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Cardano’s Founder Predicts Hard Times Ahead. Here’s Why That’s a Reason to Sell It.


Cardano‘s (ADA +5.53%) community governance system is now fully operational, and so far, the community has voted to defund its own annual summit and starve a cybersecurity project of resources. Two of the chain’s most prominent projects shut down within six weeks of each other.

Founder Charles Hoskinson responded to the chaos by announcing he was “taking a break.” At this point, the only thing Cardano holders seem to agree on is selling; the coin is down 74% in the past year.

Hoskinson’s prediction does not, in itself, constitute a reason to sell Cardano; people predict all sorts of things about the market all the time, and often for self-motivated reasons. But the factors that drove his prediction, when paired with other issues Cardano has, do constitute a reason to sell this coin, so let’s take a look at what’s going wrong.

Image source: Getty Images.

The ecosystem is collapsing

The crux of the problem with Cardano is that its ecosystem is small and rapidly weakening.

Its total value locked (TVL) in decentralized finance (DeFi) protocols has cratered from $653 million in December 2024 to $95 million today. Its number of daily active wallet addresses was just under 16,000 in May, down from approximately 485,000 active wallets per day at its November 2021 peak. Similarly, the number of daily transactions on the chain is just a fraction of its prior high, as are transaction fees. In other words, liquidity and users are exiting the chain together, which is a very bad sign.

Moreover, two of Cardano’s flagship consumer-targeted projects have collapsed in just six weeks. JPG Store, the dominant non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace on the network, shut down on May 23. TapTools, an analytics platform with a million-plus users, said on June 2 it would wind down within two weeks.

Hoskinson called these events leading indicators for the chain’s health, and he isn’t wrong.

Cardano Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(5.53%) $0.01

Current Price

$0.17

Voting has consequences

Hoskinson abdicated direct control over Cardano’s governance as part of its Voltaire upgrade, which implemented a community voting system for governance.

That has had some consequences. On May 29, Cardano’s on-chain governance mechanism held a vote, which ultimately led to the canceling of the $2 million in funds necessary to conduct its 2026 in-person summit in Singapore. A separate proposal to fund a quantum-resistant cybersecurity project for the chain is on track for rejection in a vote concluding this week. The coin’s holders increasingly look like they won’t fund Cardano’s roadmap.

The deeper problem is that Cardano’s investment thesis was never anchored to any single category where it dominated. Ethereum and Solana both have far more DeFi capital, faster transaction speeds, and higher throughput, not to mention lower fees in Solana’s case. Cardano simply hasn’t ever had an area where it excels, and now, investors are voting with their feet.

It makes sense to sell this coin and avoid buying it until that changes, and it might not ever.

The Current State of BRSR in Corporate India 2.0


Effectively incorporating sustainability considerations into financial decisions, including investment process and capital allocation, remains a significant challenge for global capital markets and the investment industry. Although sustainability data has entered mainstream discourse, the debate around how sustainability information should be integrated into investment decisions continues across industries, sectors, and markets. Meaningful and measurable integration of sustainability information presents an important opportunity for investment analysts and portfolio managers across asset classes and geographies.

In India, FY2022–23 marked the first full reporting year for regulator-mandated BRSR disclosures by the top 1,000 listed companies by market capitalization, as directed by the SEBI. Companies are required to disclose BRSR information as part of their annual reports. BRSR disclosures are aligned with the nine principles of the National Guidelines on Responsible Business Conduct (NGRBCs), covering areas such as gender participation, emissions, water use, energy footprint, and employee well-being. This 2nd edition of our analysis indicates that, despite several challenges, corporate India has made notable qualitative and quantitative progress in ESG reporting.

Our analysis covers sustainability disclosures from annual reports of 300 listed Indian companies across FY2022–23, FY2023–24, and FY2024–25. The study focuses primarily on quantitative parameters, clearly defined qualitative data, and binary responses to enable comparability and measurable trend analysis. In addition to the analysis of BRSR data from companies, this report draws on stakeholder interviews and roundtables conducted with asset management companies, investors, corporations, rating agencies, ESG data providers, proxy advisers, and service providers. Across stakeholder groups, a consistent theme emerged: the need to improve data quality, consistency, comparability, and reporting methodologies to make BRSR disclosures more useful for investment decision-making.

Stakeholders emphasized the importance of standardized reporting units, consistent reporting boundaries, and stable methodologies. Frequent changes in reporting boundaries without adequate rationale continue to reduce comparability across reporting periods. There is also growing demand for additional forward-looking climate and carbon-transition data, particularly as physical and transition climate risks gain prominence across industries.

The report also highlights the importance of sector-sensitive reporting. Certain BRSR indicators are inherently more relevant for specific industries. For example, product recall metrics are more concentrated in the Healthcare and Consumer Discretionary sectors, while data breaches are more common in Information Technology and sectors handling large customer databases. Similarly, R&D and environmental capital expenditure (capex) metrics may be more relevant for manufacturing and product-based companies than for many financial institutions. Sector-specific interpretation of disclosures can improve comparability and reduce box-ticking approaches.

The utility of BRSR varies among investors. For many market participants, BRSR currently functions primarily as a risk management tool rather than a decisive alpha-generating input. At the same time, investors increasingly use sustainability disclosures to identify ESG leaders and laggards by assessing climate-risk exposure, transition preparedness, and carbon exposure.

The findings indicate that standalone sustainability reporting remains dominant in India, although some sectors continue to use consolidated reporting structures. Workforce disclosures show that employee churn remains elevated in Financials, IT, Consumer Discretionary, and Communication Services, while Energy, Utilities, and Materials continue to exhibit lower attrition levels.

Additionally, energy and emissions reporting coverage expanded further during the study period. Renewable energy disclosure increased steadily, particularly in Financials, Consumer Discretionary, and Industrials. Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions reporting remained high, while Scope 3 reporting also expanded significantly, although with considerable volatility across sectors. The data also shows improving disclosure levels for R&D and environmental and social capex investments, although full allocation toward environmental and social technologies remains limited. Sustainable sourcing procedures have also become more widely adopted.

The report also observes growth in value-chain environmental assessments and continued disclosure of procurement from micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs). Product recalls remained limited and sector specific, while data breaches increased during FY2024–25, driven primarily by Consumer Discretionary and IT sectors.

The report recommends enhancements across three areas: the BRSR format itself, reporting companies, and other ecosystem participants such as investors, policymakers, ESG rating providers, and capital providers. Key recommendations include improving reporting consistency, strengthening assurance practices, increasing methodological clarity, enhancing sector-specific guidance, and improving linkages between sustainability data and financial metrics.

Globally, sustainability reporting frameworks continue to evolve, with the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) playing an increasingly important role in advancing investor-focused sustainability disclosures. In India, SEBI has played a leading role in developing the sustainability reporting ecosystem, and BRSR has established a strong foundation for further progress. Further improvements in areas such as standardization, comparability, granularity, and reporting clarity will help, but in general the Indian listed companies are making substantial and consistent progress in sustainability disclosures.

Why a $3.6 Billion Deal for an Iconic Sugar Brand Is Actually a Massive Bet on Health



Through this acquisition, this ingredients company is mirroring consumer trends. Here’s why.

APM Financial Fitness: June 2026


Summer’s just around the corner, but as the Iran conflict continues to affect fuel prices, more would-be vacationers are canceling plans for road trips and flights. This has contributed to consumer sentiment numbers sinking to a new low, with lower-income families hit especially hard. Rising inflation numbers have also introduced new challenges.

Home Financing

Housing That Keeps Generations Together

As housing costs climb and generations age, more families are opting for multi-generational properties. These larger homes are designed to house occupants from three generations, providing safety and privacy to everyone. It’s a lifestyle trend that’s more common within European countries, and is becoming more popular here in the United States.

Generation X buyers aged 46 to 61 are sometimes referred to as “the sandwich generation” because of their dual roles supporting their children and parents. They’ve increased their share of ownership of multigenerational properties from 12% in 2013 to 21% today. A recent Realtor.com report estimated there are 4 million multigenerational households, representing 4.5% of all owner-occupied households, as of 2024.

Like other larger homes, buying a home with sufficient room for three generations will be more expensive than a single-family home. However, they also provide their own money-saving features — for example, all residents can pay a percentage of the monthly utility bills.

Contact your local APM Loan Advisor to learn more about your family’s financing options for multigenerational properties.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Insurance

Critical Illness Coverage: A Safety Net for Major Health Issues

If you have concerns about unexpected medical expenses, adding a critical illness policy — also called supplemental health insurance — to your existing insurance can provide peace of mind at a particularly stressful time.

Critical illness insurance provides a lump sum payment if you or a family member suffers a serious health issue. Depending on your coverage, these may include a heart attack, diagnosis of a chronic illness, or an organ transplant.

A major advantage of this coverage is that, in most cases, you can use your lump sum payment for nearly anything you like. In addition to hospital stays and medical bills, you can finance travel to medical centers and hospitals or cover everyday expenses like rent or groceries. It can also help pay for an out-of-network provider.

While this coverage can be a lifesaver, be sure to review your current health benefits before you decide on your ideal level of critical illness coverage. Some employers offer this as an additional benefit at a low cost, so you may want to buy this coverage when it’s time to review your benefits package.

This article is provided for informational purposes only. For specific advice about insurance products and coverage options, please consult with a licensed insurance professional.

Source: investopedia.com

In the News

More States Prohibit Employers from Checking Your Credit

If you or a family member is job-hunting, there may be concerns about potential employers checking credit histories. This has become a controversial practice as some have pointed out that it may unfairly screen out some applicants, especially those with lower incomes.

Last year, 39 bills to restrict employer credit checks were introduced in 19 states, but restrictions are only active in:

  • California
  • Colorado
  • Connecticut
  • Delaware
  • Hawaii
  • Illinois
  • Maryland
  • Nevada
  • Oregon
  • Vermont
  • Washington

There are some jobs where a credit check may be necessary, including those applying for jobs in banking and finance, and those where credit checks are required under federal law.

No matter where you live or what type of position you’re seeking, it’s a good idea to review your free annual credit reports at annualcreditreport.com before attending an interview. If you spot errors, you can request corrections on the site. You’ll also be prepared to explain any negative information they may contain.

Source: credit.com

Credit and Consumer Finance

Higher Gas Prices Encouraging More Staycations

Summer vacations are just around the corner, but higher fuel prices are expected to affect road trips and flights to holiday destinations. A recent poll found that a substantial number of would-be vacationers have already changed or cancelled their plans for summer travel as gas prices have increased by 50% since the Iran conflict began.

One way to temporarily bring down prices for motorists is to suspend the federal gas tax. This move is supported by the White House, plus a number of senators and representatives.

Currently, taxes and other fees on retail gasoline and diesel fuel are 18.4 cents per gallon for gas and 24.4 cents per gallon for diesel, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. In addition, some states have taken steps to offer state gas tax relief. This varies from 9 cents per gallon for Alaskan drivers to 71 cents per gallon for California residents.

Reducing or pausing the federal gas tax would require congressional approval, but several lawmakers have supported this move as early as March 2026. However, some economists have concerns that suspending this tax won’t provide adequate relief for many budgets. In addition, it could adversely affect the balance of a key federal fund for highway construction and maintenance.

Source: cnbc.com

Did You Know?

Adding Gold to Your Retirement Investments

Thinking about adding gold to your retirement portfolio? The “three bucket strategy” is a popular retirement plan that separates your short-, medium- and long-term goals, and you can add gold to this and other retirement plans.

If you’re still planning your retirement savings, here’s how the bucket strategy works.

  • The first bucket is for the short term. This is typically made up of cash and cash alternatives, such as certificates of deposit (CDs), that can pay for everyday expenses, like housing, gas and groceries.

  • The second bucket is for bonds and income-generating stocks and represents cash you may need in three to seven years.

  • The final bucket contains long-term growth assets that have time — like eight years or more — to ride out any volatility. These should be left alone so they’ll have time to recover from corrections.

Since gold prices can be volatile, you may want to add it to your long-term assets. This gives it flexibility to recover from market downturns. Experts typically recommend limiting gold to 5-10% of your portfolio.

Like any other new investment strategy, it’s important to assess your personal risk tolerance and financial goals. Ask yourself if you’ll be comfortable with the price swings that gold may exhibit, and if you prefer to store physical gold or invest in a fund.

The information in this article is provided for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment, financial, tax, or legal advice. For guidance tailored to your individual financial situation, contact your local APM Loan Advisor for a referral to a qualified investment advisor or Certified Financial Planner (CFP®).

Source: money.com



CLEAR Membership Price Going Up to $219?


Some CLEAR Members Seeing $219 Renewal Price 

A discussion on Reddit suggests that some CLEAR members are seeing upcoming renewal charges of $219 per year, despite CLEAR’s website still showing a $209 annual membership fee.

Multiple users reported seeing a $219 renewal amount in their account settings or renewal emails, while others continue to see the standard $209 rate. Mine for example still shows a renewal price of $209 for August 16, 2026. You can check by logging into your CLEAR account, and then going to Membership > Payments > CLEAR+ Membership.

For now, it’s unclear whether this is a system error, or an upcoming fee increase that hasn’t been publicly announced yet.

Guru’s Wrap-up

A $10 increase isn’t a huge deal by itself, but CLEAR is already a tough sell for some travelers. If the fee is really going up, Amex Platinum will likely increase the statement credit to match it as they have done in the past.

But keep an eye on it if your renewal is coming up soon, if you don’t want to pay $10 out of pocket for the service.

Abridge wants to be the operating system for medicine—and NVIDIA and Eli Lilly are helping build it



On Thursday morning in New York City, Dr. Shiv Rao stood before a room of health system executives and made a case that ambient AI—a technology that began largely as a transcription tool—was ready to do something far more consequential than writing a doctor’s notes.

Abridge, the startup Rao cofounded in 2018, announced a strategic investment from drugmaker Eli Lilly and what it is calling the first AI-native clinician intelligence platform: a system that both documents the patient-clinician conversation and uses it as the foundation for billing, clinical decision support, payer adjudication, and pharmaceutical trial screening. More than 300 health systems—including Northwestern Medicine, Emory Healthcare, and Johns Hopkins—are already live on the platform, supporting upward of 100 million clinical conversations annually and serving more than 250 million patients.

The company’s platform captures conversation between patients and doctors in real time and automatically generates the clinical note, billing codes, and patient summary before the doctor has left the hallway. What’s new is everything that flows from that moment. 

Before the visit, Abridge surfaces care gaps and prior clinical context for the clinician. During the encounter, the tech suggests discussion topics and surfaces relevant clinical guidelines without requiring the physician to switch applications. After the visit, it generates the documentation, flowsheets, and orders—all grounded in the actual words spoken.

“We’ve known all along we wanted to be able to connect the dots across the main stakeholders in healthcare, because the only thing that matters, I think, in terms of AI’s impact on healthcare is business model innovation.” Rao told Fortune. “If we can’t actually improve how healthcare is delivered, how it’s experienced, and how it’s paid for, then we haven’t really moved the needle on the problem.”

Behind the platform expansion is a war chest and a set of strategic bets. Abridge has raised approximately $1.1 billion to date, most recently closing a $316 million Series E extension in April 2026 at a $5.3 billion valuation. NVentures, NVIDIA’s venture arm, is among its backers. 

On Thursday, NVIDIA announced it’s also co-developing with Abridge the first foundation model for clinical conversations: an AI model trained on the specific dynamics of doctor-patient dialogue, not a general large language model adapted for medicine.

Rao also announced a partnership with Artisight—an NVIDIA-backed smart hospital company that uses computer vision to automate patient monitoring and nursing workflows inside hospital rooms. Together, the two platforms give care teams a continuous feed of room sensor data and ambient documentation across an entire hospital stay.

Eli Lilly’s bet tracks closely with its own AI ambitions. The pharma giant is simultaneously building what it has called the industry’s most powerful AI supercomputer in partnership with NVIDIA, and Abridge’s new life sciences module—which can surface clinical trial eligibility from within the clinical conversation itself—represents the kind of patient-facing pipeline Lilly needs to accelerate enrollment for next-generation therapies.

“For us, the most important first priority that we would love to explore, that we are working to explore with them, is around clinical trials,” Rao said.

The ambient clinical intelligence mark Abridge is chasing was valued at $7.24 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $56.61 billion by 2035. Microsoft, which acquired speech-recognition company Nuance for $19.7 billion in 2022, is the dominant enterprise incumbent. Ambience Healthcare, Suki, and Nabla are all also well-capitalized challengers. But the field is expected to consolidate within the next 12 to 18 months. The question is whether Abridge’s expansion into payments and life sciences creates a defensible moat, or simply a larger target.

“Now the priority is how much impact can we create, and speed is everything, so I think for the foreseeable future we’re just going to focus on the algorithm,” Rao told Fortune

The platform’s ambition is also its risk surface. Recording protected health conversations requires updated security assessments, state-specific patient consent, and business associate agreements governing how audio is stored. And AI-generated notes that slip past physician review become part of the permanent medical record—a liability that compounds as the platform moves from documentation into billing codes and clinical orders.

Beneath it all is a deeper governance question. Abridge is now positioning itself as neutral infrastructure connecting providers, payers, and life sciences companies through some of the most sensitive data in medicine: the conversation between a sick person and their doctor.

Whether that trust holds, at scale, is an untested hypothesis.

Why Aussies Are Retiring in Asia (And How Much You Need)



Why are thousands of Australians leaving the country to retire in Southeast Asia? In this video, I break down exactly why more Aussies are choosing to retire in Thailand, Bali, Vietnam, Malaysia, and the Philippines, and how much money you actually need to make it work.

We’re talking real monthly budgets, visa requirements, Age Pension portability rules, superannuation access overseas, healthcare insurance, and the hidden risks nobody warns you about.

Timestamps:
0:00 Why Australians are leaving to retire overseas
0:46 The cost of living crisis hitting Aussie retirees
1:41 Can you receive the Age Pension overseas?
2:12 Retiring in Thailand
3:18 Retiring in Bali, Indonesia
3:57 Malaysia, Vietnam, and the Philippines
5:39 How much money do you actually need?
6:50 Superannuation access when living overseas
7:28 Healthcare and insurance in Southeast Asia
8:31 How to test retirement in Asia before committing

Legal Disclaimer:
The content presented in this video is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, tax advice, legal advice, or any form of personal recommendation. All figures, pension rates, visa requirements, cost of living estimates, and superannuation references in this video are based on publicly available information at the time of recording and may change without notice. Always consult a licensed financial adviser, tax professional, or legal expert before making any decisions about retirement, relocation, investments, superannuation withdrawals, or pension entitlements. Aussie Finance With Luke is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information in this video.

💬 Creator’s Note:
Each video on this channel takes a lot of time to write, narrate, and animate with care.
Yes, I use AI tools to help with voiceovers and visuals, but every message, script, and idea is crafted with intention and love, so you can understand money clearly and feel empowered to change your life.

Thank you for being part of this project. 💛

#australiafinance #aussiefinance #australianfinance

source

As SpaceX goes public, a $100 billion shadow market faces a reckoning



A day ahead of the spectacle of SpaceX’s IPO, the much-anticipated trillion-plus valuation of the company—a Frankensteined creature of Elon Musk’s dreams and realities—is emerging as an investor Rorschach test. Some will see cosmic potential, while others will see science-fiction red flags. 

But for one group of investors—those who purchased SpaceX stock on the overheated and shadowy market for “secondary” shares, the company’s listing day will initiate a nerve-wracking moment of truth. For those anxious investors, here’s what will happen: SpaceX will go public, the lockup period will end, and they’ll find out whether they hit the jackpot, were taken in by a scam, or something in between. 

The line between the public and private equities has been blurring over the last 20 years, and nowhere has this been more true than in the secondaries market—the parallel and sometimes-fraud-riddled financial market where investors buy, sell, and effectively gamble for shares of the world’s sexiest private companies.

Given the mammoth size of the U.S. venture secondaries market—an elephant-sized black box that, in 2025, was estimated at somewhere between $62.5 billion and $120.9 billion—it’s not a question of whether fraud will be uncovered when SpaceX IPOs; it’s a question of how much fraud will be uncovered. 

These transactions have happened in the dark for years, with accelerating velocity through the AI boom. But this summer of white-hot IPOs—SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic—could be the crucial moment where the lights flicker on. 

The Wild West of secondaries

It’s no secret that companies are staying private longer. The average venture-backed unicorn now remains private for ten years at minimum, and there are about half as many public companies today as there were in 1996. It has both gotten easier to stay private as more capital from VCs and other investors has become available, and being public—with the scrutiny that entails—is increasingly seen as cumbersome.

As companies have stayed private longer, they’ve also gotten bigger and more sought after: OpenAI—according to private market investors—is worth a cool $852 billion, while five-year-old Anthropic was just valued at a staggering $965 billion. Between SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic, private capital has fueled the rise of three companies that, at least on paper, are worth more all together than France’s GDP. (OpenAI and Anthropic have both confidentially filed to go public, which does not guarantee a timeline or that an IPO will happen at all.)

These much-longer-than-anticipated holding periods have left many VCs illiquid, their funds tied up for years before they can realize their gains on the public markets. (Consider: SpaceX first raised venture funding in 2002, the year Nickelback’s How You Remind Me topped the Billboard 100.) As the superstars of their portfolios have gotten historically huge, and captured the public imagination, VCs have been getting squeezed as their own investors, called limited partners, have started to say “show me the money.” 

Add in: Startup employees who’ve been accumulating vested private stock at high-flying companies for years, and are impatient for the life-changing cash that in the 1990s or 2000s would have come from a traditional IPO—but that IPO doesn’t necessarily materialize. 

Of course, there are plenty of investors eager to hand over vast sums for those coveted shares. Enter the venture secondaries market: If you’re a doctor, lawyer, dentist, entrepreneur, or other high-net-worth individual and you happen to want shares of SpaceX, Anthropic, or OpenAI, there’s a way. And that way is the rabid, private-message-run, Wild West of secondaries. That’s the market that the SpaceX IPO is set to start blowing the lid clean off. 

The Ozempic of the private markets

Secondaries are the Ozempic of the private markets. They’re awkward to discuss, but in tech investing circles, it sometimes feels like everyone’s in on them.

Until the 2010s, selling secondary shares of private companies was deeply frowned upon by pretty much everyone—the investing community  and companies—but over time, the practice became increasingly common. 

Investors and employees, generally speaking, are the original sellers, often transacting through tender offers. And it has become clear that, for the buzziest companies, the world of people who want to own that private stock is extensive. They’re all seeking bragging rights, and alpha (the risk-adjusted surplus return on an investment above an asset class’s benchmarks) that’s been historically locked into the private markets, the province of a select few. 

In the middle, between these buyers and sellers, exists a world of pre-IPO brokers and platforms, of wildly varying credentials and trustworthiness. For example: Industry Ventures, a firm bought by Goldman Sachs in October, is considered serious and credible. That unlicensed broker on Twitter with cryptic access to SpaceX shares? Not so much.

A substantial portion of secondary sales happen through entities called “special purpose vehicles,” or SPVs—financial instruments that first found popularity when touted by the 1980s junk bond maestro Michael Milken. SPVs have been exceptionally helpful tools of capital in the AI boom, as they’re one-deal vehicles that investors can use to deploy millions or billions into coveted cash-guzzlers like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Musk’s xAI. Fortune has reached out to SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic for comment, and will update this story with any responses.

Now, the problem: SPVs regularly go two or three layers down, abstracting the buyer away from the original owner of the shares. And let’s be real: Many SPV investors have no idea who the first layer of shares is even owned by. 

To use a more tangible analogy: It’s like buying a Picasso from a gallery that bought it from a dealer who bought it from a guy who says he knows the family of the owner—and the proof of authenticity is a PDF sent in an email. But you wire $50 million for that Picasso anyway. 

For the companies themselves, there’s frequently zero visibility into the SPVs that are buying and selling their shares. Because an SPV isn’t exactly like buying a share one-to-one, it’s more like joining a consortium of investors buying a set of shares, similar to the pooled structure of mutual fund. 

“In special purpose vehicles, people are just trading units, not trading shares,” said Glen Anderson, cofounder and CEO of Rainmaker Securities. “The actual cap table entity doesn’t change. It often doesn’t require company approval.”

‘That’s still fraud”

“How many people think that they have bought into SpaceX, but they’re actually just funding some dude’s coke habit in Miami? The number is not zero,” said Anduril cofounder Matt Grimm, when we spoke a few months ago. 

Anduril—one of the most sought-after companies in the secondaries market and the hardest to find shares of—has been especially vocal in expressing concerns around secondaries scammers. 

“I have profanity-laden terms I’d use for them, but I describe them as wildcats,” said Grimm. “There are wildcat secondaries sellers, who are out there slinging around share prices that are completely unreasonable and unjustified, preying on desperate, potentially naive or potentially deceived retail investors… It creates this very broad market problem. And my real concern is it’s going to dissuade retail-type investors from investing into companies like this, because they feel like they’re being scammed. And in some cases, they literally are being scammed.” 

Indeed, there will be outright fraud, sellers who lied about the terms of a deal, or their access to shares in the first place—as in the case of Giovanni Pennetta, who was charged by federal prosecutors with using a slideshow pitch to fraudulently sell millions in non-existent Anduril shares, and was caught trying to flee at New York’s JFK Airport. 

But there are nuances here, and fraud-adjacent ambiguities: forward sale agreements that could get voided (“pay now, get shares at IPO” contracts aren’t uncommon); or fee structures on SPVs that are famously predatory, leaving investors who didn’t read the fine print with less SpaceX than they thought.

“That’s still fraud, because I think that you know you’re misrepresenting to an investor what their economic outlook is,” said Samir Kaji, CEO and cofounder of private markets platform Allocate. “You’re not telling them exactly what they bought into, with the total flow of economics across many, many layers of SPVs… It’ll be really interesting when SpaceX does go public to unearth how many synthetic shareholders of SpaceX were there before it went public, because of all these SPVs out there.” 

There are whispers that the SEC is looking at this market, but any regulation will come slowly, and in an era where white-collar-crime prosecution numbers are dramatically down, federal enforcement will likely be scattered.

So, as the “Hot IPO Summer” unfolds, prepare for a great unwinding in the private markets. A world of people will find out that they don’t own what they thought they did. A wave of litigation will likely ensue. And that will be just the beginning. 

Real Estate Investors’ Purchases Drop to a Six-Year Low—Here’s Why Now Is a Great Time to Buy


It had to happen sooner or later: The effect of high interest rates, purchase prices, and escalating holding costs has caused investor purchases to plummet to a six-year low, according to a new Redfin report. 

However, every cloud has a silver lining, and the pullback has coincided with a spike in inventory in many markets and softening prices, leaving keen-eyed, well-funded investors an opportunity to quietly pick up deals.

The Six-Year Pause

Redfin’s report notes that during the first quarter of 2026, U.S. investor home purchases fell 6% year over year, dropping to their lowest level since 2020, amid the pandemic.

The brokerage/listing site said that before the pandemic, investor purchases had been this low only once, in 2016. A confluence of factors beyond high interest rates and rising property prices has caused investors to hit the brakes. These include insurance costs, property taxes, renovation and maintenance costs, and economic uncertainty stemming from geopolitical tensions.

Tamara Mattox-Kabat, a Redfin Premier agent in Denver, said in the report: 

“Higher mortgage rates, slowing price growth, and rising construction costs are giving both investors and individual homebuyers pause. Flippers and investors are scaling back and being much more strategic when they do buy homes. They’re buying less expensive materials and being more careful about timing their projects to list during the stronger spring and summer seasons. It’s also noteworthy that large institutional investors are focusing more on building new homes than buying existing ones.”

Other Key Points From the Report

  • Investors bought 19% of all homes in the first quarter.
  • Investors’ purchases of condos fell sharply by 8% compared to the same period the previous year, due in part to rising HOA fees. Single-family homes were down 6% and townhouses 13% over the same period.
  • Lower-priced homes fell by 10%, but higher-priced homes only fell by 1%, showing that well-financed investors wanted to lock down stable, long-term investments with both equity and cash flow potential.
  • In Detroit, investor purchases were down by a massive 35%, in Orlando by 25%, and in Cleveland by 21%. Conversely, in the Bay Area, they were up by 19% in San Francisco and in San Jose by 12% over the previous year.

AI Is Fueling Deep-Pocketed Buyers

Smaller, less expensive properties with tight margins, often favored by newbie investors with limited budgets and relying on leverage, dropped off a cliff in many markets, such as Detroit and Orlando. That’s because cash flow for these homes is negligible at the moment, while maintenance—measured in both time and money—makes buying these types of houses—considered bread-and-butter workhorses—during a time of low interest rates simply not worth the hassle as far as many are concerned.    

However, pricier markets around San Francisco are on fire thanks to the AI boom, with well-heeled investors able to purchase at will with cash.

“People are rushing in,” David Cohen with City Real Estate told the Wall Street Journal. “You add increased demand because of all this AI money and the fear of competing against those AI buyers.” The Journal reported that the city’s trademark Victorians and apartment buildings have been highly coveted.

TechCrunch reported that this had become par for the course, with crazy money sparking multiple bidding wars in a real estate market gone wild.

“There are lots of people who have gotten very rich off of AI,” Redfin chief economist Daryl Fairweather told Fortune

The opposite was true in more traditional real estate markets. “At the same time, salaried white-collar workers are feeling the strain of the economy, worry[ing] that AI is going to replace them,” Fairweather added.

Agents and Mortgage Brokers Quitting the Market Reflect the Malaise of Many Investors

The frenzied Bay Area market is undoubtedly an anomaly compared with many other markets across the country, where sluggish sales and investor pullbacks have led many real estate agents to quit the business.

“It’s a lot of energy and a lot of money just to exist as a real estate agent,” former agent Erica Rojek of Silver Spring, Maryland, told the Journal, citing costs for licensing, brokerage fees, marketing, and coaching. “When you’re not closing the transactions, it makes it really hard to continue.”

How Small Investors Can Still Win

Money is made in down markets when competition is less. Here’s how investors can turn slow to whoa!

Inventory is on the rise as prices are falling, creating buying opportunities

Investors are backing out just as inventory in many markets is increasing and prices are falling. Realtor.com‘s April 2026 Monthly Housing Report shows inventory is up 4.6%, while list prices fell for the sixth straight month, led by the Northeast and Midwest. There are deals to be had and sellers who are willing to negotiate.

Less competition means more opportunities—but negotiate everything

Investing today is sharply divided into those who can afford to buy with cash or a considerable down payment—which offsets the perils of higher interest rates—and those who are looking to borrow. Borrowers should not be afraid of negotiation.

Negotiate so the deals make sense with current interest rates

Ask for credits with inspections and closing costs, because there’s no telling when rates will come down. If the numbers don’t work to at least break even, be prepared to walk away.

Don’t buy without reserves

Reserves are a necessity, especially when borrowing. Firstly, you will not be able to get a loan without showing six months or so of reserves (PITI). Secondly, as an investor, you should have additional funds for operating expensesrepairs, maintenance, and vacancies. The more the better!

 

It is better to buy fewer houses in this market but safeguard the ones you have with more cash on the sidelines.

Shop around for everything

Not only will you have to look at more houses and write more offers, but you will also have to canvass extensively for lenders offering the best rates, asking for options like floatdowns or buydowns where they materially improve the deal.

Once you have the deal, shop around for insurance and management companies. Ask for testimonials, and run the numbers based on the percentage of rent charged. Do extensive market research on realistic rents. Many prospective managers will start high and get you to sign with them, then lower the rent if your apartment remains vacant.

Maximize rental income

ADUs, converted garages, attics, and basements—where codes allow—can be a godsend in boosting rental revenue. Take advantage.

Final Thoughts: Find Cash Partners

There are deals in every market. However, the investors who invariably build their fortunes in down markets are well-funded. If you don’t have the funds, team up with someone who does, and put in some sweat equity. Present a number of different investment strategies that include selling once the price reaches a certain number or buying and holding on a long-term basis.

Many investors have multiple silent partners—whether they are people they have met or been referred to by others on the BiggerPockets forums, at a local REIA, or simply family members or friends. To paraphrase the movie Field of Dreams: Find the deals, and they will come.

[Update] Upside Gas App Review – $20 Off $60+ With Code GIANT20


Update 6/10/26: New code ‘Earn an additional $20 in cash back at Giant with a $60 minimum purchase. Use code GIANT20’ supposed to be for Giant (Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Delaware, Washington, D.C., and West Virginia) but seems to be working on any grocery store. Hat tip to Bockrr

Update 3/16/25: Check for the following offer: Earn an extra 30% cash back on one qualifying restaurant or grocery purchase. Maximum cash back on bonus offer is $7. Offer expires April 13, 2025. (ht Tikky)

Update 6/20/24: Some other codes worth trying:

upside_25cpg_test_04242024
shsbpo
Nblionspto
shsvball

Update 5/22/24:  SOFI35. 35 cents off next 2 fillups. Works for some existing users but not others.

Update 4/16/24: UBERPC20 – 20 cents/gallon on the next four fill-ups.

Update 4/30/23: Use the following promo codes to get up to $2 off per gallon, or up to $30 total savings. YMMV. (ht TJBDeals):

  1. SHOPPERS35
  2. USHIP35
  3. GOPUFF35
  4. AMEX35
  5. PERKSATWORK230

Update 2/6/23: New users can now get $15 via Swagbucks to sign up and also 25¢ off per gallon.

 

Update 1/2/23: AMEX35 works for 35¢ off next two fillups.

Update 10/23/22: GOPUFF35 $0.35/gal on next two gas purchase. Hat tip to reader Bockrr

Update 10/14/22: LUCKY7CASH works for 7¢ off your next order.

Update 4/26/22: Has rebranded from GetUpside to Upside (this is what it was previously called).

Update 3/4/22: SHOPPERS35 for 35 cents off 2 fill ups (ht dpaquett)

Update 7/12/21: New code COMEBACK6 works for 6¢

Update 6/2/21: New code 100mil for 10¢ off

Update 5/24/21: New code 7CENTBONUS, 7¢ off.

Update 4/30/21: new code Shopper20 – 20 cents on the next 4!

Update 2/29/21: New code: Now through 2/21/21, use promo code 21FOR21 to get a 21¢/gal bonus. That’s an extra 21¢ on top of whatever great offer you find. Hat tip to ieatdogfood

Update 12/31/20: Some extra promo codes (stackable):

  • UPSIDE7 7 cents extra
  • 20K20 20 cents extra
  • 20KSECOND. 5 cents extra
  • 20KPROMO. 5 cents extra
  • INSTACART20. 20 cents extra next 4
  • DOORDASH20. 20 cents extra next 4

Hat tip to reader Bill

Update 12/8/20: Looks like restaurants have been added as well. I’m sure this is powered by another back end, just not sure who powers it yet. Hat tip to reader Craig P

Update 9/24/20: Some extra promo codes (work for new and existing users, stacks with referral for new users):

  • 20K20 – 20 cents/gal off – expires 10/31
  • 20Kpromo – 5 cents/gal off – expires 10/31
  • Upside7 – 7 cents/gal off – no expiration

Hat tip to reader ieatdogfood

Update 5/17/20: Seems to be available in most states now, but not Wisconsin.

Update 5/16/20: You can get a $10 bonus when signing up through a referral. Person referring doesn’t get anything. You can find a referral by clicking here. Hat tip to Onsale

 

Upside Review

Using the app is fairly easy:

  • Open the app
  • Select an offer (the screen shows you both the price per gallon and the discount)
  • Pay with your regular credit card and take a picture of your receipt
  • Upload picture to Upside

Within a day or so of uploading the receipt, you’ll see the cash back available in your Upside account. You can cash out via check or Paypal. Check payments have a $5 minimum while Paypal cash out has no minimum. I was able to cash out a small ~$1 balance without a hitch.

Upside Credit

Aside from cash back on gas purchases at these gas stations, Upside also gives you a credit toward future purchases at the gas station location. These Upside Credits are more generous than the actual cash back discount, BUT they are much more restrictive in use and can be used only for specific items or services at the gas station. You might be able to use the credit for an oil change, for example.

The app will dictate on which goods or services the Credit can be used. After purchasing the specific item, you’ll upload a receipt of that purchase and then the Upside Credit will turn into real cash back via Paypal or a check.

A recent purchase of mine at a Sunoco gas station got me 8¢ cash back per gallon on around 6-gallon purchase for a total of $.48 back, plus I got 25¢ per gallon in Upside Credit for a total Credit of $1.50. The app gives me two options for using up the $1.50 credit: 1) get the $1.50 back as a rebate on an oil change, 2) purchase goods at the gas station convenience store and get 20% off the purchase by submitting the receipt. (Tobacco and gift cards are excluded.)

Pay careful attention to the cash back numbers you see in the app: the standard earnings are literally cash back, but the Upside Credit earnings have much more limited use, as noted.

Final Thoughts

Uploading receipts is always a pain. In this case, if you use a lot of gas and have a big tank, it could be worthwhile to use the app and get a couple dollars off each fill up. If you are able to easily use up the Upside Credit too (e.g. you regularly buy food items or do oil changes at your local gas station), the value proposal is much more.

They also have a business facing website that’s quite interesting if you’re into reading about their business model.

If you live in one of the participating states, I’d love to hear your feedback about the app in the comments. Is it worth the download or is it mostly just overpriced stations offering non competitive discounts?

Please do not share your referral codes in this post. Instead use this linked post.

Hat tip to Maximizing Money for making me aware of this app.

Post history:

Update 1/12/20: Some stations no longer require you to upload a receipt. They are identified by a blue lightning bolt next to them. Hat tip to FM

Update 12/30/19: All gas offers are at least 10¢/gal until 11:59 pm EST 12/31. Hat tip to reader Gadget

Update 12/16/19: Referral bonus has been increased to $7

Update 9/20/19: Another 1,200 stations have been added to TX & GA. Georgia is a new state as far as I’m aware. Hat tip to FM

Update 7/2/19: Another 1,000 stations have been added to the Midwest. Hat tip to FM

Update 3/25/19: Existing users can get an additional 7¢ off per gallon with promo code UPSIDE7. Looks like it only works for users that have used the app successfully/submitted receipt before it can be applied. Details on applying it can be found in this comment. Thanks to reader Gadget.

Update 1/6/19: Now available in more states, they have also expanded the number of gas stations they partner with. Hat tip to reader Gadget.

Upside is an app that allows you to get cash back on gas you purchase at select stations. They currently only have stations in the following locations: MD, VA, NY, NC, SC, DE, FL, TX, MI, WI, MO and DC.

upside-gas

[Updated 4/20/17]