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World Legend Mastercard Priority Pass Showing Restaurants and Spas


World Legend Mastercard Priority Pass Restaurants and Spas

Update: It looks like it’s a an expanded benefit on World Legend Mastercards (HT: William). I sent out emails to Mastercard, Priority Pass, Citi and Bilt for comment. I will update below with any details they provide.

  • Bilt said: The membership provides complimentary access to 1,200+ lounges for the cardholder and up to two guests. While the Priority Pass portal allows you to view participating lounges and “experiences,” this currently refers to airport lounges and business facilities. It does not include non-lounge airport experiences such as restaurant credits or spa treatments.

World Legend Mastercard page says that you get access to 1,700+ airport lounges worldwide and special offers and discounts in the terminal on dining, retail and spa experiences. Although it looks like that language has been there for a few months at least and Priority Pass may work out different terms with different issuers.

World Legend Mastercard Priority Pass Restaurants


Original article:

World Legend Mastercards such as Bilt Palladium or Citi Strata Elite offer a complimentary Priority Pass Select membership. It provides unlimited access to over 1,200 airport lounges worldwide.

But briefly over the last few hours, this Priority Pass Select membership was also showing airport restaurants and spas as eligible. That’s something rare that is now limited only to a few credit cards. You get $28 per restaurant visit for yourself and one guest, so it is/was a great value.

Here’s a screenshot that was shared by Anki in our Facebook Group:

Bilt Palladium Priority Pass Showing Restaurants and Spas

But now these non-lounge experiences have been removed, or at least I no longer see them listed. Some people still report seeing them. So it’s looking less like a glitch, and more like an expanded benefit is in the works.

I asked Bilt Concierge and was told that: Your Bilt Palladium Card includes a Priority Pass membership equivalent to their “Prestige” level, and I can confirm that it does include participating airport restaurants. I have also reached out to Bilt for comment.

For now don’t rush just yet to get that free drink or massage.

Nature and Significance of Management class 12 Business Studies ONE SHOT | chapter 1 bst



Nature and Significance of Management class 12 Business Studies ONE SHOT | chapter 1 bst
bst class 12 chapter 1 by Gaurav Jain

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PassPass closes ‘seven-figure’ seed round at $15m valuation, pitching gamified music discovery to artists


PassPass, a Nashville-based platform that lets artists build scavenger hunts tied to music releases, tickets, merch drops, and more, has closed a “seven-figure” seed round at a $15 million pre-money valuation.

Atlanta-based real estate fund Roots led the round, alongside a group of strategic backers and angel investors.

The company launched commercially in the summer of 2025, offering entertainment, rewards, and commerce in a single platform. Players can compete in games for a chance to win real prizes and giveaway entries, according to the company’s website. PassPass launched a new artist discovery initiative, PassPass for Artists, in March.

The Bitcoin Conference, rapper BIGXTHAPLUG and country artist Chris Young have used the platform to run activations. Artists can set up challenges across cities where fans can show up and participate.

Since its launch, PassPass says it has grown to over 170,000 registered users across more than 20 cities. The company says its growth has been largely organic, driven by fan sharing and participation.

PassPass also reported $1 million in annual recurring revenue in its first year post-launch and claims over 1 billion views across its social media channels, with roughly 2 million followers across its city-based network.

“We’re planning more than investment; we’re looking forward to using PassPass ourselves to engage our community across the country this year.”

Daniel Dorfman, Invest With Roots

The business model runs on a mix of subscriptions, paid media partnerships, and advertising, touting itself as an alternative to traditional digital advertising, which continues to face declining engagement.

Daniel Dorfman, CEO of Invest With Roots, said: “PassPass is one of the strongest cross pollinations of fintech, playful gaming, community spirit, and consumer rewards we’ve seen.”

“Their win-win approach to attention, promotion, and entertainment really resonates with Roots. We’re planning more than investment; we’re looking forward to using PassPass ourselves to engage our community across the country this year.”

Edgel Groves Jr., co-founder and CEO of PassPass, added: “PassPass is shifting how consumers engage with entertainment and commerce by making fintech fun.”

“We’ve built a platform where attention and participation are rewarded, discovery is gamified, and brands can connect with audiences in ways those audiences enjoy. This capital will let us get even more innovative in how we continue growing and fostering our highly engaged community.”

“We’ve built a platform where attention and participation are rewarded, discovery is gamified, and brands can connect with audiences in ways those audiences enjoy.”

Edgel Groves Jr., PassPass

PassPass will use the latest investment to expand into additional US markets, build out AI-driven personalization for challenges and rewards, and grow its “fanbase.”

The investment comes amid the growing appeal of superfans as revenue drivers. The music industry is shifting its focus from passive listeners to superfans or users who are willing to pay a premium for deeper engagement with artists and exclusive experiences.

SoundCloud recently launched a superfan feature that lets artists release music exclusively to followers before a wider release. The feature, called ‘Follower Exclusive Releases,’ is available to Artist Pro subscribers and allows creators to gate tracks behind a follow either temporarily or permanently.

In January, Universal Music Group acquired a minority stake in superfan platform Stationhead following the latter’s merger with online music event platform Mellomanic. The UMG-Stationhead deal arrived two years after UMG invested in another prominent superfan platform, HYBE’s Weverse.

In March, during UMG’s most recent earnings call, Chairman and CEO Sir Lucian Grainge outlined superfans as a key priority for UMG and noted the company’s focus on “fostering a deeper relationship between artists and fans”. He characterized the segment as “massively under-monetized.”

Goldman Sachs, in its Music in the Air report, put the addressable superfan opportunity at $4.3 billion annually based on 2026 projections.

According to Luminate‘s 2025 Year-End report, 20% of US music listeners now qualify as superfans.

Thom Skarzynski, founder of New York-based music marketing firm Happiness, told MBW in March: “Every superfan started as a casual listener. If we design experiences that invite fans deeper into the culture of the music, those relationships grow naturally and they spread. Once someone becomes a superfan, they bring others with them.”

Music Business Worldwide

Pell Grant Eligibility Jumped 31% After FAFSA Simplification, GAO Finds


Key Points

  • The GAO confirms FAFSA simplification met its goals: roughly 9.9 million students were eligible for a Pell Grant in 2024–25, up about 570,000 (6%) from the prior year.
  • Most of the new eligibility came from middle-income families. Pell eligibility climbed sharply in the $60,001–$125,000 income range, and the number of students with household incomes of $40,001–$80,000 qualifying for the maximum award more than doubled.
  • The share of FAFSA filers who qualified for any Pell rose from 65% to 71%, even though fewer students filed the form because of the bumpy 2024–25 rollout.

A new report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (PDF File) finds that the redesigned Free Application for Federal Student Aid is doing what Congress intended — pushing more students into the Pell Grant program and qualifying far more of them for the maximum award. 

The report examined the first year of the simplified FAFSA and found significant gains in eligibility, with the largest jumps concentrated among middle-income households that historically received little or no need-based federal aid.

About 9.9 million students who completed the FAFSA were eligible for a Pell Grant in school year 2024–25, an increase of roughly 570,000 students, or 6% over the prior year.

Eligibility for the maximum Pell award of $7,395 grew even faster: about 7.9 million students qualified, a 31% increase representing roughly 1.9 million additional students.

The GAO attributes these results to the FUTURE Act of 2019 and the FAFSA Simplification Act of 2020, which together reshaped the application and the underlying aid formula.

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Simpler Form Allows For Easier Completion 

The new FAFSA cut the number of questions from more than 100 to as few as 18 for some filers, automatically imported tax data from the IRS, and replaced the Expected Family Contribution with a new metric called the Student Aid Index. Congress also raised the income protection allowance, lifted the threshold for reporting assets from $50,000 to $60,000 in adjusted gross income, and created automatic Pell pathways tied to the federal poverty level.

Under the new rules, students whose household income falls at or below 175% or 225% of the federal poverty level (depending on dependency status and family size) automatically qualify for the maximum Pell. A second set of thresholds, ranging from 275% to 400% of poverty, automatically qualifies students for the minimum Pell. The minimum award rose to $740 in 2024–25.

The GAO also notes that incarcerated students are again eligible for Pell aid after a decades-long exclusion, and that students who are homeless or in foster care no longer have to reverify their status each year.

Middle Income Families Find Support

The headline finding for families: simplification did the most for households that previously felt squeezed out of need-based aid. We’ve long been advocates of always filling out the FAFSA, but FAFSA Simplification removed an additional barrier to making this happen.

At least 350,000 more students with household incomes between $60,001 and $125,000 became Pell-eligible in 2024–25 — accounting for at least 61% of the total 570,000-student increase. Within that band, the share of FAFSA filers who qualified rose from 38% to at least 55%.

The picture is even more striking for the maximum award. The number of students with household incomes between $40,001 and $80,000 who qualified for the full $7,395 Pell Grant more than doubled, from about 554,000 to at least 1.3 million. The GAO credits the expanded automatic maximum Pell criteria for much of this growth.

Lower-income students still make up the bulk of Pell recipients. Of the 9.9 million eligible students in 2024–25, about 7.4 million (roughly 75%) had household incomes below $60,001, and nearly all FAFSA filers in that bracket qualified.

What This Means For Households

For families weighing college affordability, there’s a few key takeaways here.

Average awards moved up. The average Pell award across all eligible students rose by $278 from 2023–24 to 2024–25, driven largely by the surge in maximum-award qualifiers. Because more than half of eligible students qualify for the full amount in both years, the median award stayed at the full $7,395.

The asset rules changed. Roughly 2.4 million more students reported no assets on the 2024–25 FAFSA, partly because the threshold for reporting assets rose and partly because households below the automatic maximum Pell income criteria are not required to report assets at all. Among students who reported no assets, 91% were Pell-eligible and 85% qualified for the maximum.

The “sibling discount” went away, but most affected families gained anyway. The new formula no longer accounts for the number of family members in college, a feature that under the old formula reduced a student’s expected contribution when a sibling was also enrolled. Despite that change, 60% of students with another family member in college qualified for Pell in 2024–25, up from 55%, and 77% of those qualified for the maximum, up from 48%. Other formula changes more than offset the loss for most households.

There are exceptions. The GAO modeled a hypothetical family of four with two children in college, $10,000 in assets, and $95,000 in household income — a family that may have qualified for a Pell Grant under the old rules but would not under the new ones. A similar family with $70,000 in income, however, would qualify for a larger award than before.

What Happens Next

The GAO is careful to note what the numbers do not capture. Fewer students completed the FAFSA in 2024–25 because of well-documented rollout delays, so eligibility totals are likely depressed relative to a normal cycle. The data also predates changes made under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act,  which restored small business and family farm asset exemptions on the 2026–27 FAFSA and could narrow Pell eligibility for some students with high household assets but low incomes.

It’s important to remember, though, that the maximum Pell still covers less of the cost of college than it once did.

According to the Congressional Research Service, the maximum award covered about 80% of tuition, fees, and room and board at a public four-year college in the mid-1970s, around 40% in the early 1990s, and roughly 30% in 2022–23.

Larger eligibility numbers expand access but it does not, on its own, restore the award’s historical buying power.

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The post Pell Grant Eligibility Jumped 31% After FAFSA Simplification, GAO Finds appeared first on The College Investor.

April inflation shoots 3.8% higher on surging prices from war in Iran



U.S. consumer prices climbed sharply again last month as the 10-week war with Iran pushed energy prices higher.

The Labor Department’s consumer price index rose 3.8% from April 2025, according to data released Tuesday. On a month-to-month basis, April prices rose 0.6% from March as gasoline prices rose 5.4% during the month; the month-over-month gain was down from 0.9% increase from February to March.

Labor Department figures showed that gasoline prices are up more than 28% compared to a year ago. AAA says the average gallon of gasoline costs motorists more than $4.50 a gallon, about 44% more than it cost last year at this time.

Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called consumer core prices rose 0.4% last month from March and 2.8% from April 2025, relatively modest readings that suggest the energy price burst isn’t spilling over much yet into other prices.

Grocery prices rose 0.7% from March to April, as meat prices rose, after falling slightly the month before.

Inflation had been dropping more or less steadily since peaking with a 9.1% year-over-year spike in prices in June 2022, a surge caused by supply chain bottlenecks at the end of COVID-19 lockdowns and an energy price shock following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. But inflation remained above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

Then, the United States and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, and Tehran responded by shutting off access to the Gulf of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas passes. Energy prices rocketed in response.

The Fed, which had been expected to cut its benchmark interest rates in 2026, has turned cautious as it waits to see how long conflict lasts and whether higher energy prices spill over into other products and cause a broader inflationary outbreak.

President Donald Trump has lambasted the Fed and its outgoing chair, Jerome Powell, for refusing to slash rates to boost the economy. Kevin Warsh, the president’s hand-picked choice to succeed Powell, is expected to be confirmed by the Senate this week; but it’s unclear whether Warsh would pursue lower rates given the uncertainties arising from the war — or whether he could persuade his colleagues on the Fed’s rate-setting committee to go along if he tried.

Americans are getting squeezed by gasoline prices that have shot past $4.50 a gallon. Some companies are also starting to feel the pain. For example, Whirlpool, which makes KitchenAid and Maytag appliances, reported last week that revenue dropped nearly 10% in its most recent quarter and said that the war has caused a “recession-level industry decline″ that has undermined consumer confidence.

Mortgage Rates Doing What They Do Best in May: Rise


Welp, the month of May is fully in swing and mortgage rates are doing what they normally do; go up!

Despite spring being peak home buying season, mortgage rates are often the most expensive during this time of the year.

This is historically speaking and can vary from year to year, but so far it’s looking to be on trend.

Driving rates higher lately has been the ongoing war in Iran coupled with some warmer-than-expected jobs data.

If it continues, expect a re-test of recent highs for the 30-year fixed mortgage and possibly a 7-handle.

Mortgage Rates Continue to Be Under Pressure

Lately, mortgage rates have been under a lot of pressure thanks to the Iranian conflict.

Without it, mortgage rates were at their best levels in about 3.5 years, or since the summer of 2022.

That was the same year the 30-year fixed was still in the low-3s, before QE ended and the Fed began hiking rates.

So the fact that we were that low was pretty darn good all things considered.

Problem now is we’ve started another war and Iran doesn’t look ready to make a deal anytime soon.

Meanwhile, the Strait of Hormuz is choked off and that’s leading to really expensive oil, which affects prices on everything.

That all leads to higher inflation, which combined with hotter labor numbers of late, puts upward pressure on mortgage rates.

Simply put, hot economy = higher mortgage rates, all else equal.

The end result is a 30-year fixed back around 6.50% instead of being sub-6% as it was at the end of February.

What’s Next for Mortgage Rates?

I personally see them going higher in the short-term, on the basis that the Iranian conflict is dragged out.

We keep hearing rumblings of a peace deal or some sort of resolution, but then we’re told the two sides are far apart and will never go for X, Y, and Z offer.

As such, the impasse continues and it’s hard to see a quick and painless way out of it.

Eventually that hits the inflation numbers, and bonds (and mortgage rates) don’t like inflation so they must go up.

At the same time, labor continues to show resiliency despite all the warnings that AI will take all of our jobs.

Assuming this transpires, the 30-year fixed, already around 6.50%, climbs that to recent highs of 6.625% and beyond, perhaps 6.75% or even 6.875%.

Does it go all the way to 7% again? I sure hope not as the spring home buying season already appears to be a dud with existing home sales up just 0.2% in April from March and flat from a year earlier.

In other words, more of the same 30-year lows for home sales, despite many thinking 2026 would be the turnaround year.

And the housing market can’t take another gut-punch as it already appears to be running on fumes with affordability so poor.

The alternative scenario is a peace deal is reached, labor isn’t so hot all of a sudden, and a new-look Fed led by Kevin Warsh attempts to resume rate cuts.

That would be the way to get mortgage rates back to their winning ways and sub-6% again, though it wouldn’t happen until after the traditional spring home buying season.

But it could still unfold before the midterms and give Trump something to boast about, as getting mortgage rates low again was a key policy goal.

(photo: FutUndBeidl)

Colin Robertson
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[Ends 5/12] Chase Sapphire Reserve Partners With Whoop Wellness For Free One-Year Subscription ($359 Statement Credit)


The Offer

Direct Link to offer

Chase has a new offer for Whoop wellness brand to rebate their subscription:

  • Activate the Chase Offer on your Sapphire Reserve card: Earn $359 cash back on your WHOOP Life membership purchase when you spend $359 or more, including taxes and after any discounts.

There’s a similar offer on the Sapphire Preferred card, but only $100 back after $149 spend. Offer not available on Sapphire Reserve for Business.

The Fine Print

  • Offer expires 5/12/2026
  • Offer valid one time only.
  • Offer only valid on purchase made directly with the merchant.
  • Offer valid online only at WHOOP.com.
  • Offer not valid on purchase made using third-party services, delivery services, or a third-party payment account (e.g., buy now pay later).
  • Offer only valid on U.S. purchase.
  • It is possible that the merchant may split your purchase into multiple transactions.
  • Offer redemption awarded as statement credit on the first qualifying transaction amount.
  • Payment must be made on or before 5/12/2026.

Our Verdict

Along with the subscription you’ll get the band free, so this basically gets you one year of Life membership tier completely free. Hopefully they’ll renew the deal in a year; for now, it’s just one year free – set yourself a reminder to cancel before renewal. 

  • You can find and share referral codes for Whoop on this dedicated page. Do not share in the comments below.
  • You will be on the hook for the sales tax on the subscription (if applicable), and so I’m debating whether to sign up. People mention promo codes that give $29.90 off (I believe these are referral codes), but be sure that your final charge is $359 for the statement credit to trigger.
  • If you have $29+ in sales tax, adding the promo code should be able to get the costs down, but for most states the sales tax are not high enough for this to work. You can also add $16.99 for expedited shipping and that should count; others mention seeing an $8.99 shipping fee which should count. Play around with the numbers and see what you can get to work for you. Some mention adding accessories; that might work as well to trigger the credit, YMMV.
  • Another note: the purchase is HSA/FSA eligible, and some people might be interested in using up FSA money that way. 
  • Someone shared this ID.ME link for $25 back on the subscription purchase. 
  • Update: a report indicates that the statement credit works when buying clothing from Whoop, so that can be an option to try if you don’t aren’t interested in the health subscription. 

Why Leaders Should Let Minor Mistakes Slide


New research finds that including small slip-ups in performance reviews can drive employees to gossip, disengage, or even sabotage the company.

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Conversations with Frank Fabozzi, CFA, Featuring Sue Brake


How can investment professionals improve decision-making in increasingly complex and uncertain markets?

In this episode of Conversations with Frank Fabozzi, CFA, Susan Brake offers practical perspectives on the total portfolio approach, governance, and the evolving role of AI in investment decision-making.

Key Discussion Points:

  • Rethinking the total portfolio approach Where it works, and where firms get it wrong
  • What actually drives better investment decisions Beyond structure, models, and collaboration
  • Using AI in practice How the role of the investment professional is changing
  • Seeing risk through a systems lens Beyond traditional portfolio models
  • Governance as a performance lever Why decision processes matter more than expected