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Tether Continues Its Diversification Strategy With Investment In Whop


Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin issuer, has invested in Whop, a digital marketplace.

Tether did not reveal the details on the investment.

According to a statement from the firm, Whop will integrate Tether’s Wallet Development Kit (WDK), supporting self-custodial USD₮ and USA₮ payments directly inside the platform. This means that Whop users will no longer need to depend on legacy payment rails.

Tether states this supports its thesis of stablecoins plus self-custody wallets.

Paolo Ardoino, CEO of Tether said the investment in reflects Tether’s focus on supporting real economic activity by “providing efficient digital dollar and wallet infrastructure that can scale to billions of people, across every continent.”

Whop.com is US -based social commerce marketplace founded in 2021. It serves as a digital “Etsy,” allowing creators and entrepreneurs to sell digital products, including community access (Discord/Telegram), courses, and software.

Tether, which earned a profit around $15 billion in 2025, has aggressively invested in other firms in recent years. Currently Tether has committed capital to around 120 companies while maintaining significant holdings in Bitcoin, Gold and US T Blls.

Tether competes with a growing number of stablecoin issuers. The company recently partnered with Anchorage Digital to offer a compliant stablecoin to the US market.

 

 



What is the meaning of business management?



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Earnings call transcript: ISA Energia Brasil meets Q4 2025 EPS, revenue exceeds forecasts




Earnings call transcript: ISA Energia Brasil meets Q4 2025 EPS, revenue exceeds forecasts

Hippo (HIPO) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript


Image source: The Motley Fool.

DATE

Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026 at 8 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • President & Chief Executive Officer — Richard McCathron
  • Chief Financial Officer — Guy Zeltser
  • Moderator — Charles Sebaski

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Gross Written Premium — $1.1 billion for the year, representing 24% growth driven primarily by commercial and casualty lines.
  • Net Written Premium — $422 million for the year, up 13% as diversification increased in the premium mix.
  • Homeowners Gross Written Premium — $379 million, down 10% as underwriting discipline led to contraction in this largest line.
  • Homeowners Renewal Premium Increase — approximately 15% average premium increase, resulting in management’s view of rate adequacy for this portfolio.
  • Commercial Multi-Peril Gross Written Premium — $265 million for the year, up 75% and now the second-largest line.
  • Casualty Gross Written Premium — $264 million, up 92%, from a well-diversified group of programs; average risk retention was 3%.
  • Renters Gross Written Premium — $175 million, up 19%, maintaining what management calls “attractive profitability.”
  • Q4 Gross Written Premium — $288 million, rising 40% year over year with casualty and commercial multi-peril as primary contributors.
  • Q4 Net Written Premium — $97 million, up 23% year over year as net premium mix continues to shift away from homeowners.
  • Q4 Net Loss Ratio — Improved to 46%, a twelve-point year-over-year improvement, with cat loss ratio at negative 1% due to low losses and positive reserve releases.
  • Q4 Net Expense Ratio — Increased to 53.5%, a four-point rise attributed to the homebuilder network sale in 2025.
  • Q4 Net Combined Ratio — Improved eight points to 99.4% versus prior year’s fourth quarter.
  • Full-Year Net Loss Ratio — 60%, improving seventeen percentage points; non-cat loss ratio at 45%, cat loss ratio at 15% for the year.
  • Full-Year Net Expense Ratio — Improved eight points to 53%, reflecting increased scale and operating leverage.
  • Full-Year Net Combined Ratio — 113%, representing twenty-five-point progress over 2024.
  • Q4 Net Income — $6 million ($0.23 per diluted share), compared to $44 million ($1.71 per diluted share) in the prior year period, with prior Q4 including a $46 million gain from the First Connect sale.
  • Q4 Adjusted Net Income — $18 million ($0.67 per diluted share), a 20% increase year over year.
  • 2025 Full-Year Net Income — $58 million ($2.22 per diluted share), a $98 million swing from the prior year.
  • 2025 Full-Year Adjusted Net Income — $18 million ($0.68 per diluted share), a $38 million increase, exclusive of asset sale gains.
  • Shareholders’ Equity — $436 million ($16.97 per share) at year-end, up 17% from $362 million ($14.56 per share) at prior year-end.
  • Homeowners Share of Gross Written Premium — 34%, down from 47% last year, with diversification into other lines.
  • Homeowners Share of Net Written Premium — 60% for the year, down from approximately 82% in prior period.
  • Programs in Operation — 38 active programs with under 1% of quotes requiring underwriting exceptions and over 800 claims files reviewed monthly.
  • 2026 Guidance: Gross Written Premium — Expected to increase 27%-36% to $1.4 billion-$1.5 billion.
  • 2026 Guidance: Net Written Premium — Projected to increase 19%-28% to $500 million-$540 million.
  • 2026 Guidance: Net Combined Ratio — Targeted between 103%-105%, representing an 8-10 point improvement from 2025.
  • 2026 Guidance: Adjusted Net Income — Forecasted at $45 million-$55 million, up from $18 million this year.
  • 2026 Guidance: Cat Loss Ratio — Assumed at 13%, a two-point reduction from 2025’s 15% actual.
  • 2026 Guidance: Stock-Based Compensation and Depreciation & Amortization — Expected to total $41 million, down from $50 million in 2025.

SUMMARY

Hippo Holdings (HIPO +3.67%) emphasized a shifting premium mix, with commercial and casualty lines accelerating to comprise nearly half of gross written premium, reflecting a strategic pivot away from homeowners concentration. Management directly attributed improved net loss and combined ratios to enhanced underwriting, more disciplined cat risk management, and operational oversight, highlighting a 54% gross loss ratio despite facing California wildfire exposure. During the call, the company indicated that the homeowners line, after average renewal premium increases and structural improvements, is expected to move back into growth mode in 2026, supported by partnerships with over 50 homebuilders and a controlled relaunch in traditional channels. Hippo Holdings discussed disciplined, low-retention growth in casualty as a key strategic lever, signaling intentions to gradually expand risk retention as confidence builds with program partners. Looking forward, fiscal 2026 guidance anticipates a step-change improvement in profitability and scale, with the net combined ratio set to approach breakeven and adjusted net income projected to exceed double the prior year’s level.

  • CEO Richard McCathron said, “we have relaunched writing traditional new policies with selected partners,” clarifying a strategic shift in distribution.
  • CFO Guy Zeltser said, “Growth in both the fourth quarter and for the full year was driven primarily by strong performance in casualty and commercial multi-peril lines and slightly offset by modest contraction in homeowners.”
  • Management stated risk retention in the casualty line was “only 3% for 2025” but described a plan to “increase our retention levels over time” as reinsurance partnerships deepen.
  • The call specifically noted that the underwriting improvement in net loss ratio was aided by “favorable trends in both cat and non-cat loss experience.”
  • Management described the 15% homeowners renewal premium lift as “way above the loss cost trends in 2025,” and said average premium is expected to continue to outpace loss cost in 2026.
  • Full-year net income increased markedly, attributed to a combination of top-line premium expansion, underwriting improvement, and asset sale gains, though adjusted net income excludes the asset sale effect.
  • The number of operational programs suggests continued portfolio diversification, with direct controls in place limiting quotes requiring exceptions to under 1%.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • Gross Written Premium: Total premiums written before reinsurance and ceding commissions, reflecting the top-line growth of an insurer’s underwriting.
  • Net Written Premium: Premium retained by the insurer after deducting reinsurance ceded to third parties.
  • Cat Loss Ratio: Percentage of net earned premiums paid out for catastrophe-related losses.
  • Combined Ratio: The sum of loss and expense ratios, representing overall underwriting profitability; a value under 100% implies profitability in core insurance operations.
  • Runoff: Discontinuation of writing new policies in a specific program or line, but maintaining liability for claims from existing policies.
  • Short-Tail Exposure: Types of insurance risks where claims are typically settled within a short period (e.g., two years).
  • Retention: The proportion of risk an insurer retains in its own portfolio, after ceding the remainder via reinsurance.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Charles Sebaski: Good morning, and thank you for joining Hippo Holdings Inc.’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings call. Earlier today, Hippo Holdings Inc. issued an earnings release announcing its fourth quarter and full year 2025 results and a financial results presentation which will be webcast during today’s call, both of which are available at investors.hippo.com. Leading today’s discussion will be Hippo Holdings Inc. President and Chief Executive Officer Richard McCathron and Chief Financial Officer Guy Zeltser. Following management’s prepared remarks, we will open the call for questions.

Before we begin, we would like to remind you that our discussion will contain predictions, expectations, forward-looking statements, and other information about our business that are based on management’s current expectations as of the date of this presentation. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, Hippo Holdings Inc.’s expectations or predictions of financial and business performance, conditions, and competitive and industry outlook. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from historical results and/or from our forecast, including those set forth in Hippo Holdings Inc.’s Form 10-K.

For more information, please refer to the risks, uncertainties, and other factors discussed in Hippo Holdings Inc.’s SEC filings, in particular in the section entitled Risk Factors in our Forms 10-Q and 10-K. All cautionary statements are applicable to any forward-looking statements we make whenever they appear. You should carefully consider the risks, uncertainties, and other factors discussed in Hippo Holdings Inc.’s SEC filings and not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, as Hippo Holdings Inc. is under no obligation and expressly disclaims any responsibility for updating, offering, or otherwise revising any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by law.

During this conference call, we will also refer to non-GAAP financial measures such as adjusted net income. Our GAAP results and a description of our non-GAAP financial measures with full reconciliation to GAAP can be found in our fourth quarter 2025 earnings release, which has been furnished to the SEC and is available on our website. I will now turn the call over to Richard McCathron, our President and CEO.

Richard McCathron: Thank you, Chuck, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us. Once again, I am pleased to report that Hippo Holdings Inc. delivered a very strong performance in 2025, continuing to advance and strengthen our business, building on our technology-native insurance platform. For the year, we generated over $1.1 billion of gross written premium for the first time, an increase of 24%, and we are just getting started. Net written premium for the year of $422 million was up 13%. This growth was achieved while improving our combined ratio by 25 percentage points, helping deliver net income of $58 million for the year.

These results underscore the strength of our model and our ability to drive consistent improvements across the core drivers of our business. Guy will discuss more details when he reviews the financials later. We entered 2026 with positive momentum and increased confidence in achieving and exceeding our 2028 targets of over $2 billion in gross written premium, $125 million of adjusted net income, and an 18% adjusted return on equity by 2028. Our continued evolution aligns squarely with the three strategic pillars that guide our business and position Hippo Holdings Inc. for long-term profitable growth. Strategic diversification. We continue to broaden our premium base across both personal and commercial lines, building a more balanced and profitable portfolio. Unlocking market growth.

Our programs deliver a differentiated technology-driven customer experience that sets Hippo Holdings Inc. apart and expands our reach into attractive markets. Optimize for risk management. We are leveraging our diversified portfolio and deep risk management capabilities to continuously optimize performance across market cycles. Now I would like to provide updates on our main lines of business. First, in homeowners, our largest and original line of business. In 2025, we wrote $379 million of gross written premium, down approximately 10% from the prior year, as we prioritized profitability over growth given the heightened competition in E&S.

However, we believe the line performed well, having achieved an average renewal premium increase of approximately 15% in our HHIP business, which we now view as rate adequate. Consequently, we have turned the corner in homeowners and expect this business to return to growth again in 2026, driven by two key developments. First, through our Baldwin partnership, we are now actively quoting business with more than 50 homebuilders nationwide, up from six prior to the sale of our homebuilder distribution network.

Second, following the completion of improvements to our homeowners product outside the builder channel, which included an advanced rate filing process, revised terms and conditions, and improved claims handling, I am pleased to report that we have relaunched writing traditional new policies with selected partners. Turning to our renters business, which produced $175 million of gross written premium for the year, a 19% increase year over year. As one of Hippo Holdings Inc.’s most seasoned programs, it continues to grow while maintaining attractive profitability. We are pleased to support this program and its continued innovation in the renters market. Now turning to our most diversified portfolio of risk, our commercial lines business.

Commercial multi-peril delivered a very strong year of growth, increasing 75% over 2024 to $265 million of gross written premium, making it our second largest line of business after homeowners. Fundamental to our program strategy is supporting programs we know well or have had a long track record of performance, and this is exactly where this year’s growth originated, specifically programs with five years operating histories and consistently attractive underwriting results. Our casualty business experienced even faster growth, increasing 92% to end the year with $264 million of gross written premium, just slightly behind commercial multi-peril. Importantly, this growth came from a well-diversified group of programs with relatively modest limits profiles.

Consistent with our strategy of supporting long-tenured programs, our risk retention levels in casualty was only 3% for 2025. However, as these programs were well supported by the reinsurance market and as we continue to deepen those partnerships, we expect to increase our retention levels over time. Given the growth in our partner program business, we wanted to provide additional insight into how we manage this platform, which is likely a bit more engaged than some may realize. When launching new lines of business with program partners, we follow a rigorous diligence process. Together, we establish the underwriting guidelines the program will operate under, an approach we believe is critical to our long-term success.

For instance, over 70% of our liability policies have limits under $300,000, and our portfolio has an average liability duration of approximately two years, which is generally considered short-tail exposure. We remain highly engaged with our program partners through the underwriting and claims once new programs are operational. For example, if a program wants to write a policy that falls out of its established underwriting guidelines, it must request an exception. Today, we are well under 1% of quotes requiring such an exception. Claims management is also critical to underwriting outcomes, and we are actively involved in that process as well. We set claims authority limits on third-party administrators and proactively review claims that approach those thresholds.

Today, our claims team reviews more than 800 files per month. While we currently have 38 programs in operation, not all have performed as initially expected. In those cases, we will place a program into runoff to protect the overall underwriting performance. I am very pleased with how our team has managed the program business, driving growth, maintaining oversight, and exiting when necessary. This disciplined approach is clearly evidenced by our 54% gross loss ratio in 2025, which includes the impact of severe California wildfires in early 2025. Overall, I am very pleased with Hippo Holdings Inc.’s position today and confident in our prospects for 2026 and beyond.

Now I would like to turn the call over to our Chief Financial Officer, Guy Zeltser, to walk through the highlights of our fourth quarter and 2025 financial results and our expectations for 2026.

Guy Zeltser: Thanks, Rick, and good morning, everyone. In the fourth quarter, we once again delivered strong top-line premium growth, improved underwriting, and increased profitability. Gross written premium in Q4 grew 40% year over year to $288 million and, for the full year, grew 24% year over year to over $1.1 billion. Growth in both the fourth quarter and for the full year was driven primarily by strong performance in casualty and commercial multi-peril lines and slightly offset by modest contraction in homeowners, as we continue to prioritize underwriting discipline over premium growth in that line of business. I will now highlight a few additional details of this gross written premium growth.

Casualty grew 169% compared to Q4 of last year, grew 92% over full year 2024, and accounted for 24% of 2025 gross written premium. Commercial multi-peril grew 58% compared to Q4 of last year, grew 75% over full year 2024, and also accounted for 24% of 2025 gross written premium. And homeowners declined 5% compared to Q4 of last year and 10% versus full year 2024. For 2025, homeowners accounted for 34% of gross written premium compared to 47% in 2024, demonstrating our ongoing portfolio diversification. Net written premium in Q4 grew 23% year over year to $97 million and, for the full year, 13% to $422 million while also getting more diversified.

Renters grew 227% compared to Q4 of last year and grew 311% over full year 2024. Commercial multi-peril grew 36% compared to Q4 of last year and grew 127% over full year 2024. And homeowners declined 3% in the quarter and was down 17% for the year. Homeowners accounted for 65% of net written premium in the quarter and 60% for the full year, both down from approximately 82% in each of the prior year periods. In Q4, net loss ratio improved 12 percentage points year over year to 46%, driven by favorable trends in both cat and non-cat loss experience.

Cat loss ratio improved seven percentage points to negative 1%, driven primarily by a very low level of cat losses during the quarter and by positive development from earlier quarters in accident year 2025. Non-cat loss ratio improved five percentage points year over year to 47%, reflecting continued rate actions, refined policy terms and conditions, enhanced underwriting processes, and stronger claims operations. In Q4, net expense ratio increased four percentage points year over year to 53.5%. This was fully driven by the sale of our homebuilder distribution network in 2025, as our expense ratio in Q4 of last year benefited from five percentage points of profit from these agencies in that period.

Together in Q4, net combined ratio improved eight percentage points to 99.4% compared to Q4 of last year. For full year 2025, our net loss ratio improved 17 percentage points to 60%, driven by improvements in both cat and non-cat loss experience. Non-cat loss ratio improved 11 percentage points year over year to 45%, reflecting the same previously mentioned actions. Cat loss ratio improved six percentage points to 15% compared to 2024. Our net expense ratio for 2025 improved eight percentage points year over year to 53%. This was driven by the scalability of our platform, which enabled us to grow top line significantly faster than our fixed expenses.

Together, the improvements in our loss and expense ratios resulted in a combined ratio of 113%, a 25 percentage point improvement compared to 2024. Q4 net income attributable to Hippo Holdings Inc. was $6 million or $0.23 per diluted share, compared to $44 million or $1.71 per diluted share in the prior year quarter. The year-over-year decline was primarily due to the $46 million gain from the sale of a majority stake at First Connect in the prior year period, which more than offset the improvement in underwriting performance over the same period. Q4 adjusted net income grew 20% year over year to $18 million or $0.67 per diluted share.

For full year 2025, net income attributable to Hippo Holdings Inc. was $58 million or $2.22 per diluted share, representing a $98 million improvement year over year. This improvement was driven by continued top-line growth, materially stronger underwriting performance, and an incremental $45 million in net gain from asset sales in 2025 versus 2024. Full year 2025 adjusted net income was $18 million or $0.68 per diluted share, a $38 million improvement year over year. This was driven by the same underlying factors that drove the net income improvement, with the exception of the net gain on the sale which is excluded from adjusted net income.

Total Hippo Holdings Inc. shareholders’ equity at the end of the quarter was $436 million or $16.97 per share, up 17% from $362 million or $14.56 per share at year-end 2024. The increase was driven primarily by the gain on the sale of the homebuilder distribution network and better underwriting performance, which more than offset first quarter operating losses from the California wildfires and a share repurchase executed in the third quarter. Looking ahead to 2026, we expect gross written premium to grow between 27%–36% to a range of $1.4 billion to $1.5 billion.

This reflects our expectation that growth in our newer lines of business will continue and, as Rick mentioned, our homeowners business will return to growth in 2026. We expect net written premium to grow between 19%–28% to a range of $500 million to $540 million. We expect net combined ratio to improve between eight and ten percentage points to a range of 103% to 105%, driven mostly by the operating leverage and scalability of our platform. This outlook assumes a 13% cat loss ratio, a slight reduction versus 15% actual cat loss ratio in 2025, which includes the Los Angeles wildfires. This reduction is supported by our continued diversification into less cat-exposed lines of business.

And finally, we expect adjusted net income of between $45 million and $55 million, compared to the $18 million in 2025. While we are no longer providing net income guidance, we are now guiding to stock-based compensation and depreciation and amortization expense and expect these line items to total approximately $41 million in 2026, down from $50 million in 2025. And with that, operator, I would now like to open the floor to questions.

Operator: Of course. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question on today’s call, please press star one. The first question today comes from Thomas McJoynt-Griffith from KBW. Thomas, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Thomas McJoynt-Griffith: Hey, guys. Good morning. Thanks for taking our questions. Yes, my first question is just about the relaunch of the homeowners book outside of builders. Could you talk a little bit about your go-to-market strategy and maybe comment on what the competitive environment looks like there as you are looking to increase the distribution?

Richard McCathron: Yes. Good morning, Tommy. This is Rick. Happy to answer that question. As you and the listeners know, it has been quite a while since we wrote traditional homeowners business. We have spent the last two years retooling that product line, a combination of reducing some of the volatility in a more geographically area. We have taken considerable rate on that product line over the last few years. We have improved our terms and conditions. We have changed some of the coverage languages as it relates to deductibles and roof schedules. And we have gotten the product that we believe is extremely rate adequate and one that we are very bullish on its profitability.

As we have opened that product line, we have done it in a thoughtful way, in a number of states with very few strategic partners in order to ensure both competitiveness and profitability. We are accelerating that throughout the year. We will continue to open in other states as well as expand the partnership roster, inclusive of some direct-to-consumer play. But we are very excited about it, and we are excited to share the results as we start to develop them quarter.

Thomas McJoynt-Griffith: Got it. Thanks for that. And then looking at another line of business here, the casualty side, you have seen some nice growth there, both on a gross basis and retaining a bit more through a net basis. Can you unpack a little bit as to what sort of business actually underlies that casualty business? What is the tail risk there? And then can you talk about your maybe timeline to continue to increase retention there? I understand gross is growing, but there is obviously room for the retention side to increase as well.

Richard McCathron: Yes, Tommy, I appreciate the question given this is a newer endeavor for us. Predominantly, it is combined as some cyber insurance, some commercial GL, predominantly for small business. Construction projects, some commercial auto. It is a fairly diverse portfolio of commercial exposure. We take a very small percentage in aggregate; think for 2025, we took about 3% of the exposure on that portfolio. And our average exposure per account is $300,000, so nothing that is extremely large. We also think the time to settle claims is two years or less, which is still fairly short-tail in nature.

As we have said previously, we typically only take risk participation with partners that we develop a longer-term relationship with and have great conviction that they understand what they are doing, that we have proper controls in place, both from a pricing perspective, a claims handling perspective. We would expect that to increase over 2026 and beyond, but we are doing it in a very partner-by-partner selective way. We find ourselves wanting to participate, but we are still concerned a bit about tail exposure or larger limits exposure. There are ways to protect that with third-party reinsurance over our share.

So we are taking risk, we are increasing the risk participation, but we are doing it in a very thoughtful, slow way.

Operator: Thanks, Rick. Thanks, Tommy. The next question comes from Andrew Andersen from Jefferies. Andrew, please go ahead. Your line is open.

Sid (for Andrew Andersen): Hi. Thanks. Good morning. This is Sid on for Andrew. Just curious if you could discuss what drove the reserve development in the quarter?

Guy Zeltser: Hi, Sid. Good morning. This is Guy. I will take the question. So to answer your question directly, it was mostly driven by one large loss. Actually, in our homeowners business, it was a liability claim. First of all, if you just look at the prior accident year, we tend to look at it on a full-year basis. On a full-year basis, we did release about $10 million. So the view for the full year has been positive for us. And then also, specifically, when you look at only Q4, you arrive that from the prior accident year, there was one point of adverse development.

But we did see about three points of positive development from earlier quarters in accident year 2025. So even if we just focus on Q4, it was a positive quarter, and this is why we are, generally speaking, feeling pretty good about where we stand from a reserve perspective entering 2026.

Sid (for Andrew Andersen): Okay. Thanks. And then maybe you could just discuss how you are expecting the premium increases in homeowners to trend moving forward relative to the 15% in 2025?

Guy Zeltser: Yes, absolutely. So as we mentioned, we achieved about 15% in 2025. Obviously, that was way above the loss cost trends in 2025. Given what we just said, that we feel very good about the rate adequacy for the book, we do not expect another year of 15%, but it will still go up, given that in addition to some rate, we have the annual—essentially, we are automatically catching up with inflation. So we do expect premium change increase in 2026 to continue.

And we also expect it to still come ahead of loss cost, which is another reason why we are very, very bullish about the new partnership that we launched and growing outside the builder channel, given that, again, we are not only rate adequate, but we do expect the average premium change next year to trend faster or slightly faster than loss costs.

Richard McCathron: Listen. If I can, this is Rick. I just want to add one very important component. As we accelerate and grow in our own HHIP homeowners program, we are only writing business where we expect the loss ratio to be profitable. So our partners will not even see quotes for business that we are not excited to write.

Operator: Final call for questions, star one. You have no further questions, so I will hand the call back to the management team for any closing.

Richard McCathron: Great. Well, thank you so much for joining us this morning. We are excited about the year and quarter we just posted and very excited to be sharing additional progress in the coming quarters. Thank you very much. Have a great day.

Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you very much for your attendance today.

Is America Facing A Graduate School Brain Drain?


Key Points

  • Federal research cuts and rising costs are squeezing graduate education. 
  • Asian and EU countries are stepping up recruitment of U.S. graduate students and researchers.
  • Research strength underpins national security and economic innovation – but the rewards don’t typically materialize for years.

The United States has long been the world’s premier destination for graduate education and research in science, engineering and medicine. American universities dominate global rankings, and federal agencies (including the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Department of Defense) fund research that powers industries and strengthens national defense.

But a confluence of research grant elimination, changes to graduate school student loan programs, tighter immigration policies and rising global competition is raising concerns among higher education leaders: Is the United States entering an era of graduate-level brain drain?

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Research Is A National Security Asset

Research funding is not simply an academic issue. It is foundational to economic strength and national security.

Many technologies now central to defense and daily life (the internet, GPS, semiconductor manufacturing) were born from federally funded research.

According to data from the National Science Foundation, the United States spent roughly $900 billion on research and development (R&D) in 2022, with federal agencies accounting for a significant share of basic research funding. Basic research, which often takes years to yield commercial results, is the pipeline for applied technologies used in defense systems, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence and quantum computing.

The Department of Defense remains one of the largest federal funders of research tied to military innovation. Meanwhile, the National Institutes of Health supports research that underpins biotechnology and healthcare.

Yet federal funding has not always kept pace with inflation. When adjusted for inflation, NIH funding experienced periods of stagnation in the 2010s, following a budget doubling in the early 2000s. Success rates for major research grants often hover near 20% or lower, meaning many highly rated proposals go unfunded.

For graduate students and postdoctoral researchers, that translates into fewer funded positions and more uncertainty.

A Historical Warning

The idea of brain drain is not new. During and after the World Wars, the United States benefited from an influx of European scientists fleeing war and political upheaval. Federal investment surged after the launch of Sputnik in 1957, leading to expanded funding for science education and research.

That investment paid dividends for decades.

Today, other nations are making similar strategic bets. Global research is no longer centered in one country. According to international data, China now produces a comparable or greater number of scientific publications annually in certain fields. Patent filings and advanced manufacturing capacity are also shifting.

The United States still leads in many high-impact discoveries and hosts many of the world’s top universities. But leadership is no longer uncontested.

The troubling part is that Americans won’t feel the issue for 10 to 20 years, and by then, it may be too late to catch up.

Massive Graduate School Changes Are Squeezing Students

Graduate education in the sciences often depends on grant-funded stipends. When colleges and research labs secure grants, they can admit and support doctoral students as researchers. When grants are cut or become unpredictable, universities become unable to support the same number of students.

At the same time, the cost of living in major research hubs (Boston, San Francisco, New York) has surged. Graduate stipends, while increasing in some fields after student organizing efforts, often lag behind housing and healthcare costs.

Visa policies add another layer. International students account for a large share of graduate enrollment in STEM fields. According to the National Science Foundation, temporary visa holders earn a significant percentage of U.S. doctoral degrees in engineering, computer science and mathematics each year. Lengthy visa processing times, uncertainty around work authorization and caps on employment-based green cards can make long term planning difficult.

For U.S. citizens, funding uncertainty can discourage pursuit of academic research careers. For international students, it can signal that opportunities may be more stable elsewhere.

Asia and Europe Are Taking Advantage Of America’s Missteps

While U.S. research funding has faced periodic constraints, several Asian nations have sharply increased investment in science and technology. Japan and South Korea are reporting record numbers of international student enrollment.

China’s government has invested heavily in research and development over the past two decades, making it the world’s second-largest R&D spender. Singapore has built major research hubs with strong government backing. European Union programs such as Horizon Europe allocate hundreds of billions of euros to collaborative research projects across member states.

We’ve heard reports from universities indicate that some Asian governments and universities are offering full tuition waivers, competitive stipends, startup funding for laboratories and streamlined residency pathways to attract Ph.D. students and faculty trained in the United States.

“Asian governments and universities are offering full tuition waivers, competitive stipends, startup funding for laboratories and streamlined residency pathways to attract Ph.D. students and faculty trained in the United States.”

In certain cases, recruitment efforts target students nearing completion of U.S. doctoral programs, offering immediate lab space, grant funding and long-term contracts for job security. For researchers facing years of uncertainty competing for U.S. grants or navigating immigration backlogs, these offers can be compelling.

The European Union, meanwhile, has emphasized researcher mobility, providing funding portability across member states and structured postdoctoral fellowships. Visa processes in many EU countries for highly skilled researchers are often more predictable than the U.S. green card system, which can leave scientists from high-demand countries waiting years.

What This Could Mean For America’s Future

For students, the question is not abstract. Can you afford your graduate education (and what lies afterwards) or not? The net result affects career planning, earnings potential, and even student loan decisions.

It’s important to note that graduate students in STEM fields typically receive stipends and tuition waivers. But postdoctoral researchers (a common next step) may earn modest salaries relative to their training. If U.S. funding remains volatile, early-career scientists may face extended periods of temporary contracts and geographic instability. This could lead them elsewhere.

If top U.S. students move abroad for graduate school and future research projects, the United States risks losing not only talent but also the economic return on its public education investment.

Public universities, supported by state and federal dollars, train scientists who may then commercialize their discoveries elsewhere.

From a national security standpoint, the stakes are higher. Emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and advanced materials have dual-use military and civilian applications. If breakthroughs increasingly occur abroad, U.S. defense and economic leadership position could erode over time.

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Scotiabank earnings top estimates on growth across divisions




Bank of Nova Scotia topped estimates on better-than-expected results at its Canadian banking division even as pressure on loans in that business increased. 

Capital One Shopping Offering $80 Referral/Signup Bonus, Plus Cap Increased to $1,900


Capital One Shopping Referral/Signup Bonus

🔃 Update (Feb 24, 2025) – Capital One Shopping is now offering an $80 referral and signup bonus. You get the bonus without even making a purchase. Additionally, you can now earn up to $1,900 in referrals. That’s a big boost from the previous limit of $500. 

If you don’t have an account yet, follow these steps:

  • Create an account and verify your email
  • Add the free shopping savings tool with full permissions – then use it for 90 days to enjoy free coupons and rewards at 100K stores
  • You can get $80 in shopping rewards

🔃 Update (Nov 05, 2024) – $40 referrals and signup bonus are back again. The rewards you earn from the portal can be redeemed for gift card purchases. These are the current options in my account at least:

🔃 Update (Dec 09, 2023) – There’s now a new best ever $200 referral and signup bonus for select users. If you have a $200 referral, you can share it in our Facebook Group, and I can share it here on the site.


This is an amazing bonus for Capital One Shopping and for any shopping portal in general. If you do not have an account yet, this is the best time to sign up and get $200 for your holiday shopping. It gets better if you have the $200 referral yourself, as you can invite your family members and they also get $200.

🔃 Update (Nov 20, 2023) – Zhivko in our Facebook group shared that there’s now a new highest ever $75 referral and signup bonus for select users. You can use his link to sign up, or share your own referrals here if you have the $75 bonus. 

Original article: Capital One Shopping has increased the referral bonus for current members as well as the signup bonus for new users. You can now earn $30 with every referral and give your friends and family members the same bonus.

Here’s how it works:

  • Sign up for Capital One Shopping or log into your account
  • Get your referral link here
  • New users need to sign up through the link, install extension and spend $10.
  • You then each get $30 in Shopping Rewards.

You can earn up to $300 in rewards through referrals. And as a reminder, you do not need to be a Capital One customer in order to create a Capital One Shopping account.

Important Terms

Lauren Demarte promoted to Chief Operating Officer at GoDigital Music


Lauren Demarte has been promoted to Chief Operating Officer at Los Angeles-headquartered GoDigital Music.

Demarte was most recently Senior Vice President of Marketing at Cinq Music Group, a label, distributor, and publisher housed under GoDigital Music.

Demarte, who becomes GoDigital Music’s first COO, brings more than 15 years of experience across early-stage, scaling, and post-IPO technology companies.

She will lead operational strategy and execution across the company’s global music and technology businesses. She also oversees operations in Colombia, “playing a strategic role in strengthening the company’s presence in Latin America and other high-growth markets”.

The move comes as GoDigital Music continues its global expansion under parent company GoDigital, which recently secured $230 million in financing, bringing total capital raised to more than $1 billion.

The funding news arrived alongside a revamp of the GoDigital brand.

The company shed its former “Media Group” identity and said that it is “leaning into the future” with the creation of three new business units: GoDigital Music, Networks, and Brands.

That latest capital raise was conducted through its GoDigital Music division.

GoDigital said at the time that Cinq Music, which currently sits within the GoDigital Music division in L.A., would undergo a rebrand of its own.

Previously, as Senior Vice President of Marketing at Cinq Music Group, Demarte spearheaded strategic marketing initiatives, growing artist reach and engagement across multiple genres and markets, and played a key role in the label’s continued expansion.

“I’m proud to be part of a leadership team that reflects the diversity of the industry we serve — including strong female voices shaping strategy and growth.”

Lauren Demarte, GODIGITAL MUSIC

“I’m excited to step into this role at a time when we’re continuing to innovate our offering for artists and labels across the U.S. and global markets,” said Demarte. “GoDigital Music represents an extraordinary roster of talent from around the world, and I’m proud to be part of a leadership team that reflects the diversity of the industry we serve — including strong female voices shaping strategy and growth.

“As we enter this next chapter, I’m looking forward to scaling and diversifying how we support our teams and our artists.”

“Lauren carries the beautiful burden of being an extremely reliable executive and problem solver. She is everyone’s first call when faced with a challenge.”

LOGAN MULVEY, GoDigital Music

Speaking about Demarte’s promotion, GoDigital Music CEO Logan Mulvey said: “Lauren carries the beautiful burden of being an extremely reliable executive and problem solver. She is everyone’s first call when faced with a challenge.

“Her instincts and track record as an operator and a leader of people have put her squarely in the middle of our growth and evolution as a business.”


Elsewhere at GoDigital Music, the company recently acquired “several” Latin music catalogs in a transaction valued at approximately $115 million. As part of the announcement, the company also revealed that it had acquired the publishing catalog of Marc Anthony in a separate eight-figure deal.

Meanwhile, last November, GoDigital Music completed the acquisition of Swiss digital music distributor Octiive, allowing it to establish a European headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland.

GoDigital Music says its catalog includes over 80,000 assets across Reggaetón, Música Mexicana, Afrobeats, K-pop, Country, and more, including works from Jason Derulo, T.I., Daddy Yankee, Marc Anthony, and others.Music Business Worldwide

We studied chatbots and language and saw a huge problem: They mean 80% when they say ‘likely’ but humans hear 65%


When a human says an event is “probable” or “likely,” people generally have a shared, if fuzzy, understanding of what that means. But when an AI chatbot like ChatGPT uses the same word, it’s not assessing the odds the way we do, my colleagues and I found.

We recently published a study in the journal NPJ Complexity that suggests that, while large language model AIs excel at conversation, they often fail to align with humans when communicating uncertainty. The research focused on words of estimative probability, which include terms like “maybe,” “probably” and “almost certain.”

By comparing how AI models and humans map these words to numerical percentages, we uncovered significant gaps between humans and large language models. While the models do tend to agree with humans on extremes like “impossible,” they diverge sharply on hedge words like “maybe.” For example, a model might use the word “likely” to represent an 80% probability, while a human reader assumes it means closer to 65%.

This could be because humans can interpret words such as “likely” and “probable” based more on contextual cues and personal experiences. In contrast, large language models may be averaging over conflicting usages of those words in their training data, leading to divergences with human interpretations.

Our study also found that large language models are sensitive to gendered language and the specific language used for prompting. When a prompt changed from “he” to “she,” the AI’s probability estimates often became more rigid, reflecting biases embedded in its training data. When a prompt changed from English to Chinese, the AI’s probability estimates often shifted, possibly due to differences between English and Chinese in how people express and understand uncertainty.

AI chatbots don’t interpret ‘probably’ and ‘maybe’ the same way you do. Mayank Kejriwal

Why it matters

Far from being a linguistic quirk, this misalignment is a fundamental challenge for AI safety and human-AI interaction. As large language models are increasingly used in high-stakes fields like health care, government policy and scientific reporting, the way they communicate risk becomes a matter of public trust.

If an AI assistant helping a doctor, for instance, describes a side effect as “unlikely,” but the model’s internal calculation of “unlikely” is much higher than the doctor’s interpretation, the resulting decision could be flawed.

What other research is being done

Scientists have studied how humans quantify uncertainty since the 1960s, a field pioneered by CIA analysts to improve intelligence reporting. More recently, there has been an explosion in large language model literature seeking to look under the hood of neural networks to better understand their “behaviors” and linguistic patterns.

Our study adds a layer of complexity by treating the interaction between humans and artificial intelligence as a biological-like system where meaning can degrade. It moves beyond simply measuring if an AI is “smart” and instead asks if it is aligned.

Other researchers are currently exploring whether so-called chain-of-thought prompting – asking the AI to show its work – can fix these errors. However, our study found that even advanced reasoning doesn’t always bridge the gap between statistical data and verbal labels.

What’s next

A goal for future AI development is to create models that don’t just predict the next likely word but actually understand the weight of the uncertainty they are conveying. Researchers are calling for more robust consistency metrics to ensure that if a model sees a 10% chance in the data, it chooses the same word every time.

As we move toward a world where AI summarizes scientific papers and manages people’s schedules, making sure that “probably” means “probably” is a vital step in making these systems reliable partners rather than just sophisticated parrots.

The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

Mayank Kejriwal, Research Assistant Professor of Industrial & Systems Engineering, University of Southern California

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Conversation