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CVC Capital Partners to acquire majority stake in DistroKid


CVC Capital Partners has agreed to acquire a majority stake in DistroKid, the independent music distribution platform.

The private markets investment firm will make the investment via its CVC Capital Partners IX fund, DistroKid confirmed on Monday (July 6).

Insight Partners, a longtime DistroKid backer, will retain a “significant minority stake” in the company, according to an announcement.

Phil Bauer will continue to lead DistroKid as President, alongside the company’s existing leadership team.

The transaction is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, subject to customary closing conditions. Terms were not disclosed.

MBW revealed in January that DistroKid was exploring a sale, with a price of around $2 billion under discussion at the time.

In music circles, CVC is best known for its 2024 investment in Superstruct Entertainment, the live events group it backs alongside KKR.

Superstruct operates more than 80 festivals across Europe and Australia, among them Wacken Open Air and Sónar.

CVC‘s wider entertainment and sports investments have included Stage Entertainment, Formula One and Spain’s LaLiga.

The private markets firm manages approximately €209 billion in assets across private equity, secondaries, credit and infrastructure, according to the firm.

“We’ve been incredibly impressed by what Phil and the entire DistroKid team have built,” said Sebastian Künne, a Partner at CVC Capital Partners.

“DistroKid has earned the trust of millions of artists by staying focused on what they need most. We look forward to partnering with Phil and his team, drawing on our experience across music, entertainment and consumer subscription businesses to help DistroKid support the next generation of artists around the world.”

“DistroKid has transformed how independent artists share their music with the world,” said Deven Parekh, Managing Director at Insight Partners.

“We’re proud of our partnership with Phil and the DistroKid team and are excited to continue supporting the company alongside CVC.”

Founded in 2013 by Philip Kaplan, DistroKid has expanded beyond distribution to offer independent musicians tools including video distribution, instant mastering, direct-to-fan experiences and on-demand merchandise.

The New York-based company claims to handle 30% to 40% of new music releases globally, and says its platform is used by more than 2 million artists.

DistroKid charges artists a flat subscription fee and lets them keep 100% of their royalties.

The company was valued at $1.3 billion following an investment from Insight Partners in August 2021.

Insight Partners, which is retaining its minority stake, has continued to expand across the independent distribution sector.

In January, the firm acquired Berlin-based distributor Zebralution from German collecting society GEMA, as GEMA exited digital distribution.

Kaplan transitioned from DistroKid’s CEO to Chairman in January 2024.

Bauer, previously DistroKid’s Chief Operating Officer, then took over day-to-day leadership as President.

Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC and The Raine Group served as financial advisors to DistroKid. MBW reported the duo were handling its sale process in January.

In 2025, DistroKid launched Direct, a platform for artists to sell merchandise straight to fans.

The service builds on Bandzoogle, the direct-to-fan company DistroKid acquired in 2023, and marked its push beyond audio and video distribution.Music Business Worldwide

Anker 25W USB-C Wall Charger with Cable for $9.99 at Amazon


Anker 25W USB-C Wall Charger with Cable for $9.99 at Amazon

This article contains Amazon affiliate links.

Amazon has the Anker 25W USB-C Wall Charger bundled with a 5-foot USB-C cable on sale for $9.99 for Prime members.

The charger features a compact, foldable design and supports 25W PPS fast charging for compatible Samsung Galaxy devices, along with fast charging for iPhones, iPads, and other USB-C devices. It’s available in Black, White, Blue, and Mauve.

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Guru’s Wrap-up

Anker is one of the more reliable charging brands, and $9.99 is a solid price for a charger that includes a USB-C cable. If you need an extra charger for travel or your desk, this is a good buy.

 

Disclaimer: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases made through this article. Using links on the site for Amazon purchases is the best way you can support the site as you normally can’t earn cash back for these purchases. But, you should still check shopping portals such as Rakuten, TopCashback, RebatesMe, ShopBack and others for possible cashback. Your support is always greatly appreciated!

Prediction: Why Buying Brookfield Renewable Instead of Bloom Energy Could Set You Up For Life


The rapid growth of artificial intelligence (AI) has strained the power grid. Rising electricity prices have led communities to push back against the construction of new AI data centers. Since AI can’t “live” without a reliable power source, the technology industry has a big problem on its hands. Bloom Energy (BE +8.64%) is well-positioned to help solve the power problem.

But don’t rush out and buy Bloom Energy’s stock. You might be better off with Brookfield Renewable Partners (BEP 0.27%) instead. Here’s why this high-yield partnership could set you up for life.

Image source: Getty Images.

Bloom Energy has a timely solution

Bloom Energy makes hydrogen fuel cells. It is an interesting technology on two fronts. First, it is clean because it doesn’t produce greenhouse gases. Second, the fuel cells are made in a factory and can be delivered wherever they are needed, providing on-site power. It can be quicker and easier to build and deliver a fuel cell to a new AI data center than to obtain a grid connection.

That’s why Bloom Energy’s product backlog rose 2.5x year over year to $6 billion at the start of 2026. But that’s just the start of the story, because each new fuel cell comes along with a long-term service contract. The revenue from those contracts expands the backlog to a whopping $20 billion. There are many reasons to like Bloom Energy’s story.

The problem is that the stock has risen roughly 1,000% over just the past year. It’s very clear that investors are aware of the opportunity. That’s not to suggest the stock can’t go higher, but the price-to-sales ratio is lofty at 29x. Most investors will probably be better off with a different AI power play.

Bloom Energy Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(8.64%) $23.41

Current Price

$294.30

Brookfield Renewable is built for the long term

Brookfield Renewable owns a globally diversified portfolio of clean energy assets. The diversification it provides is extensive, spanning hydroelectric, solar, wind, storage, and nuclear. Geographically, it operates in North America, South America, Europe, and Asia. But the real linchpin here is that Brookfield Renewable is also serving AI data centers, having inked notable supply contracts with Google and Microsoft (MSFT 0.94%).

The power contracts that Brookfield Renewable signs are generally long-term, so the income it generates is highly reliable. Which is what supports the stock’s lofty 4.6% yield. The distribution has grown at an annualized rate of 5% over the past decade, in line with the long-term target of 5% to 9% annual distribution growth.

Brookfield Renewable Partners Stock Quote

Brookfield Renewable Partners

Today’s Change

(-0.27%) $-0.09

Current Price

$33.79

Brookfield Renewable actively manages its portfolio, so it is always buying and selling assets. However, the approach’s long-term success is pretty clear from the steady growth of the distribution. If you are an income investor, Brookfield Renewable’s lofty yield and reliable distribution growth will make it an appealing long-term holding. But what’s also notable here is the valuation, since the price-to-sales ratio is 1.5x. That’s in line with the five-year average, so it wouldn’t be fair to suggest that the partnership is “cheap” today. But compared to Bloom Energy, it looks like a bargain.

Bloom Energy is a growth stock, Brookfield Renewable is a reliable tortoise

In reality, Bloom Energy and Brookfield Renewable Partners are likely to attract two different types of investors. Bloom Energy is a growth stock, Brookfield Renewable is an income stock. However, of the two, Brookfield Renewable’s reliable, growing distribution can set you up for a lifetime of income while still giving you direct exposure to the AI sector. And you’ll benefit from diversification beyond AI and across multiple power platforms.

Bloom Energy is an all-in bet on fuel cells, and the AI story is the main factor driving its stock higher right now. If either of those pieces of the story crumbles, the stock could pull back dramatically. For many investors, including those not focused on income, Brookfield Renewable is likely to be the better choice.

New Law Carries Implications For Roofing and Insurance—Here’s What Investors Need to Know


As if homeowner’s insurance weren’t expensive enough, a new federal rule has quietly moved the responsibility to pay for roof damage claims off the insurers’ shoulders and onto property owners. This means that after storm damage, investors must foot the cost for damage to their roofs—if they opt to pay less for their insurance—which could result in five-figure bills for landlords, eliminating hard-won cash flow in one fell swoop.

The Specifics of the New Rule

According to MarketWatch, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced in March that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will now accept homeowner’s insurance policies that provide only actual cash value (ACV) coverage for roofs, rather than requiring full replacement cost coverage as they did previously.

This means that when investors buy new insurance, if they have mortgages covered by Fannie and Freddie, they no longer have to maintain insurance that covers what it costs to fully replace a roof after a storm—only the depreciated value, taking into account the roof’s age and condition.

The change is not mandated—i.e., it is not a strict requirement that landlords “must” buy ACV insurance. They still have the option of paying more for their insurance to cover the full replacement, so long as the insurer offers it in their area and the roof qualifies.

Although the new policy is touted as offering property owners a less expensive insurance option, under ACV, the insurer can deduct depreciation and the cost of a new roof. It means that older roofs can generate smaller compensation checks for the same amount of physical damage, with property owners needing to make up the shortfall.

If the policyholder is “not prepared and they get a hailstorm or tornado, they are going to be in for the surprise of their life when they get that bill from the roofer saying, ‘Hey, your insurance is only covering $9,000, you owe another $9,000 to put a new roof on,’” Lindsay Frangie, a Georgia-based branch partner at the lending firm Alcova Mortgage, told MarketWatch.

Government officials couched the new policy as a win for property owners. FHFA director William J. Pulte said in a press release:

“Thanks to President Trump’s landslide victory, we are replacing a disruptive and expensive Biden insurance mandate with common-sense policies for today’s market. Lower insurance costs and mortgage rates shrink the monthly payment of a new mortgage, giving new homebuyers confidence that they can afford the American dream.”

How Much Could Investors Save?

ACV premiums are generally 10% to 20% lower than replacement cost, according to estimates cited in the MarketWatch article. However, investors need to be wary of trying to save money in the short term—only to get clobbered in the long term by an expensive repair they have to pay out of pocket.

“I think it’s a Band-Aid on a bullet wound,” Frangie said.

Read the Fine Print

Some insurance agents might be tempted to “brush off the details,” Amy Bach, director of consumer advocacy group United Policyholders, told MarketWatch, in order to make a sale. “The amount of commission [agents] would earn by recommending more coverage is not worth it to them against the risk of them losing you as a customer because of the price point,” she said.

Many insurance companies have nuanced policies that might benefit the homeowner. Insurance agency Insurify offers the following advice:

“Even if your home is insured on an ACV basis, some insurers offer a guaranteed replacement cost coverage endorsement for roof replacement. If your roof is damaged by a covered loss, the insurer will pay the full replacement cost without subtracting depreciation. Some policies mix coverage types, such as replacement cost for the dwelling and ACV for personal property. Review your declarations page and clarify with your insurance agent to understand which parts of your policy include depreciation.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, the five biggest home insurers didn’t pay out on more than 44% of claims resolved last year, up from 36% a decade ago. The Journal reported that State Farm is being sued by hundreds of Oklahoma residents, who allege that the company uses vague definitions in its coverage policies to allegedly mislead policyholders.

One of the lawsuits against State Farm alleges that the definition is “absent from the four corners of the policy and hidden from the insured” until their claim is denied. Jeff Marr, the lawyer for the plaintiffs, told the Journal that earlier State Farm settlements had revealed its “secret playbook” to replace fewer roofs. “They have weaponized their claims department,” he said.

Don’t Sacrifice Insurance for Cash Flow

Housing affordability is a key political issue. Investors need to be particularly careful, especially those in areas prone to extreme weather. While it’s tempting to think only about the cash flow, skimping on insurance, even if the option to do so is there, is a dangerous game.

Billionaire entrepreneur and investor Mark Cuban posted on Bluesky in 2024: “Home insurance in areas hit by repetitive disasters is going to be the number one housing affordability issue over the next 4 years. And possibly going into the midterms. More so than interest rates. Florida in particular is going to have huge problems.”

In a LinkedIn post, SES Risk Solutions, an insurance provider for financial institutions, said that “insurance is now influencing real estate decisions in ways traditionally reserved for mortgage rates…buyers are reconsidering purchases after reviewing insurance quotes,” while “investors are reevaluating yields based on higher operating expenses” and “property owners are delaying moves or refinancing decisions due to concerns about future premium volatility.”

The article went on to say:

“For investors with multiple properties, the challenge compounds quickly. Managing renewals, carrier appetite changes, and inconsistent coverage terms across a portfolio introduces operational risk alongside financial risk. This environment underscores the importance of insurance structures designed specifically for real estate portfolios rather than one policy at a time.”

Final Thoughts

While the new Fannie/Freddie policy is targeted primarily to homeowners, it can also apply to investors. In the crunch to lower expenses, there is understandably a temptation to roll the dice with lower insurance costs to boost cash flow and hope for the best. It’s not a wise move.

Rather than navigate the insurance minefield on your own, consulting with a broker, particularly if you have a larger portfolio, could be a savvy move to find property and liability insurance customized to your needs.

Roofs are a particular concern for insurers, as they are a main casualty in extreme weather. “Recent disasters—whether they be hurricanes, fires, storm surges—are unprecedented,” said Al Brooks, vice chair of commercial banking at J.P. Morgan, on the company’s website. “And the losses suffered by the insurance industry are unprecedented.”

In addition to shopping around for a broker, Brooks recommends ensuring repairs are up to date. “If you have a leak from the roof, do not go up there and throw a tarp over it until you get someone to fix it—get it fixed immediately,” Brooks said. Many insurance companies use drones to monitor properties. “If they drone your property and see the tarps, you’re probably getting dropped.”

AI Is Changing How Customers Choose Your Business



<p>How three SMBs&#8212;a manufacturer, a boutique hotel, and a B2B software company&#8212;are adapting.</p>

Bank of Canada surveys show war boosted inflation expectations, investment




The war in Iran caused a spike in Canadian inflation expectations and is leading the country’s oil producers to boost their investment and production plans.

inKind No Longer Allowing Offers Across Multiple Accounts


Until recently it was possible to split a single inKind check across multiple accounts and use an offer on each account. That is no longer possible and you’re limited to one offer per check and it doesn’t matter how many accounts are used. It is possible to use inKind cash (gift card balance) after an offer. If your server will split the bill into multiple checks with different check #’s then you can still use multiple offers but a lot of places won’t do this.

inKind is popular due to the referral bonus, frequent offers and gift card sales. Earlier this year inKind added new rules that prevented stacking offers and inKind cash and also introduced dynamic rewards.

Hat tip to reader BonusVault

DOGE cuts to USAID have worsened the Congo’s Ebola outbreak that has killed 500, experts warn



More than 500 people have died in the Democratic Republic of Congo as a result of the ongoing Ebola outbreak, as experts say cuts to international aid have hampered the country from containing the virus.

There have been 1,561 recorded cases of Ebola, including 506 deaths, since the disease’s outbreak was declared on May 15, according to DRC’s Ministry of Health. The World Health Organization deemed the first month of the Ebola outbreak the worst on record, and slowing the virus’s spread has been complicated by the lack of treatments for Bundibugyo, the strain behind the most recent Ebola outbreak.

The International Rescue Committee, a humanitarian aid organization, previously said severe cuts to global aid weakened frontline healthcare and preparedness systems, leaving the Congo with a more fragile health system now than during the 2018-2020 outbreak that killed more than 2,000 individuals.

“The warning signs are flashing red,” Bob Kitchen, vice president of emergencies at IRC, said in a statement. “Increased conflict and cuts to global aid funding have dismantled defenses at exactly the wrong moment. The lesson from every previous outbreak is clear: delays cost lives. The risks are growing and the resources are shrinking; that is the brutal arithmetic facing global aid today.”

In February 2025, the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency, a special advisory group led by Elon Musk, helped effectively gut the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the federal agency primarily responsible for disbursing foreign aid, eliminating about 83% of its programs.

DOGE officially ended on July 4, but its effects remain.

Total U.S. humanitarian funding was slashed from $14 billion in 2024 to $3.7 billion in 2025, according to Refugees International. Cuts to foreign aid in the last year are estimated to have resulted in more than 750,000 preventable deaths.

How USAID cuts exacerbated the Congo’s Ebola outbreak

USAID played a crucial role in preventing previous Ebola outbreaks. Phuong Pham, associate professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in an interview for the college that the U.S. was previously a global leader in addressing infection outbreaks including Ebola, with USAID as the operating arm for addressing public health crises.

In the past, the agency would have a permanent presence in countries like the Congo and would increase laboratory testing capacity for Ebola and train healthcare workers in the area to identify signs of the virus to collect samples. USAID would also liaise between local communities and other agencies like the WHO and UNICEF. During the 2018 outbreak, USAID helped vaccinate more than 300,000 for the disease, according to Pham.

Following the latest outbreak, the U.S. State Department said it would give $23 million in emergency aid to the Congo and Uganda to bolster Ebola containment and prevention efforts by working to create 50 clinics for Ebola screening, isolation and treatment.

Last month, the White House also requested more than $1.4 billion from Congress to address the Ebola outbreak, including $800 million in humanitarian response funds. Dedicated resources to address the spread of disease are crucial, Pham said, but they doesn’t replace the emergency response infrastructure USAID helped create.

“This support is much needed and may save lives,” she said. “That said, emergency response cannot fully substitute for the sustained investments that are needed before an outbreak begins.”

Craig Spencer, an emergency doctor and associate professor at the Brown University School of Public Health, said the impacts of USAID cuts as a result of DOGE are already being felt. In an New York Times op-ed, he noted samples of the virus delivered to a Kinshasa, Congo, lab were at the wrong temperature, part of the operations previously overseen by USAID.

“I’ve seen Ebola up close. I got it while treating patients in West Africa in 2014,” Spencer wrote. “I know how destructive the disease can be—and how unprepared we are for its return.”

The State Department did not immediately respond to Fortune‘s request for comment.

Musk’s reaction to DOGE’s role in the USAID aftermath

Musk, for his part, has denied DOGE having a negative role in enabling the spread of the virus. In February 2025, Musk admitted DOGE accidentally ended—and then quickly restored—funding for Ebola prevention, saying there was no interruption to programming.

Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna last month accused Musk and DOGE of killing millions of children as a result of cuts to USAID and other key agencies, a claim Musk disputed, endorsing several posts on X disputing Khanna’s claim.

“Exactly,” Musk wrote in response to one post. “And they cannot cite a single name of someone who died out of the ‘millions’ they falsely claim have died. Not a single name!”

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