, Austin and Los Angeles.


Sellers price to move as days on market lengthen


Perhaps most notable for brokers and lenders, the share of active listings with a price cut dropped to 16.7%, 1.2 percentage points lower than a year earlier, even as list prices softened.


“Compared to last year, 2026 has seen both fewer price cuts and lower median list prices,” Jake Krimmel, senior economist at Realtor.com, said.


“That combination suggests sellers have internalized the generally more buyer‑friendly market conditions and are adjusting price expectations before listing rather than after. This is a meaningful behavioral shift.”


Homes spent a median 52 days on the market in April, two days longer than a year earlier but still about four days faster than pre‑pandemic norms, extending a two‑year trend of gradually lengthening marketing times.


Mortgage volatility eased, but didn’t disappear


On the financing side, 30‑year mortgage rates peaked near 6.46% in early April before easing below 6.30% by month‑end, remaining well under levels seen in April 2024 and April 2025.


Weekly surveys from the Mortgage Bankers Association showed purchase applications fluctuating but broadly stabilizing as buyers adjusted to mid‑6% borrowing costs.


“Although rates have eased from their peak in early April, they are still higher than earlier this year, but well below the past two Aprils,” Krimmel said.


“Between the rebound in mortgage purchase applications and the continued rise in new listings, it looked as though buyers were relatively unfazed by the volatility. Even so, a resolution to the recent geopolitical uncertainty would do a world of good for the U.S. consumer and homebuyer,” he said. 


Stay updated with the freshest mortgage news. Get exclusive interviews, breaking news, and industry events in your inbox, and always be the first to know by subscribing to our FREE daily newsletter.

MBA 101 | Master Of Business Administration For Beginners & Aspirants | What Is MBA? | Simplilearn



🔥 Executive Certificate Program In General Management:

This MBA 101 tutorial will acquaint you with all the essential information you need to know before entering into an MBA program. In this video, you will go through common concerns people have before getting into the management course. You will learn What Is MBA? and What Is Executive MBA? along with future career prospects. So let’s dive into this Master Of Business Administration For Beginners & Aspirants tutorial!
The topics covered in this tutorial are:
00:00 Introduction
01:13 What Is MBA?
11:13 What Is Executive MBA?
19:05 Career Opportunities Post MBA

#MBA #WhatIsMBA #MasterOfBusinessAdministration #WhatIsAMBADegree #WhyMBA #ReasonsToDoMBA #MBAExplained #MBAForBeginners #MBADegree #Simplilearn

Why pursue an MBA degree?
The first and most essential outcome of an MBA is Better Job Prospects. An MBA can help you break through few concrete ceilings to advance up the corporate ladder. The second advantage that MBA has to offer is Career Change. The next benefit of an MBA is the opportunity to learn management skills. Apart from the course curriculum, you will find finance clubs, public speaking clubs that can help students gain more intricate abilities.

🔥Explore Our Free Courses With Completion Certificate by SkillUp:

➡️ About Post Graduate Program In Business Analysis
This Post Graduate Program in Business Analysis is for professionals looking to pursue a Business Analysis career, understand business analysis techniques, get hands-on experience, and for experienced analysts looking to learn the latest tools and frameworks used by Agile teams.

✅ Key Features


– Masterclasses delivered by Industry Experts
– Earn 35 PDs/CDUs post completion of the CBAP® module
– Harvard Business Publishing case studies of Pearson, CarMax, EvCard, etc.
– Capstone from 3 domains and 14+ projects
– Simplilearn Career Service helps you get noticed by top hiring companies
– Get mentored and network with Business Analyst from Amazon, Microsoft, and Google

✅ Skills Covered
– Business Analysis
– Elicitation and Collaboration
– BRD FRD and SRS Document Creation
– Requirements Analysis
– Planning and Monitoring
– Requirements Life Cycle Management
– Strategy Analysis
– Wireframing
– Solution Evaluation
– Dashboarding
– Data Visualization
– Agile scrum methodology
– Scrum Artifacts
– Statistical Analysis using Excel
– SQL Database
– Python
– Data analysis
– Digital Transformation

👉Learn more at:

🔥🔥

source

How Executives Should Deal with Heightened Security Risk


Staying safe is about more than bringing in armed bodyguards, says Jack Zahran, CEO of Pinkerton.

Decision Day: 5 Truths Every College-Bound Student Needs To Hear


Decision Day is here, and millions of high school seniors are about to make one of the biggest financial decisions of their lives. Before you commit, here are five truths worth hearing.

These have been seen and experienced over 15+ years of both working with young adults, and seeing careers progress over time.

@thecollegeinvestor Here are five things to know as you enroll in college. 1. The cheapest is probably the best 2. College does not define you 3. Your major doesn’t equal your career 4. Never borrow more than you expect to earn after graduation 5. Experience beats prestige #EduTok #TikTokLearningCampaign #collegeadmissions ♬ original sound – The College Investor

1. The Cheapest College Is Probably The Best College

The job market is shifting faster than ever. AI is reshaping entire industries, and the credentials that mattered ten years ago may not carry the same weight a decade from now. Taking on six figures of student loan debt for a name-brand degree is a bigger gamble than it’s ever been.

The smarter play is to minimize cost without sacrificing opportunity. State schools, in-state tuition, scholarships, and community college transfers can save tens of thousands of dollars — money that funds your first home, your retirement contributions, or your ability to take career risks in your 20s.

2. College Doesn’t Define You

You’ve probably been told college will be the best four years of your life. For most people, that’s not true — and that’s a good thing.

You’ll likely stay in touch with one or two people from your graduating class. There’s always that one person who peaked in college, but most people don’t. Your best chapters (career wins, family, financial freedom) come later. Don’t make a six-figure decision based on a romanticized version of campus life.

3. Your Major Doesn’t Equal Your Career

Most people end up working in fields unrelated to what they studied. Pick a major you can actually finish, keep your GPA up, graduate on time, and keep your debt low. 

Flexibility beats specialization at 18, especially when you don’t yet know what you want to do at 28.

And according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (PDF File), from ages 18 to 24, Americans change jobs an average of 5.7 times. And between 25 and 34 years old, they change jobs an average of 2.4 times. It’s not unheard of for a person to have had 12-15 jobs before the retire.

4. Never Borrow More Than Your Expected First-Year Salary

This is the single most important rule of student loan borrowing. If your target career pays $50,000, don’t take out $90,000 in loans. If you’re studying to be a teacher, you should not have law school-level debt.

This rule alone will shape your entire 20s — your ability to save, invest, buy a home, or change careers. If you borrow too much debt that you cannot afford based on your salary, you will not be able to achieve these milestones. Run the numbers before you sign. The College Investor has a great How Much Student Loan Debt Can You Afford Calculator.

5. Experience Beats Prestige

Employers care what you’ve actually done, not where you went to college. A state school graduate with three internships, a strong skillset, and real networking will outperform an Ivy League grad with none — every time.

Start building real-world experience your freshman year. Internships, part-time work, side projects, and professional relationships matter more than the logo on your diploma.

And by your second job? Employers don’t even care where you went to college.

The Bottom Line

Decision Day is significant, but it’s not your whole story. The college you choose matters less than the financial decisions you make around it. Choose the option that gives you the most flexibility, the least debt, and the most room to build a life on your terms.

The post Decision Day: 5 Truths Every College-Bound Student Needs To Hear appeared first on The College Investor.

Spirit Airlines Shuts Down, Cancels All Flights


Spirit Airlines Shuts Down, Cancels All Flights

The aviation landscape is witnessing a historic shift as Spirit Airlines, the pioneer of the ultra-low-cost model in the United States, officially begins the process of shutting down. After months of struggling with mounting debt and a failed attempt to secure a strategic bailout, the carrier has been unable to find a viable path forward.

The airline announced early Saturday that it is canceling all of its flights and stranding travelers. The company said passengers who booked flights with credit cards or debit cards will automatically get refunds. Guests who booked flights via a travel agent should contact the travel agent directly to request a refund. But for anyone who bought their flight via “voucher, credit” or Free Spirit points, any compensation “will be determined at a later date through the bankruptcy process.”

This collapse comes after several turbulent years for the airline, marked by a blocked merger with JetBlue and persistent engine issues that grounded a significant portion of its fleet. Despite efforts to restructure its finances and pivot its business model to include more premium offerings.

For millions of travelers who relied on Spirit’s “bare fare” model, this exit will likely mean fewer options and potentially higher prices on many domestic routes. As the industry watches the final descent of the bright yellow planes, the focus now shifts to how other carriers will move to fill the void left in the budget travel market.

Forget Hyperliquid: High Beta, Low Conviction


Hyperliquid (HYPE +1.89%), the native token of the Hyperliquid decentralized exchange (DEX), has been one of the market’s hottest and most volatile cryptocurrencies. It was launched on Nov. 29, 2024, at an initial price of $3.20 per token, but it’s now trading at about $41. Let’s see why this little token skyrocketed — and why it’s a dangerous play for most investors.

Image source: Getty Images.

Why did Hyperliquid’s price soar?

Before Hyperliquid was launched, it was already actively used to trade perpetual futures contracts (perps) on its DEX. Hyperliquid also initially distributed its tokens via an airdrop to its DEX traders. While some of those recipients immediately sold their tokens for a profit, a larger share held onto them. As a result, the initial demand for Hyperliquid tokens outstripped supply, driving up its price and attracting even more crypto traders.

At the same time, Hyperliquid’s DEX was growing in popularity as a faster, lower-latency alternative to other DEXs, such as dYdX. Most of its trading activity was driven by derivatives, and liquidations on large short positions amplified the token’s upward moves.

Simply put, Hyperliquid wasn’t just another hyped-up meme coin. Its low float, real trading demand, and its DEX’s derivative-driven market structure all drove its price higher. Hyperliquid’s real-world applications made it less speculative than other altcoins that couldn’t be valued by their utility, and it has a tight circulating supply of 255 million tokens (out of 955 million tokens).

Hyperliquid Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(1.89%) $0.77

Current Price

$41.66

Why isn’t it worth buying?

Hyperliquid has generated some massive gains for its early investors, but it’s too risky for three simple reasons. First, the Hyperliquid DEX is a new Layer 1 (L1) blockchain that hasn’t yet stood the test of a true crypto winter. Second, its rally over the past one and a half years has largely been driven by its tight supply rather than longer-lasting catalysts.

Lastly, Hyperliquid’s future is entirely pinned to a single trading platform and a single product category: perp trading. Therefore, if Hyperliquid’s trading volume declines in its DEX — either due to competition from other platforms or macro headwinds — its token will fizzle out.

That makes it much riskier than Bitcoin (BTC +0.80%), which is broadly adopted as a neutral digital commodity, and Ethereum (ETH +0.56%), which is used across multiple ecosystems. So while Hyperliquid might have a brighter future than some of the market’s more speculative meme coins, it’s still a high-beta, low-conviction play that could easily burn greedy investors.

Leo Sun has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Hyperliquid. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.