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[CA, In Branch Only] EverTrust Bank $300 Checking Bonus


Offer at a glance

  • Maximum bonus amount: $300
  • Availability: CA, In branch only [locations]
  • Direct deposit required: Yes, $2,500+ for three consecutive months
  • Additional requirements: None 
  • Hard/soft pull: Unknown 
  • ChexSystems: Unknown
  • Credit card funding: Unknown 
  • Monthly fees: $10, avoidable 
  • Early account termination fee: Unknown 
  • Household limit: None listed
  • Expiration date: None listed

The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • EverTrust Bank is offering a $300 bonus when you open a new checking account and complete the following requirements:
    • Three or more consecutive months of qualifying direct deposits totaling at least $2,500

The Fine Print

  • Bonus Requirements
    • The bonus is available to new Regular Personal Checking accounts opened on or after April 1, 2026. We may change the availability of the promotion at any time. Limit one bonus per customer.
    • A bonus of $300 will be paid after three or more consecutive months of qualifying direct deposits totaling at least $2,500 are made within 120 calendar days from the date the account is opened. A qualifying direct deposit is a deposit of your salary, pension, Social Security, or other monthly income transaction electronically deposited into your account by your employer or other outside agency. Transfers from one account to another, or deposits made at a branch or ATM, do not qualify as a direct deposit.
    • Your Regular Personal Checking account must be in good standing from the date the account is opened to the date the bonus is paid. Good standing means the account is open, active, not frozen, or restricted, without incurring a negative balance outside the approved overdraft daily balance amount, applicable service charges are paid timely and has complied with the terms of the account agreement.
  • Bonus Payment
    • The bonus will be deposited into your Regular Personal Checking account within 30 calendar days after the 120-day qualification period and all requirements of this promotion are fulfilled.
    • The bonus will be reported to the IRS for tax purposes, and you are responsible for any applicable taxes.

Avoiding Fees

Monthly Fees

This account has a $10 monthly fee, this is waived with a balance of $500+

Early Account Termination Fee

I wasn’t able to find a fee schedule so unsure if there is any EATF. 

Our Verdict

Annoying that it needs to be opened in branch, but still a good deal if you live near a branch. 

Hat tip to reader Ji

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

Should You Buy Lemonade Stock Before April 29?


The war in Iran has created a lot of volatility in the markets, and many stocks are experiencing fluctuating prices based on little more than conflicted investor sentiment. Right now, that sentiment is improving, and the S&P 500 is finally back in the positive for 2026, up 4% as of this writing.

That means that as companies release their latest earnings, the markets may respond to macroeconomic and geopolitical concerns rather than to the company’s performance.

Insurance technology company Lemonade (LMND +3.59%) reports 2026 first-quarter earnings on April 29. Given the current broader uncertainty, should you buy Lemonade stock today?

Image source: Getty Images.

Does AI make Lemonade better?

Insurance is a huge industry. In a recent blog post, Lemonade CEO Daniel Schreiber noted that 14 of the 100 largest companies in the U.S. are insurance companies. They’re big, and they’re old. However, Schreiber writes a scathing analysis of why the incumbents can’t catch up to Lemonade’s technological advancements, even though it is a much smaller operator in this industry.

The basic premise is that Lemonade was created on a digital substrate with AI as its foundation, and that gives it an edge even if the other companies start embracing AI, which they have. Its systems work together to analyze millions of data points and quickly respond, leading to more accurate pricing without the need for human intervention. It’s chatbots onboard customers and deal with claims, and Lemonade’s operating expenses excluding growth (OPEX) have remained constant even as its in-force premium (IFP), or the average total premium at a given time, soars.

Lemonade opex vs. IFP.

Image source: Lemonade.

Lemonade continues to report robust growth in IFP, revenue, and profitability. Its loss ratio, which is an important profitability metric for insurance companies, has been declining, which means it’s paying out less money in claims. That implies that its underwriting is improving as the company has more data.

Lemonade Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(3.59%) $2.46

Current Price

$70.94

What’s happening on April 29?

Management has provided several long-term goals, including reaching positive adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) by the 2026 fourth quarter, with positive net income to follow in 2027.

IFP growth, its top-line metric, has been accelerating for the past seven quarters, reaching 31% in the 2025 fourth quarter. That’s quite a track record. Management is guiding for that trend to continue, with IFP expected to increase about 32% in the 2026 first quarter. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to remain negative for the first three quarters of the year and the full year, but the outlook is for a 50% improvement in the loss.

Lemonade stock has seen major swings recently, and it’s trading roughly flat this year despite the broader market recovery. If it beats Wall Street’s expectations in the first quarter, the stock should reflect enthusiasm; conversely, if it misses, the stock should reflect pessimism. However, broader economic issues may impact what’s happening in the stock market.

In any case, it’s the long-term thesis that looks really exciting, and risk-tolerant investors might want to buy the stock now, no matter what happens after earnings.

The Markets Where Renters Have the Most Power—And What Investors Can Do About It


If you’ve been fretting about unanswered postings for your vacant apartments, you’re not alone. According to new data from Apartments.com and Realtor.com, the rental outlook has been decidedly mixed over the last year, with the Sunbelt states hit the hardest.

Apartments.com shows that the states with the biggest rent declines in March, compared to the same time the previous year, were Fort Myers (-6.4%) and Naples (-4.4%) in Florida, followed by Katy (-3.3%) and Austin (-3.1%) in Texas, and Denver, Colorado (-2.8%). The Northeast, Midwest, and California fared comparatively better, with Chicago (+3.6%) and San Francisco (+7.8%) enjoying a bounce from the past 12 months.

“More Choice and More Time” for Renters

Realtor.com painted a slightly more somber outlook in its January 2026 report, citing 29 straight months of year-over-year rent declines for zero-to-two-bedroom properties and an average rental vacancy rate of 7.6% in 2025 among the nation’s largest 50 metros. Both reports agree that the Sunbelt is where renters have the greatest upper hand, but generally, renters are in a far more advantageous position than they were a few years ago.

Grant Montgomery, national director of U.S. multifamily analytics for CoStar Group, told Apartments.com that “for renters, that means the apartment search in 2026 still looks different than it did during the peak of the pandemic-era housing shortage,” emphasizing that “there is more choice, more time to decide, and greater negotiating leverage, particularly at newer or higher-priced properties.” He added that while construction has slowed, the Sunbelt is still working through an oversupply and that “the advantage [remains] with renters rather than landlords in most of these markets.”

Rental Competitiveness: A Nuanced Analysis of the Rental Market

RentCafe.com did its own number crunching, matching cities against one another for a competitiveness report that factored in the following criteria:

  • How long it took for an apartment to get filled
  • The share of apartments that were occupied
  • How many renters were competing for each vacancy
  • How many renters chose to renew their leases
  • The share of apartments that were new

It found that the greatest demand for rental apartments was in tech-centric metros such as Chicago, San Francisco, Atlanta, and Silicon Valley. 

Other takeaways from the report include:

  • Miami is the most competitive rental market.
  • Lease renewals: Eight out of 10 tenants are renewing leases in New Jersey, the Philadelphia suburbs, and parts of the Midwest.
  • Small cities are becoming increasingly difficult to find vacant apartments in, with Wichita, Kansas, the tightest small rental market in the U.S.
  • The Midwest is far more competitive than it once was: Competition has heated up, and investors and tenants are fleeing high-priced cities.

The Most Competitive Midwest Markets

If you are one of those investors who, frustrated by prices in Northeastern and coastal markets, are planning to buy in the Midwest, I’ve got some bad news. It’s become far more competitive than it once was. Chicago and its suburbs, along with the suburban Twin Cities, are among the most competitive markets in the region, fueled by limited new construction and renters priced out of more competitive markets elsewhere.

Big City Coastal Markets See Competition Tumble and Vacancies Increase

In contrast to other rental reports, RentCafe.com paints a rosier picture for landlords based on geographic location. Nationwide, 92.7% of apartments are rented, with six people competing for each available unit.

However, there is still strong demand for new apartments, with only 0.6% of the country’s apartment inventory built in the past year, and newer apartments renting the fastest. Overall, it’s impossible to draw sweeping conclusions, with the actual numbers making for a nuanced read.

Veronica Grecu, senior real estate writer and research analyst at RentCafe.com, wrote in the report:

“While many major metros have heated up considerably since this time last year, others have moved in the opposite direction. Southwest Florida, Brooklyn, NY, Eastern Los Angeles County, Washington, D.C., and Louisville, KY are the five markets where competition cooled the most over the past 12 months. In these areas, apartments are taking longer to fill, fewer renters are competing for each unit, and lease renewal rates have dropped. Louisville and Southwest Florida, in particular, saw more newly built rentals in recent months, helping drive the shift.“

The Play for Small Landlords: How to Get Your Rentals Filled

As the rental market balances out, small landlords must navigate the shift from bidding wars for apartments to fierce competition amongst landlords to fill vacancies. Key strategies for renting apartments include the following.

Consider pricing and incentives

To counter a tiny 7.6% national vacancy rate, landlords are offering discounts, free months’ rent, and gift cards, which have become standard marketing tools.

Use social media

If you don’t have a robust social media campaign with compelling, snappy walk-through videos of stylish, modern apartments, you will be left behind by the competition. The hard sell isn’t always the most effective tool to draw viewers. Offer practical tips and educational advice to attract potential clients.

The power of retention

Nationwide, about 6 out of 10 tenants are renewing leases. Midwest markets like suburban Chicago and Lafayette, Indiana, see those rates above 70%. Renewing leases is far more cost-effective than finding new tenants.

Demand drivers

Rental demand remains high due to high house prices and interest rates, and construction is limited in many areas. Even though markets have softened from post-pandemic peaks, rent prices remain roughly 15% above 2019 levels.

Appealing to would-be homebuyers priced out of the owner-occupant market by offering rents marginally lower than the competition’s could be a winning strategy in a tight market.

Vet management thoroughly

Paying slightly more for a reputable property manager who is acutely familiar with the local market and good at maintaining high occupancy will pay dividends in the long run.

Final Thoughts

There’s no one-size-fits-all solution for the current rental market. While overall it has softened in certain areas, particularly in the Sunbelt and some pricey coastal metro markets, there is still plenty of competition in other areas such as the Midwest, tech cities, and even small-town America to keep units filled, provided landlords offer an attractive, stylish product with amenities such as washer/dryers and a dishwasher, an open-plan layout, and modern finishes—and price competitively.

In this market, it’s not all about squeezing tenants for every penny from the start, but rather attracting them with a reasonable rental price and renewing their leases so they stick around and you remain vacancy-free.

Lock-in effect drives home renovation boom, Redfin says



With mortgage rates still hovering above 6% and far greater than those seen during the pandemic, homeowners are choosing to renovate their homes rather than move.

Processing Content

About 43% of Americans upgraded their homes last year, and 33% plan to remodel in the next year, according to a recent survey from Redfin that was conducted in November and consisted of 4,000 residents in the United States. Of those who renovated, 65% chose to as a direct alternative to finding a new home.

“Many Americans are choosing to stay put and make the home they already have work for them,” said Chen Zhao, Redfin’s head of economics research, in a press release Friday. “That could mean improving outdated spaces, adding space for a growing family or reconfiguring the existing space so it works for everyone.”

Mortgage rates and home prices remain historically high, which has created a lock-in effect, as about 80% of homeowners with a mortgage have an interest rate below current levels, according to a separate Redfin report. 

More than a third of homeowners with a mortgage rate less than 6% would not give up their rate for any reason, and 47% said they couldn’t afford current rates, a survey conducted by Best Interest Financial and Clever Real Estate found.

As a result, housing-inventory growth has flattened over the past year.

Gen Z and millennial homeowners were more likely than older generations to remodel instead of move, as 77% of each generation said they made improvements rather than relocating in the last year. Less than 50% of baby boomers did so, Redfin found.

“Younger homeowners are especially likely to renovate instead of jumping to a different house; they’re earlier in their homeownership journey and more willing to invest in improvements to build equity,” Zhao said. “Those with kids living at home are often motivated to plant deeper roots where they are so they can stay in the same school district and community.”

Most homeowners are spending less than $20,000 in renovations, with 21% spending between $1,000 and $5,000, 20% spending between $5,000 and $10,000 and 23% spending between $10,000 and $20,000. About 16% dropped between $20,000 and $50,000, the report showed.

Painting was the most common upgrade, as nearly half of recent renovators opted for a new coat, while at least 40% of renovators improved their bathroom and kitchen. Exterior maintenance and landscaping was also popular, with 35% choosing such enhancements, Redfin said.

Climate resilience was important to homeowners as well, as 15% added renovations to make their homes more suited to handle natural disasters such as flooding, wind, fire and heat.

In a time when sellers severely outweigh buyers on the market, some sellers may benefit from remodeling their homes to help them stand out.

“If you can afford it, investing time and money into making your house look and feel better can help when it comes time to sell,” said Jo Chavez, a Redfin Premier agent in Kansas City, Missouri, in the release. “Updated homes tend to sell faster than fixer-uppers, and for more money.”



The AI Leadership Imperative


Companies that successfully integrate AI will prioritize leading human-centric transformation.

Digital Banking : Nubank Subsidiary Nu Mexico Reports 15M Customers


Nubank’s (NYSE: NU) latest milestones highlight its accelerating momentum across Latin American markets, blending customer growth with new payment technology that aims to put users in control of their finances. In Mexico, the digital bank has now surpassed 15 million customers, firmly establishing itself among the nation’s three largest financial institutions by user base. This landmark comes after the company tripled its scale in only two years, welcoming roughly 12,000 new account holders each day and posting 36 percent year-over-year expansion—outpacing even its record-breaking Brazilian origins.

Daniel Rojas, Nu Mexico’s Chief Growth Officer, credited the milestone to the millions of Mexicans who have embraced the platform.

“In just seven years we have earned a level of trust that once required decades,” he noted, emphasizing the bank’s promise to keep innovating so customers retain full command of their money.

The expansion reaches far beyond big cities. Nu’s footprint now rivals the third-largest fan base in Mexico’s top soccer league, with especially strong adoption in Mexico City, Quintana Roo, Nuevo León, Tabasco, and Baja California Sur.

By operating entirely through a 24/7 digital platform without physical branches, the bank handles more than 30,000 customer requests daily while preserving a personal touch.

This model fuels a self-reinforcing cycle: larger user numbers generate richer data, which sharpens risk models, lowers costs, and lets the company reinvest in better rates and smoother experiences.

The results speak volumes—credit balances rose 61 percent and deposits climbed 21 percent in the past year alone, making Nu the go-to choice for both saving and borrowing.

At the same time, Nubank is redefining everyday transactions in Brazil with a major upgrade to contactless payments.

The new “Pay by Tap” feature, now rolling out to Android users with NFC capability, lets customers complete purchases by simply tapping their phone at any compatible terminal—no physical card required.

What sets it apart is the seamless integration of three payment methods into one fluid action: instant Pix transfers, Pix installments stretching up to 12 months, debit, or credit.

Users can access the tool directly from the “My Cards” or Pix sections of the app; setup happens automatically by creating a secure virtual card behind the scenes. A tap at checkout then handles everything, while device biometrics or passwords add an extra layer of protection.

Tokenization ensures merchants never see actual card details, sharply reducing fraud risk and eliminating the need to carry plastic.

Fausto Ibarra, Vice President of Digital Ecosystem at Nubank, explained the thinking behind the update: the goal is to collapse every payment option into the simplest possible flow, especially for the millions who rely on Pix daily.

Customers can even set the bank as their default wallet or pin a shortcut to their home screen for instant access.

The feature will continue expanding gradually, but early adopters already report faster checkouts and greater peace of mind. Together, these developments paint a clear picture of Nubank’s business strategy, which focuses on scale in new markets paired with streamlining digital banking.



This founder was an AI layoff 9 months ago. Then he built a company with 2 partners and 12 agents


Nine months ago, Sam Brown was out of a job. The reason, he’ll tell you without a sense of bitterness, was artificial intelligence. The company he’d spent years building a career inside decided it needed fewer people, and he was one of them.

“I got laid off nine months ago, and it was AI-related,” said Brown, 48, with a career that stretches back to 2000, aside from a few months as a ball boy for the Denver Nuggets in his youth. “I had to sit there and say, ‘This is a blessing, because I get a head start on everyone else that’s going to have to go through this in a little while.’”

He didn’t spend long feeling sorry for himself. Instead, Brown joined a three-person startup with no venture funding, no engineering team, and no traditional software infrastructure. What they did have were 12 AI agents.

$300 in, $300,000 out

Fathom AI, an Austin-based sales enablement platform built specifically for the medical aesthetics industry, launched in early 2026. Within 12 weeks, it achieved an estimated annual recurring revenue of $300,000, gross margins north of 90%, and operating costs under 10% of revenue, according to records reviewed by Fortune. And the total capital invested to start the company was just $300.

“We launched 2.5 months ago, and right now, we have $300,000 in ARR,” said Brown, who manages the three-person company’s finances as the president of Fathom AI.

The company has taken no outside funding. When venture capitalists came calling, Fathom got all the way to the finish line on a term sheet and walked away—not because the deal was bad, but because they genuinely couldn’t figure out what they’d spend the money on.

“The VC said, ‘You’re going to need an engineering team of this size, a customer success team of this size,’” Brown recalled, adding that when he and Fathom’s founder and CEO Ben Hooten walked out of the meeting, they basically said, “We’re not going to need that.”

courtesy of Fathom AI

By year-end, Fathom projects $5 million in ARR across 15 to 18 enterprise customers. The team is structured as a partnership specifically to distribute profits now, a deliberate decision to get paid rather than hold out for a distant exit in a market none of them can predict.

Brown explained to Fortune that the partnership is essentially like collecting a paycheck. “We’d rather take the money now and then, there’s not a lot to reinvest in, because we don’t have huge costs.”

“Hell,” added Dan Crump, the senior member of the trio, at 56 years old, “we got paid today, as a matter of fact. We’re cash-flow positive.”

The skeptic who became the proof

Kirk Gunhus has been in the medical aesthetics industry for 30 years. He has gray hair and, by his own cheerful admission, is “not a technology guy.” He wasn’t interested when Fathom AI first pitched him on switching vendors.

The origin story starts with a frustrated rant. The CEO, Hooten, then still a sales rep, was sitting in one of Gunhus’ meetings when Gunhus, a couple of beers in, unloaded on the state of sales technology. “You’ve got all this stuff here, and none of it really works well,” Gunhus said. “Someone needs to just put it all together, so when I walk into a zip code, I know exactly what accounts are perfect for us to go after.”

He forgot about his rant immediately, but Hooten didn’t. Gunhus said he got a call the very next weekend from Hooten, who said he put a plan together.

Gunhus agreed to a pilot with six sales reps. The company, he said, couldn’t afford the subscription, but every one of those six reps paid individually to work with Fathom AI. That’s “because it works,” Gunhus said. “It’s making them so much money.”

The results bore him out. In all of 2024, one of Gunhus’ consulting clients, Tiger Aesthetics, did not open a single net new account. Within one quarter of deploying Fathom, he said they had opened 225. “The bosses over at Tiger are like, ‘[Give them] whatever they want.’ They just saved a ton of money.”

The medical aesthetics industry is a multibillion-dollar world of plastic surgeons, dermatologists, med spas, and device manufacturers and, according to Fathom AI and their clientele, it’s ripe for disruption. Sales have historically been entirely manual. Reps cold-called, drove routes blind, and relied on memory and intuition to figure out who to see and when.

Fathom replaces all of that. A rep enters a zip code, and the platform surfaces every nearby account that fits their product profile, ranked by fit. It layers in real-time Google search data so a rep can walk into a doctor’s office and say, with specificity, what that physician’s patients are searching for. It also serves as a live training tool: new hires roleplay sales scenarios against an AI that corrects their technique in real time, flagging wrong answers and asking follow-up questions.

The team that isn’t supposed to exist

Hooten, the CEO and the junior member of the group at 39, explained to Fortune that his 12 agent co-workers hold real operational roles—one runs customer success for a national sales force; another wakes up every two hours to scan the competitive landscape and file a briefing.

His background was in sales, not software, Hooten explained, and so he looks at the AI agent era as a chance to build things that he never had the skills to, before. When a colleague told him that he couldn’t build an automated sales tool that actually worked, he built it anyway, and on his first day using it in the field, he closed $440,000 in a single day.

Gunhus said he had firsthand experience with the customer service bot: a Tiger Aesthetics rep called with a support issue, was walked through the solution by what they believed was Hooten on the line, and had no idea they’d been talking to an AI. “The rep has no idea what’s going on, literally.”

courtesy of Fathom AI

Crump, the senior member of the group, at 56 years, is a former Marine with decades in tech sales experience at companies including GE and IBM. He has watched every major tech cycle from the early internet to the smartphone era. He recalled one morning about 25 years ago visiting Enron, when he was working as a sales rep for HP, the exact time when the famous accounting fraud was going belly-up. “The elevator door opened, and a lady had a plant and a Herman Miller chair, and she was rolling it out of there, cussing,” Crump recalled. “I go up, and my buddy says, ‘Hey, somebody just tried to throw a chair through the window.’” He’d been on the phone with his manager minutes earlier to confirm Enron owed his company $27 million—and that it had cleared the Friday before. “So I was like, ‘Okay, thank God we’ll get paid,’” he said. “I’ve seen a lot of stuff.”

In this industry, he added, sometimes tech sales is “just uninspiring.” With Fathom, he said he feels like they’re making “something that makes a difference.”

The 23-year-old parallel

Fathom isn’t the only small team rewriting the economics of what a company can be. Half a continent away, in Toronto, Yatharth Sejpal is running a strikingly similar experiment, and he’s 23 years old.

Sejpal is the CEO of KNOWIDEA, a predictive intelligence platform that advises executives on decision-making. He has no computer science background—”never written a line of code in my life,” he said—but within six months of launching he said he has closed $500,000 in ARR with six enterprise clients spanning energy, manufacturing, professional services, and financial services. He co-founded the firm with Brian Zhengyu Li, who is completing a PhD and previously worked as an applied scientist intern at Amazon Web Services.

Like Fathom, KNOWIDEA is a three-person operation. And like Fathom, Sejpal passed on early VC money. “If I wanted to exit, I would have taken VC money really quickly,” he said. He turned down a spot in Antler, one of the world’s largest startup accelerators, because he didn’t want to dilute equity before proving his model. Instead, he took a strategic investment check, from a consulting firm, not a venture fund, at a $15 million valuation.

His pitch to enterprise clients is almost a philosophy as much as a product. “Leaders need clarity,” Sejpal told Fortune from a hotel room (he said he spends nearly all his time traveling). “That’s it. There is no other reason, a dashboard, a report, all of it is just to bloody get clarity.” His platform ingests decentralized data and produces ranked, risk-weighted insights for C-suite decision-makers.

Crucially, Sejpal is careful about what his platform won’t do. On the question of AI hallucinations, a persistent concern among executives considering high-stakes AI tools, he draws a clear line. “At the core of decision-making is clarity plus judgment,” he said. “Our job is to give clarity. Your job is to make the judgment.” His system flags predictions that deviate dramatically from market norms and filters them out before they reach a client.

Sejpal, who grew up in India and moved to Canada to attend the University of Waterloo, spent years inside some of the largest people consulting firms in the world before deciding the industry was ripe to be disrupted. His vision of where the three-person company model leads is more radical than his current headcount suggests. He doesn’t think three-person teams are the endgame: he thinks they represent the beginning of a total restructuring of how work gets organized.

“I don’t want to ever hire an account executive or a customer success manager,” he said. “The only two roles that we want to hire are FDEs and FDCs, forward deployed engineers and forward deployed consultants.” One person who understands what data to select, and one who understands what context to apply. “Everything else,” he said, “can be automated using artificial intelligence.”

That logic extends to his larger argument about the enterprise. Take 20-person project teams, for example: “I think that is going to slim down to a two-person team. FDC plus FDE can do all of the work, and then one supervisor who can overlook. That’s it. It’s as non-complicated as that.”

It hasn’t been as lucrative for Sejpal as it has for the Fathom co-founders, but he’s not concerned about that yet. His savings dwindled for months until the spring of 2026, when he finally started drawing a salary, but he cheerfully said that his excitement about what he’s doing is more than enough for him. “If I if I wanted to make money, there are much simpler, less strenuous, mentally and body-exhausting tasks that I can do. I’m worried every single night, I have night sweats thinking how I’ll make salary for my employees, how I’ll grow my team and 20 other headaches. I could have made much more money without having a single of those stress.”

Dramatic implications

Brown was careful to say that the Fathom story isn’t primarily about Fathom. It’s about what Fathom represents: the first wave of a much larger shift in who gets to build a software company and who has the advantage doing it. In fact, thanks to AI, businesses have exploded in recent years, and it looks like there’s no chance of stopping what innovations can come next, according to financial firm Apollo.

The VC model was built around the assumption that you needed massive capital to build technology: engineering teams, customer success departments, sales headcount. That assumption is now structurally broken. A platform that once required $10 million in seed funding to staff can be assembled by three experienced operators and a suite of AI agents for the cost of a dinner out.

That changes who wins. Gunhus, for his part, said he’s not interested in launching his own three-person AI startup. “I’ve done all that, I don’t want to go through all that mess again.” But he’s watching carefully and telling everyone he knows to pay attention to the AI agent revolution. “If you don’t use it,” he said, “it’s gonna run you over anyway.”

That’s more or less the same conclusion Sam reached nine months ago, sitting with a pink slip and a decision to make about what came next. He doesn’t sound like a man who was laid off. He sounds like a man who got lucky.

“Everyone’s going to have to go through this to some extent,” Sam said. “I just think I got to go through it a little earlier than most.”

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Trump Administration Proposes New Rules To Cut Federal Loans For Low-Earning College Programs


Key Points

  • The Department of Education is moving forward with a rule that would cut off federal student loan access for college programs whose graduates earn less than a typical high school graduate (for undergraduate programs) or less than a typical bachelor’s degree holder (for graduate programs).
  • Programs that fail in two out of three consecutive years lose Direct Loan eligibility for at least two years.
  • Institutions where more than half of students or funding comes from failing programs could lose all Title IV aid (including Pell Grants) for those programs. 

The U.S. Department of Education is moving forward with a proposed rule that would strip federal student loan eligibility from college programs that consistently fail to boost graduates’ earnings above what they’d make without the degree.

The 394-page Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (PDF File) represents the final piece of the Trump Administration’s overhaul of student aid under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA).

The proposal arrives as the federal student loan portfolio approaches $1.7 trillion, and it would for the first time apply a uniform earnings accountability standard to programs at every type of institution: public universities, private nonprofits, and for-profit colleges.

The Trump Administration’s proposed accountability framework is grounded in common sense: if postsecondary education programs do not leave graduates better off, taxpayers should not subsidize them,” said Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent in a statement.

According to a recent analysis by Preston Cooper at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), 95% of all programs would pass this new test.

Programs That Pass Do No Harm Test. Source: Preston Cooper

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How The New Earnings Test Works

For undergraduate programs, the Department compares the median earnings of graduates (measured four years after completion) against the median earnings of working adults aged 25-34 with only a high school diploma in the state where the school is located. If fewer than 50% of students come from that state, national data is used instead.

For graduate programs, the comparison group shifts to working adults aged 25-34 with only a bachelor’s degree. The earnings threshold is the lowest of three benchmarks: 

  1. Bachelor’s holders in the same state, or
  2. Bachelor’s holders in the same field of study (at the 2-digit or 4-digit CIP code level) in the same state, or
  3. Bachelor’s holders in the same field nationally

The earnings data comes from the IRS: wages, self-employment income, and other earned income as reported on tax returns. 

Programs need at least 30 completers (expandable through cohort aggregation) and at least 16 matched earnings records for the test to be calculated. A program passes if its median graduate earnings equal or exceed the threshold. It fails if earnings fall below it.

Infographic timeline showing how a college program loses federal student loan eligibility under the proposed earnings accountability rule, from IRS earnings test to Direct Loan loss. Source: The College Investor

What Happens When Programs Fail

A program is classified as a “low-earning outcome program” if it fails the earnings premium test in two out of any three consecutive years. Once classified, the program loses eligibility for federal Direct Loans but not necessarily Pell Grants or other Title IV aid, at least initially.

The period of ineligibility is two years. After that period, a school can seek to re-establish the program’s eligibility but only if the program has not continued to fail the earnings test in either of the two most recent award years.

Schools are also blocked from gaming the system by shutting down a failing program and restarting a nearly identical one. Under the proposed rule, an institution cannot establish Direct Loan eligibility for any program sharing the same 4-digit CIP code and overlapping occupational classification (SOC) codes as a program that lost eligibility.

There is one other option for schools: the “orderly program closure” option. If a program fails the earnings test in a single year but hasn’t yet been classified as a low-earning outcome program, the school can voluntarily agree to wind down the program over the lesser of three years or the program’s full-time duration. During that time, the program keeps Direct Loan access so current students can finish, but the school must stop admitting new students immediately and inform students of their options to transfer.

When Pell Grants Are Also At Risk

While individual programs initially lose only Direct Loan access, the rule includes a broader institutional trigger. If more than half of a school’s Title IV students or more than half of its Title IV funding comes from low-earning outcome programs in two out of three consecutive years, the Department would place the institution on provisional status and all of its low-earning outcome programs would lose eligibility for all Title IV aid, including Pell Grants.

This provision is designed to address situations where failing programs aren’t isolated issues but reflect a systemic problem at the institution. In practice, this means that students at affected schools could lose access not just to federal loans but to grant aid as well.

Warnings And Transparency Requirements

Schools are required to warn both prospective and currently enrolled students when a program is at risk of losing Direct Loan eligibility. These warnings must be updated if a student re-enrolls more than 12 months after receiving a previous warning.

The rule also adds new Pell Grant disclosure requirements. Institutions must inform Pell-eligible students of their remaining lifetime Pell Grant eligibility and explain that any Pell funds used in a failing program still count against that lifetime limit.

The Department is also expanding its Student Tuition and Transparency System (STATS), which will require institutions to report program-level data including tuition, fees, and financial aid details. This data will feed public-facing disclosures about net program costs and earnings outcomes.

The American Enterprise Institute (AEI) has also put together a dataset that you can search and see if your school is at risk. Check out the data here.

What This Means For Families

For families evaluating college programs right now, this rule won’t take effect immediately. 

The Department will calculate the first round of performance data in early 2027 and the second in early 2028. Because two consecutive failing years are required, the earliest a program can lose student loan eligibility is the 2028-29 academic year.

The public comment period runs through May 20, 2026, and the Department could make changes before finalizing. That said, the AHEAD negotiated rulemaking committee reached full consensus on the regulatory text, which suggests the framework is unlikely to change substantially.

When it does take effect, the practical impact will depend on what program a student is enrolled in and at what type of school. While 95% of programs are expected to pass, there’s a big gap between eligible certificate programs vs. graduate programs.

The rule also creates a strong incentive for schools to either improve underperforming programs or shut them down.

That’s good news for future students who might otherwise enroll in a program with poor earnings outcomes. But it could create disruption for students currently enrolled in programs that end up on the chopping block.

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