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Mastercard Launches New “Taste by Priceless” Airport Lounges


Mastercard Launches New “Taste by Priceless” Airport Lounges

Mastercard is getting into the airport lounge game with the launch of new “Taste by Priceless” dining lounges, starting with locations in Hong Kong (HKG) and São Paulo (GRU). Another location is expected to open in Mexico City (MEX) in the future.

Unlike traditional airport lounges, Mastercard is positioning these spaces more as premium dining clubs focused on food and curated experiences. So they have less of the amenities that you might expect at traditional airport lounges.

Where Are The New Lounges?

Current and upcoming locations include:

  • Hong Kong (HKG) – Terminal 1 near Gate 40/41 (review)
  • São Paulo (GRU) – Terminal 3
  • Mexico City (MEX) – Coming later

The Hong Kong location recently opened, while the São Paulo location replaced the former “The Club by Mastercard” lounge late last year.

Access Rules

Access depends on your Mastercard tier:

  • World Legend Mastercard
    • Complimentary access
    • Up to 3 guests included at Hong Kong
    • Unlimited visits
  • World Elite & World Mastercard
    • Paid access available
    • Introductory pricing of:
      • $70 through August 31, 2026
      • $85 afterwards
  • Children under 2 are free with any adult that has access.

You can access these lounges within 3 hours of scheduled departure:

  • Same-day boarding pass required
  • Passport/ID required
  • Capacity controls apply

For connecting passengers you can enter earlier than 3 hours, BUT you must show:

  • inbound boarding pass
  • onward same-day boarding pass

Mastercard taste by Priceless lounges

World Legend Mastercard Push

These lounges are also part of Mastercard’s push into the premium “World Legend” tier that launched recently.

Current World Legend cards are still relatively rare, which should help avoid overcrowding for now. And I doubt many people will be paying $70 or $85 for access.

Current World Legend Mastercards include:

list of Mastercard taste by Priceless lounges

Guru’s Wrap-up

Airport lounges continue to be one of the new battlegrounds between credit card issuers. We’ve already seen Capital One Lounges and Chase Sapphire Lounges in addition to Amex Centurion Lounges which have been around longer.

Now Mastercard is trying something a little different with a more dining-focused concept. The interesting part is that Mastercard appears to be prioritizing exclusivity over mass access, at least for now. Since World Legend cards are still limited, overcrowding may not become a major issue right away.\

They still haven’t locked down the branding yet, going interchangeably with Taste by Priceless and Taste of Priceless. Still, it’ll be interesting to see if or how quickly Mastercard expands this concept globally over the next few years. Let me know what you think!

HT: DoC & OMAAT

FAA to Air Traffic Controllers: Fewer Jobs, More Work



The agency is reducing staffing requirements by more than 2,000 positions. Will new streamlined work schedules straighten up and fly right?

Redfin Ranks Several Midwest Neighborhoods as the Hottest Markets in the County—But Should You Invest There?


Your best investment could be a goose-feather-filled down jacket and a pair of fur-lined winter boots. Why? Because Michigan and Wisconsin are the hottest housing markets in the U.S.

That’s according to Redfin’s 2026 “hottest neighborhoods” ranking, where Michigan and Wisconsin took five of the top 10 spots between them.

Why the Midwest, and Why Now?

Redfin senior economist Asad Khan explained:

“Midwest cities and lesser-known places in Florida are having a moment—and affordability is the reason. Many of these neighborhoods sit just outside major hubs like Milwaukee, Chicago, and Tampa, hitting a sweet spot: lower cost of living without giving up access to highly rated schools, shopping, and dining. They have the convenience of big cities without the big-city price tags.”

For small investors looking to offset risk with lower price points, the Great Lakes and other Midwest cities offer buy-and-hold workhorses to buttress your portfolio without sleepless nights. 

According to Redfin’s 2026 analysis, Wisconsin landed three of the 10 hottest neighborhoods—Oak Creek, West Bend, and Menomonee Falls, all Milwaukee suburbs. Michigan contributed two more: Lincoln Park near Detroit and Howell in Southeast Michigan. 

Redfin’s ranking was based on year-over-year growth in listing views and measures of buyer competition. Proving its staying power, 2026 was the second consecutive year that Midwestern metros dominated the list.

Here is how Redfin ranks the 10 hottest neighborhoods in America for 2026 and their respective median home sales prices:

  1. Land O’Lakes, Florida (Tampa metro): $425,000
  2. Plant City, Florida (Tampa metro): $320,000
  3. Oak Creek, Wisconsin (Milwaukee metro): $381,200
  4. Oceanside, New York (Nassau County): $725,000
  5. West Bend, Wisconsin (Milwaukee metro): $350,000
  6. Lincoln Park, Michigan (Detroit metro): $158,000
  7. Lee’s Summit, Missouri (Kansas City metro): $397,500
  8. Little Neck, Queens, New York (New York City metro): $796,500
  9. Howell, Michigan (Warren metro): $385,000
  10. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin (Milwaukee metro): $410,000

Bygone-Era Pricing

In an unaffordable housing market, some of the prices on the Redfin list appear to be from a bygone era. Fortune reports that many of these markets are 30% or more below similar houses in coastal cities. For example, the Redfin top 10 list shows an average home price in Lincoln Park, on the outskirts of Detroit, at $158,000.

“For many, it’s not just about cheaper homes, but about being able to build wealth earlier without drowning in overhead,” Danielle Andrews, a real estate agent with Realty One Group Next Generation, previously told Fortune.

More Than Cheap Houses

Crucially, offering more than just cheap accommodation, the Midwest is attracting residents for employment, lured by an affordable lifestyle commensurate with starter salaries.

For Generation Zers who are making entry-level salaries, “it’s going to be really difficult to survive and save money” in major cities like Los Angeles and New York, Sam Radbil, research and content strategist at Checkr, a background screening company, told CNBC. The Midwest already has a natural catchment of renters, too: university graduates entering the workforce.

The Wall Street Journal notes that one of the most sought-after areas for would-be residents is the stretch of Wisconsin along the Fox River Valley from Oshkosh to Green Bay. In the six surrounding counties near Appleton, Oshkosh, Neenah, and Green Bay, only 1 in 7 buyers spends over 30% of their income on housing—the bellwether for affordability—while the national average is 1 in 5.

Equally, only 40% of renters in the area spend more than 30%, compared to half nationwide, while wages are above the national level, thanks to the heavy emphasis on manufacturing jobs.

“The Value Play of the United States”

“It is the value play of the United States,” Joe Wadford, an economist at the Bank of America Institute, told the Journal. “It is a great place to put down roots.”

For remote workers who can keep high-paying jobs based on the coasts, parts of the Midwest are a potential gold mine. For investors, too, looking to release home equity, certain cities make sense; however, as out-of-towners flood in, prices are increasing, and potential investment properties are being snapped up by homebuyers.

Buying Frenzy Heats Up

In analyzing Redfin’s data, Fortune notes that Lincoln Park has seen a 14% year-over-year increase in home sales, and nearly 40% of homes here sold for over asking price, a trend also reflected in other in-demand parts of Michigan.

“It’s pretty low inventory,” Michigan-based Redfin Premier Anne Loehr said of Howell, Michigan, in the Redfin report. “There aren’t many homes to sell because it’s such a popular place.”

This is also visually reflected in Zillow’s Market Heat Index for March 2026, which showed the power balance shifting from buyers to sellers in certain Midwest markets. Meanwhile, the dynamic reversed in some Sunbelt markets, shifting from sellers to buyers.

Larger Midwestern Cities Dominate for Cash Flow and Appreciation

For a combination of cash flow and appreciation, Norada Real Estate Investments did a side-by-side evaluation of major Midwestern markets—showing 8%+ cap rates from properties priced around $160K, generating rents of about $1,500 a month in B and B+ neighborhoods—and found that Cleveland, Indianapolis, Kansas City, and St. Louis were the top-performing metros, depending on which neighborhoods investors chose.

The Wall Street Journal/Realtor.com Spring 2026 Housing Market Ranking, which evaluates the 200 most populous U.S. metropolitan areas based on a mix of housing market conditions and broader measures of economic health and livability, had South Bend-Mishawaka, Indiana/Michigan, in the top spot for the second consecutive quarter, while Appleton, Wisconsin, was in second place. 

There were other notable Midwest cities in the top 20, too, including:

  • Canton-Massillon, Ohio
  • Akron, Ohio
  • Flint, Michigan
  • Lansing-East Lansing, Michigan
  • Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, Wisconsin
  • Peoria, Illinois
  • Kalamazoo-Portage, Michigan
  • Rockford, Illinois

Final Thoughts

As demonstrated across various reports, the Midwest is having its moment and appears to have stolen the Sunbelt’s thunder. For investors, the combination of affordability and jobs makes it an attractive proposition, but many people share the same idea of moving here, which is heating up competition for great deals. That’s to be expected and what investors want. Buying in an affordable area with no jobs is a recipe for disaster.

The good news is that the Midwest will continue to have heat indices in the high 90s for a while to come. “The Midwest will become the fastest-growing region of the country by the end of the decade,” said demographer Diana Lind, publisher of the New Urban Order newsletter.

However, the Midwest is not monolithic. It’s made up of a myriad of diverse markets and economies. For investors, the challenge is not simply to follow the herd, which has been disastrous for some in Indianapolis, but to research and discern which markets best suit their needs. 

An Adjustable-Rate Mortgage Strategy to Offset Risk


With fixed mortgage rates still quite high compared to recent years, and ARMs finally providing a decent discount, you might be starting to look beyond the 30-year fixed.

The problem though is you’re probably still concerned that interest rates could skyrocket and that your ARM will adjust way higher in the future.

That’s always a concern with an adjustable-rate mortgage, which is why they’re discounted to begin with.

But one thing you can do to offset this risk and manage payments post-adjustment is to apply the monthly ARM savings during the fixed-rate period.

This way you’ll have a much smaller loan balance once the mortgage hits its first adjustment.

Use Your ARM Savings to Pay the Loan Down Faster While It’s Fixed

Let’s look at an example to illustrate what I mean using a $400,000 loan amount.

Imagine you can get a 30-year fixed today at 6.5% or a 7-year ARM for 5.375%.

That’d be $2,528.27 per month for the 30-year fixed versus $2,239.88 for the ARM.

That’s a difference of $288 per month. Over the course of the fixed-rate period (84 months), you’d save about $24,225. Not bad.

After 84 months, the loan balance would be $361,664.98 on the 30-year fixed and $354,410.53 on the 7-year ARM.

So on top of paying less each month, you’d also pay the ARM down faster because a bigger chunk of the payment would go toward principal due to the lower interest rate.

Those are the benefits of an adjustable-rate mortgage vs. fixed-rate mortgage, but there’s also the risk.

Namely that the interest rate can go up after the fixed-rate period ends. And potentially a lot!

Typically, adjustable-rate mortgage caps on a 7-year ARM allow the rate to increase as much as five percentage points at first adjustment.

That means a rate of 10.375% in the absolute worst-case scenario. That’s probably pretty unlikely, but it is the risk associated with an ARM.

Of course, in the meantime you might sell the property, or you might refinance the loan if rates happen to improve.

But if you are still holding the loan after seven years, you might face a higher fully-indexed rate (margin + mortgage index at month 85).

This could in fact be a decent rate if the mortgage index isn’t high at the time, but let’s pretend it is a little bit higher.

How to Get a Lower Monthly Mortgage Payment After the ARM Adjusts Higher

Say your fully-indexed rate is 7% at first adjustment. Using the balance of $354,410.53 and remaining loan term of 23 year, the monthly payment would be $2,586.91.

Not terrible. It’s about $60 more than the original 30-year fixed payment. And factor in seven years and it probably feels cheaper due to inflation.

But what you can do to bring this payment down even more, and offset some risk if the first adjustment is a lot worse, is to apply monthly savings to extra payments.

So during the first seven years, pay the extra $288 per month saved on the ARM.

At the beginning of year eight, when the loan first adjusts, the balance would be just over $325,000.

Now if we apply the fully-indexed rate of 7%, the payment is a lower $2,372.24. That’s about $150 less than the original 30-year fixed payment.

In addition, the lower loan balance might make it easier to refinance or sell due to the lower loan-to-value ratio (LTV).

So by paying extra using only the savings of the ARM, you build in some increased optionality to do other things if mortgage rates happen to be less favorable in the future.

Try out my early mortgage payoff calculator to determine possible savings of extra mortgage payments.

Colin Robertson
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Prediction: This Quantum Computing Stock Will Be Up More Than 20% by the End of 2026


Last month, Nvidia (NVDA 4.39%) unveiled a family of open-source artificial intelligence (AI) models designed to address calibration and error-correction challenges in quantum computing. Known as Ising, Nvidia’s new toolkit helps make fragile qubits more usable by pairing them with the power of graphics processing units (GPUs).

The question smart investors are asking is not whether quantum computing matters, but how Nvidia’s expanding ecosystem positions the company to capture more value as investment in AI infrastructure accelerates.

Image source: Nvidia.

Why do investors care about quantum computing?

Today’s generative AI models devour vast amounts of computing power. However, some quantum enthusiasts believe that certain applications — molecular simulation in drug discovery or complex optimization in logistics and financial modeling — can scale better on quantum hardware.

In essence, quantum systems are not a replacement for traditional AI platforms, but rather an accelerator. Nvidia’s vision is to create a hybrid future in which quantum processors handle complex tasks while GPUs handle the heavy workload of training and inference.

Nvidia is expanding its role in the quantum computing landscape

Nvidia found that Ising’s calibration model can automate processor tuning, reducing a task that once took days down to hours. Moreover, its decoding models deliver real-time error correction up to 2.5 times faster and 3 times more accurately than legacy methods such as PyMatching.

Ising’s tools run on Nvidia GPUs, integrate natively with the company’s CUDA-Q software, and are stitched together via the NVQLink interconnect. By anchoring Ising to its hardware and software stack, Nvidia ensures that advances in quantum capabilities fuel further demand for its GPU architectures and data center services. This strategy helps Nvidia turn yet another AI opportunity, quantum machines, into a natural tailwind for its existing infrastructure.

Nvidia’s path to more upside in 2026

Realistically, quantum computing is not a near-term catalyst for Nvidia. The addressable market remains modest, as quantum hardware remains experimental. Nevertheless, the Ising launch highlights something meaningful: Quantum technology is becoming another growth vector extending Nvidia’s multifaceted AI infrastructure engine.

Demand for Blackwell and Rubin GPUs shows no signs of slowing as hyperscalers and sovereign governments accelerate AI factory build-outs. Meanwhile, CUDA’s software helps lock developers into Nvidia’s ecosystem.

Expansions into areas such as robotics, connectivity networks, autonomous systems, and enterprise workflows broaden Nvidia’s addressable market. These forces, in combination with the long-term optionality of hybrid quantum-GPU systems, support sustained growth for Nvidia in the AI infrastructure age.

I predict that by year’s end, Nvidia shares will reach $280. At current levels, my forecast represents roughly 20% upside to Nvidia stock. My outlook bakes in AI infrastructure as Nvidia’s primary driver while treating quantum AI as a high-conviction call option that keeps the company ahead of competitors.

I think Nvidia is in a position to continue generating data center revenue growth between 70% and 80% year over year, while maintaining a steady gross margin around 75%. Reasonable multiple expansion should be in store as investors price in new catalysts.

[AZ, CO, FL, IL, IN, KS, MO, OK, TX] Busey Bank $200-$500 Checking Bonus


Update 5/16/26: Deal is back until June 13th, 2026. Hat tip to reader ink_me_please

Update 3/1/26: Deal is back until March 14, 2026 May 1, 2026. Hat tip to reader ChurningAndBurning

Update 4/6/25: Deal is back until 15 Apr 2025. This time requires a tax return to qualify for the direct deposit requirement unfortunately. Hat tip to reader Woody

Update 10/12/24: Deal is back and no end date listed. Hat tip to reader Yj32

Update 6/23/24: Deal is back and no end date listed. Hat tip to reader Woody

Offer at a glance

  • Maximum bonus amount: $300
  • Availability: AZ, CO, FL, IL, IN, KS, MO, OK, TX
  • Direct deposit required: Yes, $1,000+
  • Additional requirements: See below
  • Hard/soft pull: Soft pull
  • ChexSystems: Yes
  • Credit card funding: Up to $1,000, no American Express
  • Monthly fees: $5, avoidable
  • Early account termination fee: $25, 90 days
  • Household limit: None
  • Expiration date: None

The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Busey Bank is offering a bonus of up to $500 when you open a new checking account and complete the following requirements:
    • Use  promo code “LEVELUP1” for Foundation Checking or “LEVELUP2” for Pillar Banking accounts
    • Activate and use your Busey Debit Mastercard for at least 3 transactions within the first 90 days of opening the account and
    • Enroll in Online Banking with eStatement
    • Receive a qualifying direct deposits of (within 90 days of account opening):
      • $2,000 – $2,999.99: $200 bonus
      • $3,000 – $4,999.99: $300 bonus
      • $5,000 or more: $500 bonus 

 

The Fine Print

  • Offer valid for limited time for accounts opened by March 15, 2026. Busey Bank may change or discontinue this offer at any time before this date without notice. This offer is available only by using the unique promo code “LEVELUP1” for Foundation Checking or “LEVELUP2” for Pillar Banking accounts opened online or in-person at a Busey location only and qualifying as outlined below. Only one offer per household. Must have a Tax Identification Number (TIN) or Social Security Number (SSN) at account opening to qualify for this promotion. All accounts are subject to approval.
  • You will not qualify for the tiered credit if you are an existing Busey personal checking account customer, you are a Busey Bank employee OR had a previous personal checking account that was closed within the preceding 12 months OR have received a prior personal checking account incentive at any time.
    Open a new Busey Pillar Banking or Foundation Checking account online or in-person using the promotional code to be enrolled in this offer and within ninety 90 days of account opening: 
  • Enroll in online banking
    Activate and use your Busey Debit Mastercard® for at least three (3) transactions
  • Set up and receive qualifying direct deposits as defined below into that eligible personal checking account
  • Ninety (90) days after account opening all qualifying direct deposits will be totaled to determine the bonus amount you may earn (see chart below).
  • All bank account bonuses are treated as income/interest and as such you have to pay taxes on them

Avoiding Fees

Monthly Fees

Foundation checking has no monthly fee with direct deposit or average balance of $100; otherwise, pay a $5 monthly fee.

Beginning May 1, 2024, Foundation Checking will be updated with the following:

  • No monthly maintenance fee (previously $5)
  • No minimum balance or direct deposit requirement

Early Account Termination Fee

“Accounts closed within 90 days of opening will be charged a service fee of $25.00

Our Verdict

Think this is worth doing as it’s a large bonus, we just don’t have any datapoints on what works as a direct deposit. We will add this to our list of the best bank account bonuses.

Hat tip to reader Gadget

Useful posts regarding bank bonuses:

  • A Beginners Guide To Bank Account Bonuses
  • Bank Account Quick Reference Table (Spreadsheet) (very useful for sorting bonuses by different parameters)
  • PSA: Don’t Call The Bank
  • Introduction To ChexSystems
  • Banks & Credit Unions That Are ChexSystems Inquiry Sensitive
  • What Banks & Credit Unions Do/Don’t Pull ChexSystems?
  • How To Use Our Direct Deposit Page For Bank Bonuses Page
  • Common Bank Bonus Misconceptions + Why You Should Give Them A Go
  • How Many Bank Accounts Can I Safely Open Within A Year For Bank Bonus Purposes?
  • Affiliate Links & Bank Bonuses – We Won’t Be Using Them
  • Complete List Of Ways To Close Bank Accounts At Each Bank
  • Banks That Allow/Don’t Allow Out Of State Checking Applications
  • Bank Bonus Posting Times

Why the Smartest Leader Usually Fails


Catch the full episode:

Overview

Most companies hit a ceiling not because of strategy or market conditions, but because the leader is still trying to be the smartest person in the room. In this episode, John Jantsch sits down with Jason Wild, executive advisor and co-author of Genius at Scale, published by HBR Press, to make the case that the lone genius model of leadership is not just outdated. It is actively holding companies back.

Jason spent more than 20 years in senior roles at Microsoft, IBM, and Salesforce, leading projects across 40 countries. He watched brilliant people pour their careers into innovation efforts that succeeded at rates of five to fifteen percent, not because the ideas were bad, but because the conditions around those ideas were never built to support them. Genius at Scale is his answer to that problem.

This episode covers the shift from pathfinding to wayfinding, the three leadership roles that drive repeatable innovation, why most good ideas die in integration rather than ideation, and what small business owners can do right now to build a team that does not need them to be the source of every good idea.

About Jason Wild

Jason Wild is an executive advisor, co-founder of Wild Innovation Consulting, and co-author of Genius at Scale: How Great Leaders Drive Innovation, published by HBR Press. He spent more than two decades in senior leadership roles at IBM, Microsoft, and Salesforce and has led projects in 40 countries. Earlier in his career he had television and film credits, including a co-starring role opposite Mr. T in a CBS movie. Learn more at geniusatscale.com.

Key Takeaways

  • Stop hiring for the A player. Build the A team. The distinction sounds small but it changes everything about how you lead, hire, and structure work.
  • Innovation is a social process. You cannot mandate it. You have to create the conditions where people feel safe enough and inspired enough to want to co-create the future with you.
  • Most innovation stalls at integration, not ideation. Good ideas are not the bottleneck. Getting them through the seams between people, systems, and teams is where everything falls apart.
  • Language shapes culture more than most leaders realize. The Pfizer VP who banned the word change and replaced it with evolve saw an immediate shift in how his skeptical team responded to new initiatives.
  • The most dangerous place to make decisions is your office. Getting out and experiencing what your customers actually experience is not a nice-to-have. It is a leadership practice.
  • Celebrating individual achievement sends the wrong signal. If you want collaboration to be the norm, recognize teams, not heroes.
  • Wayfinding is replacing pathfinding. In a world changing this fast, the job of a leader is not to set a fixed destination and remove barriers. It is to figure out where you are going while you are already moving.
  • Self-awareness is an underrated leadership skill. How you make people feel when you give feedback shapes whether they will ever bring you their best thinking again.
  • Small business owners are better positioned for this than they think. Smaller teams, less bureaucracy, and closer proximity to customers are advantages in building cultures of repeatable innovation.

Timestamps

[00:02] Opening hook: the reason your company hits a ceiling might have nothing to do with strategy.

[00:53] Jason’s first career in Hollywood and co-starring with Mr. T in a CBS movie of the week.

[01:44] The core premise: why the lone genius model of leadership fails and what replaces it.

[03:33] What Jason saw at IBM that shaped his thinking about why smart people accept such low innovation success rates.

[06:37] Why small business founders are wired to be the genius in the room and why that eventually becomes the ceiling.

[07:19] The ABC framework: architect, bridger, and catalyst unpacked.

[10:07] Why the architect role is really about culture and psychological safety.

[11:03] The bridger as the unsung hero of innovation and why Death Valley is where most good ideas go to die.

[13:04] The role outside consultants and third parties play in bridging across boundaries.

[14:03] What catalysts do differently and how movements start with people and ideas, not companies.

[16:35] The Pfizer story: how banning the word change helped get a vaccine out in 266 days instead of eight to ten years.

[18:25] What we typically celebrate about leadership that the research says is actually wrong.

[20:31] How writing the book as a collaborative team proved its own thesis.

Memorable Quotes

“Stop trying to hire the A player. Focus on building the A team. It sounds subtle but it is a fundamentally different way to lead.”

“Innovation is not about coming up with the best idea. The organizations that innovate time and time again focus on the conditions and the environment around the idea.”

“Most innovation stalls not at the ideation phase but the integration phase. That is where good ideas go off to die.”

“Self-awareness is one of the most undervalued skills in leadership. How you make people feel when you give them feedback determines whether they will ever bring you their real thinking.”

“If the billionaire founder can make time to stand in line at a bank branch, everyone else can practice empathy too.”


Learn more at geniusatscale.com.

Product Management 101: Everything You Need to Know (Full Course)



📌 Welcome to the Ultimate Product Management Course! 🚀 This full-length video combines 10 essential episodes to help you master product management from beginner to expert.

Get the playbook:

📖 Course Breakdown:
– Introduction
– Product Management 101: What Does a PM Do?
– Understanding the Product Lifecycle
– Identifying Market Needs & Conducting User Research
– Defining Product Vision & Crafting a Roadmap
– Working with Cross-Functional Teams
– Creating a Minimum Viable Product (MVP)
– Agile Methodology & Product Management
– Key Metrics & KPIs for Product Success
– Gathering & Implementing User Feedback
– Go-To-Market Strategy & Product Marketing

🔥 What You’ll Learn:
✅ What a Product Manager does & key responsibilities
✅ How to conduct market research & define product vision
✅ The importance of an MVP & Agile methodology in PM
✅ Key metrics & how to measure product success
✅ How to launch, manage, and improve a product over time

🎯 Who is this course for?
✅ Beginners & aspiring PMs looking to break into product management
✅ Engineers, designers, or marketers transitioning into a PM role
✅ Current product managers looking to level up their skills

🔔 Subscribe for more product management insights & career tips!

#ProductManagement #ProductManager #PM101 #MVP #Agile #GoToMarket #UserResearch #ProductLaunch #PMSkills

source

MIT To Admit Fewer Graduate Students As Federal Research Funding Drops 20%


MIT will enroll nearly 500 fewer graduate students next year as the school grapples with steep declines in federal research funding, President Sally Kornbluth told the campus community in a May video message.

New graduate enrollment for 2026–27 is down nearly 20% compared with 2024 across departments outside the Sloan School of Management and the EECS Master of Engineering program.

By The Numbers

  • Federal research awards to MIT are down more than 20% year over year.
  • Total sponsored research at MIT (federal and non-federal combined) is 10% smaller than a year ago.
  • MIT will pay an 8% federal tax on endowment returns under the new tiered rate structure.

Why enrollment is shrinking: Two forces are squeezing the graduate pipeline. The 8% endowment tax has pressured MIT’s budget for more than a year. And federal grant flows have not rebounded even after Congress restored some funding in February.

Without reliable grant money, it’s difficult to fund the graduate students to staff the labs. Kornbluth said many faculty members are already cutting graduate students, postdocs, and specific research projects. Policy changes affecting international students and scholars are also discouraging top applicants from applying to MIT in the first place.

“Hundreds of exceptionally talented young people will not have the benefit of an MIT education — and we won’t have the benefit of their creative brilliance,” Kornbluth said.

What MIT is doing: Kornbluth outlined several offsetting moves: 176 grant proposals submitted to the Department of Energy’s new Genesis Mission, a recently launched MIT–IBM Computing Research Lab, expanded master’s-only programs, and a refreshed philanthropy push under new Resource Development leadership. Growth in non-federal research funding has not been enough to close the gap from the federal decline.

She also flagged early discussions among federal agencies about factoring geography into grant decisions rather than ranking proposals strictly on scientific merit — a shift that would disadvantage research-heavy schools concentrated in the Northeast and West Coast.

How this connects: The endowment tax was expanded under a tiered structure:

  • 1.4% for institutions with $500,000–$750,000 per student
  • 4% at $750,000–$2 million
  • 8% above $2 million per student.

MIT, Harvard, Princeton, Yale, and Stanford sit in the top bracket. The College Investor has noted the contradiction of Congress taxing those endowments while still routing Title IV federal student aid to the same schools.

Graduate funding cuts at the institutional level compound separate federal changes hitting students directly. Grad PLUS Loans are ending in 2026, and new federal borrowing caps for graduate borrowers will push more students toward private loans — or out of graduate programs entirely. 

What to watch next: MIT is one of the first top-bracket schools to publish concrete enrollment numbers tied to the endowment tax and federal grant pullback. Expect similar announcements from peer institutions in the 8% tier.

Watch for any bipartisan movement in Congress to revisit the rate — Kornbluth said MIT’s Washington Office is lobbying on both sides of the aisle to roll it back.

Also, keep an eye on the graduate school brain drain and active recruiting by other countries to attract top talent.

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College Tuition Up 914% Since 1983, J.P. Morgan Reports

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Best Graduate School Student Loans And Rates

Best Graduate School Student Loans And Rates
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Best Student Loans And Current Rates In May 2026

Best Student Loans And Current Rates In May 2026

Editor: Colin Graves

The post MIT To Admit Fewer Graduate Students As Federal Research Funding Drops 20% appeared first on The College Investor.