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[SC, OH, IN, KY, NC] Park National Bank $300-$500 Checking Bonus


Update 7/5/26: Deal is back until August 29, 2026

Update 4/19/26: Deal is back until 6/6/26. Hat tip to reader Another DP

Offer at a glance

  • Maximum bonus amount:
  • Availability: Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, North Carolina or South Carolina
  • Direct deposit required: Yes, $1,000+
  • Additional requirements: See below
  • Hard/soft pull: Soft pull
  • ChexSystems: Unknown
  • Credit card funding: Up to $5,000 with a debit card, no credit card funding
  • Monthly fees: $10 – $25, avoidable
  • Early account termination fee:
  • Household limit: None listed
  • Expiration date: 3/21/26

The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Park National Bank is offering a $300 or $500 checking bonus. Bonuses are as follows:
    • Earn $300 when you open a VIP checking account with direct deposits totaling $1,000+ within 90 days of account opening and use promo code  on landing page
    • Earn $500 when you open a VIP All-Access checking account with direct deposits totaling $1,000+ within 90 days of account opening, deposit a balance of $25,000+ within 30 days, maintain a balance of $25,000+ for the remainder of the 90 days and use promo code  on landing page

The Fine Print

  • Offer available when you open a new qualifying personal checking account, which is subject to approval. Current customers who have a Park personal checking are ineligible for this offer.
  • New account may be opened online or in branch using the promotion code in this offer by the indicated expiration date.
  • The promotional code must be entered at account opening and is good for one-time use.
  • The bonus will not apply to your account if you do not enter or have the promotional code at account opening or if you enter the code incorrectly.
  • We’ll confirm you met the requirements 90 days after account opening and will deposit the bonus in your new account within 15 days.
  • To receive the bonus, the account must not be closed and/or restricted at time of payout. Bonus is considered income and may be reportable on IRS 1099-INT.
  • Limit one bonus per customer. 
  • To qualify to receive the $300 bonus, you must be a new personal checking account customer and your VIP Checking Account must (1) be open and in good standing and (2) have direct deposits totaling $1,000 or more made to the account within 90 days of opening. Direct deposit qualifier is met when a total of $1,000 or more monthly electronic payments, such as payroll deposits, government benefits and ACH deposits are posted to the account within 90 days of opening. Offer availability subject to change at any time, and without notice. For more information, please see a banker. 
  • To qualify to receive the $500 bonus, you must be a new personal checking account customer and your VIP All-Access Checking Account must (1) be open and in good standing, (2) have direct deposits totaling $1,000 or more made to the account within 90 days of opening, (3) deposit a total of $25,000 or more within 30 days of opening the account and (4) maintain at least a $25,000 balance in the account for the remainder of the 90 days. Direct deposit qualifier is met when a total of $1000 or more monthly electronic payments, such as payroll deposits, government benefits and ACH deposits are posted to the account within 90 days of opening. Offer availability subject to change at any time, and without notice. For more information, please see a banker.
  • All bank account bonuses are treated as income/interest and as such you have to pay taxes on them

Avoiding Fees

Monthly Fees

VIP Checking ($300 Bonus)

This account has a $10 monthly fee that is waived if you do any of the following:

You can eliminate your service charge1 with one of the following:

  • $500 or more in qualifying direct deposits
  • $1,000 or more monthly average available balance in this account3
  • If you are 24 and under

VIP All-Access Checking ($500 Bonus)

This account has a $25 monthly fee that is waived with $25,000 or more on deposit with Park

Early Account Termination Fee

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

Our Verdict

Not really worth considering the $500 bonus as you need to tie up $25,000 and the account doesn’t earn anything AFAIK. If you put that $25,000 into a 5% APY earning account you’d earn $300+. The $300 bonus is worth doing and we will add it to the best bank account bonuses. 

Hat tip to reader Dan

Useful posts regarding bank bonuses:

The Gen Z stare has hardened into something worse, psychologists say



America foreclosed on Gen Z once. The risk now is that Gen Z finishes the job.

I wrote a piece last year that went semi-viral about the “Gen Z stare,” that labeling of young-adult awkwardness that goes far beyond the “millennial pause” in stereotyping a generation. But this interaction made me think it’s something else; it looks like the Gen Z sneer. This wasn’t the freeze response that researchers spent much of 2025 explaining (and excusing) but a worldview expressing itself casually, in the way that formed worldviews do: without effort, without doubt, and without interest in what you might say back.

I saw it in the discourse around Disclosure Day, Steven Spielberg’s much-hyped UFO opus, where younger audiences tagged the film “boomer-coded” and walked away. The film’s sincerity — the quality critics praised most — was met with a sneer rather than a response.

The stare was earned

Many Gen Zers’ formative years fell during the Great Recession, a period marked by a “jobless recovery” and a housing bust that led to a nationwide wave of foreclosures. The oldest Gen Zers were between 8 and 13 years old during the 2008-2010 foreclosure crisis, which displaced 3.8 million American families at its peak. They lived the experience of watching parents open an envelope, changing schools mid-year, the house that wasn’t there anymore. A generation was taught that the foundational promise of American middle-class life — work hard, the system holds — was simply revocable if you didn’t have enough cash in the bank.

The economic conditions they inherited as adults have only confirmed that lesson in the years since. Starter home prices are up 87% since 2019. The average new car costs $49,000, up 27% from 2020. A SignalFire analysis of hiring data from 2019 to 2024 found that across all sectors, entry-level hiring had fallen more than 50%, even as mid- and senior-level hiring recovered. Over 70% say “survival spending” is their financial norm and that wealth is genuinely out of reach. Fifty-seven percent believe their generation was set up for financial failure. Only 32% think the American Dream remains attainable.

Kaelyn, 24, was born in 2002 and wrote to Fortune after reading our coverage. She and her partner did everything the system asked: skipped college, obtained GEDs, lived with family until they were 21, saved aggressively, and eventually bought a home — a transaction she describes as arriving “with extreme caveats.”

She is now an administrator at a high-volume tax firm, working toward an enrolled agent certification. She is “one of a very fortunate and rare few” to beat the odds, she told me. And yet her read on the system is unsparing. “Everywhere I turn — healthcare, employment, even housing — those who provide the ‘opportunities’ are exploitative and slowly but surely drilling further into a broken system.” She said she’s not alone: “This is a common mentality I’ve seen among my age group. We were jaded about employment before we ever entered the workforce.”

Beyond jaded, Kaelyn added, Gen Z is simply “angry.” She grew up watching her parents “struggle through jobs that sent them home exhausted” and only having money for dinners of ramen noodles or “orzo with onions.”

That anger has a clinical name. The World Economic Forum calls it financial nihilism — the conclusion that the system no longer rewards prudence, driving a cohort toward crypto bets, prediction markets, and raided retirement accounts.

The empirical record supports them. Dartmouth economist David Blanchflower and UCL’s Alex Bryson have spent the last two years documenting what they call the disappearance of the U-curve — the long-established pattern by which happiness dipped in middle age and recovered in later life. Their findings, some previously covered in Fortune, draw on a deep dataset spanning dozens of countries to confirm that ill-being is no longer hump-shaped in age — the young are now the most miserable cohort globally. In subsequent NBER working papers under review, they sharpen the finding: the deterioration is concentrated specifically among young workers, and the trend began not with COVID but in 2010, the year the foreclosure crisis ended.

The stare, in this context, was the correct emotional response to an ambush. A generation that arrived at adulthood to find the door locked and, instead of smiling and saying thank you, froze.

Kaelyn went out of her way to bring up the Gen Z stare and to blame a broken business and consumer culture for making her generation the “guinea pigs” for social media “before anyone bothered to consider its long-term effects.” She offered some empathy for millennials, who “were screwed by [the economy] the second they hit the ground.” She said she thinks millennials seem to be “burnt out” — it was unclear whether she was referencing Anne Helen Petersen’s famous BuzzFeed essay on the burnout generation — but that Gen Z is not apathetic, lazy or stupid — it’s just really “angry.”

The sneer is something different

Foreclosure has a psychological literature, it turns out. James Marcia, building on Erik Erikson, identified defensive foreclosure as the preemptive closing off of identity exploration in response to anxiety — adopting a fixed identity defined primarily by refusal, shutting the process down before it can hurt you. The person who forecloses defensively doesn’t go through the crisis of questioning and exploring. They’ve already decided. To paraphrase the Gin Blossoms’ line from “Hey Jealousy,” if you don’t expect too much, then you won’t be let down.

Calling something “boomer-coded” is defensive foreclosure in action, a categorical ruling issued without engagement, doors shut before entry.

The corporate sector is confirming that the gates are shutting on all comers, seemingly confirming the worst-baked-in fears. Sixty percent of companies report letting Gen Z hires go within the first few months in 2026, citing a lack of motivation — and Gen Z has largely responded not with reflection but with viral mockery of the employers. Fourteen-and-a-half percent of Gen Z describe themselves as ideologically “extreme,” compared to 2.7% of Millennials at the same age. Eighteen percent say they never trust the government, more than double the Millennial rate. More than 50% of Gen Z workers say their own social skills have declined — but where early commentary framed this as a wound, a significant cohort has reframed it as a posture.

The expert class bears responsibility for this trajectory. When the Gen Z stare went viral in mid-2025, the institutional response was almost uniformly defensive. Researchers advised “generational empathy” as some called the phenomenon exaggerated. It didn’t see a generation at risk of foreclosing on itself. By reflexively framing withdrawal as resistance rather than a deficit, the expert class helped remove the mechanism that might actually have helped. Even worse, they implicitly told a generation that their contempt was justified — and even now they are still expressing surprise as it deepens.

They were not the first

There once was a generation that called itself “blank” and “vacant,” that seethed with anger and contempt for an economy that delivered stagnancy and inflation instead of growth and prosperity: the punk generation of the late 1970s. Nobody sneered at authority and received wisdom more than Johnny Rotten.

But Richard Hell, the long-time East Villager who sang of a “Blank Generation,” was explicit that his lyrics were about possibilities — the blank as a space to write on, a refusal of the previous generation’s definitions rather than a refusal of meaning itself. The punk blank was a provocation that demanded a response. Defensive foreclosure is a termination of the exchange.

Kenzie, a Gen Z corrections officer, wrote to Fortune about navigating “a world that makes all the old solutions feel like a carrot being dangled in front of our faces.” She noted that her profession is one of the least forgiving environments for disengagement — team cohesion in a corrections facility is not a corporate talking point but a physical necessity.

But paradoxically, the jadedness of the world is exactly why finding a sense of belonging matters so much, she argued: “When I felt like I was truly a part of something and mattered to my team, that we were making a difference in our workplace and world, I worked much harder. I found reasons to keep pushing on in the hard times because I knew someone had my back.”

What Kenzie describes — the discovery that belonging generates effort, that trust compounds, that earnest investment in an institution can be returned — is precisely what defensive foreclosure costs. Not in some abstract sense, but concretely: the mentorship that stops when the mentor reads incuriosity as contempt, the promotion that goes elsewhere when the manager senses the employee has already mentally checked out, or even the patron at the coffee shop who would rather not be stared back at when making their regular order.

Here is the cruel irony the data reveal: the economic conditions that produced this psychology are slowly beginning to shift. Gen Z’s homeownership rate is already tracking ahead of Millennials at the same age — buying smaller homes in lower-cost metros, adapting, finding ways in. The $84 trillion Great Wealth Transfer is underway. The starter economy, however broken, is not permanently sealed.

Returning to Blanchflower and Bryson’s troubling findings, the data show the onset of despair among young workers in 2010, meaning that the psychology of foreclosure has been hardening for 15 years, across conditions both terrible and improved, through booms and contractions alike. It is no longer purely a response to circumstances, but a lens.

The door is beginning to open, but the generation that was trained not to approach it stands at a distance, arms folded, having already foreclosed their future options.

Kaelyn put it better than any researcher has. “We gave up on this game before we even really understood what it was,” she wrote. “Because it was dead well before we arrived.”

The economy foreclosed on Gen Z first. The risk now is that Gen Z finishes the job and forecloses on itself.

Mum and Dad say they had it harder with mortgages


So the Australian argument holds in the US. It just needs a different starting point.

What Harvard found

The Harvard JCHS report is the most authoritative annual measure of US housing affordability, and the 2025 findings are stark.

Monthly mortgage payments on the median-priced home – assuming a 30-year loan with a 3.5% down payment – hit $2,570 in 2024. That figure is 40% higher than it was in 1990, adjusted for the same loan terms. Qualifying for that mortgage requires an annual income of at least $126,700. Only six million of the nation’s nearly 46 million renters can meet that benchmark.

The affordability gap

US median home price as a multiple of median household income, 1970-2024

In 1970 a home cost 2.3 times the median household income — the most affordable point in the modern record. Today it costs 5.1 times. Parents who bought in the early 1980s bought near the historical midpoint. Their kids are buying at the all-time high.

Price-to-income ratio Historical norm: 3.0x 2024: 5.1x (record)

US home price to income ratio: 2.3x (1970), 3.65x (1980), 4.7x (2005), 3.3x (2012), 5.83x (2022 peak), 5.1x (2024).

Sources: National Association of Realtors; U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey; Best Interest Financial (Feb 2026); Housing Almanac (Apr 2026); Visual Capitalist / FRED (2025). Confirmed anchors: 1970 (2.3x), 1980 (3.65x), 1985 (3.5x), 2005 (4.7x), 2012 (3.5x), 2022 (5.83x), 2024 (5.1x). Intermediate years indicative.

The median price of an existing single-family home hit $412,500 in 2024 – five times median household income. Harvard senior research associate Daniel McCue called it “shocking” and noted it was “significantly above the price-to-income ratio of 3 that has traditionally been considered affordable.”

Existing home sales dropped to a 30-year low of 4.06 million. The US homeownership rate fell in 2024 for the first time in eight years. The median age of a first-time homebuyer hit 38.

German commercial property financing sentiment plunges, survey shows




German commercial property financing sentiment plunges, survey shows

A step by step process to invest 1 Lakh INR/month (Global Investing) | Akshat Shrivastava



DISCLAIMER:

Products mentioned in this video are offered by Wio Securities LLC. As with all investing your capital is at risk. Wio Securities LLC is approved by the UAE Capital Market Authority.

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If you were to invest Rs. 1 Lakh today, how should you go about it?

In this video, I talk about strategies to invest your INR, but in a global environment. Why not just the Indian market? Watch this video till the end to know my thoughts as well as the backing behind them.

PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS NOT AN INVESTMENT ADVICE. PLEASE DO YOUR OWN DUE DILIGENCE
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Applied For SAVE But Never Got In? Loan Servicers Are Denying Applications


Key Points

  • Loan servicers, including MOHELA and Aidvantage, are denying all outstanding SAVE plan applications at the direction of the Department of Education, following the legal settlement that ended the SAVE plan.
  • These letters target borrowers with pending applications — a different group than the borrowers who were actually enrolled in SAVE and are receiving their own 90-day notices in tranches.
  • Borrowers who don’t apply for a new repayment plan within 90 days will see their SAVE forbearance end and payments resume on the plan they were on before applying, or the standard plan if they weren’t on a plan before.

Student loan borrowers who applied for the SAVE plan but were never officially enrolled are now receiving denial letters from their loan servicers. These are borrowers who submitted an application for SAVE or an old application selecting the option “Lowest Repayment Plan”, but their applications were never actually processed. These borrowers had been in administrative forbearance while waiting for an outcome to their application.

Borrowers have 90 days to submit a new income-driven repayment (IDR) application or their SAVE forbearance ends and payments resume on their old plan.

Hundreds of thousands of borrowers submitted IDR applications requesting SAVE and have been sitting in a administrative forbearance (some for well over two years) waiting for an answer. That answer has now arrived: denied.

Unlike borrowers officially enrolled in SAVE, who get auto-enrolled in the Standard or Tiered Standard plan if they miss their 90-day deadline, applicants who miss the deadline get kicked back to their previous repayment plan, or the Standard plan if they weren’t enrolled in a plan before (such as new borrowers leaving college). For many, that could mean a payment far higher than what they expected under an income-driven plan.

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We’ll email this article to you, so you can come back to it later!

What The Message Says

Here is the version of the notice MOHELA is sending to affected borrowers (other servicers, including Aidvantage, are sending similar messages):

A recent legal settlement ended the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan, and it is no longer available to borrowers. As a result of the settlement, MOHELA was directed by the U.S. Department of Education (ED) to deny all SAVE Plan applications. Visit StudentAid.gov/courtactions for more information about the settlement.

MOHELA records show that you submitted an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan application and requested either the SAVE Plan or the SAVE Plan and another plan. You must now select a new repayment plan. If you’re not currently enrolled in the SAVE Plan and don’t submit a new application for a different repayment plan within 90 days, your SAVE forbearance will end and you will be required to resume payments on the plan you were on before you applied for SAVE. If you’re currently enrolled in the SAVE Plan, you will be placed on either the Standard Repayment Plan or the Tiered Standard Plan, depending on your circumstances.

What Borrowers Should Do

Borrowers who receive this letter need to take action. Submitting a new IDR application keeps them in an income-driven plan and avoids reverting to a potentially unaffordable prior payment.

The main options are Income-Based Repayment (IBR) and the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), which launched July 1, 2026. RAP charges 1% to 10% of adjusted gross income depending on income, includes a $50 monthly deduction per dependent, and requires a minimum $10 monthly payment.

Borrowers pursuing Public Service Loan Forgiveness should enroll in IBR or RAP as both are PSLF-eligible.

Applications can be submitted at StudentAid.gov/idr or directly through the borrower’s servicer.

How This Connects

This is the second batch of notices tied to the end of SAVE. 

As we reported earlier this week, borrowers enrolled in SAVE began receiving their own 90-day notices after July 1, warning they’d be auto-enrolled in the Standard or Tiered Standard plan if they didn’t pick a new plan. The application denials extend that same deadline structure to borrowers who never made it into SAVE at all — meaning nearly everyone touched by the SAVE plan now has a clock running as the SAVE forbearance winds down.

Notices will continue rolling out from servicers over the coming months, and each borrower’s 90-day window runs from the date of their individual notice. Borrowers unsure of their status should check their servicer account and StudentAid.gov to see whether they’re listed as enrolled in SAVE or as having a pending (now denied) application.

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SAVE Plan Borrowers Now Getting 90-Day Notices: What They Say And What To Do

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SAVE Student Loan Plan Timeline Estimates: What To Expect

SAVE Student Loan Plan Timeline Estimates: What To Expect
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$180 Billion in Student Loans Are Now in Default, New Federal Data Shows

$180 Billion in Student Loans Are Now in Default, New Federal Data Shows

Editor: Colin Graves

The post Applied For SAVE But Never Got In? Loan Servicers Are Denying Applications appeared first on The College Investor.

adidas Men Runfalcon 5 Running Shoes for $21 on eBay


adidas Men Runfalcon 5 Running Shoes for $21 on eBay

This article contains affiliate links for which I may be compensated.

Adidas via eBay is selling the adidas Men’s Runfalcon 5 Running Shoes (Cloud White) for $35. You can get $14 off with coupon code ADIJULY4 at checkout, which brings the price down to $21. Shipping is free.

BUY NOW

Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you take action (i.e. subscribe, make a purchase) after clicking a link, I may earn some beer 🍺🍺🍺 money, which I promise to drink responsibly. When applicable, you should always go through shopping portals to earn cashback. But when that’s not an option, your support for the site is always greatly appreciated. Thank you for reading!

Down 32%, Is Nike the Smartest Dividend Stock to Buy for the Second Half of 2026?


Nike‘s (NKE +2.39%) iconic global brand is not delivering the steady growth investors are used to. The stock has been in a downward spiral since hitting an all-time high during the COVID-19 pandemic and has fallen another 32% year to date.

The discount has brought the dividend yield up to 3.7%, more than three times the S&P 500 average. Is this yield too good to pass up? Let’s first assess Nike’s dividend payout health before determining whether this is the smartest dividend stock to buy in 2026.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Dividend coverage is weakening

Nike is still navigating challenging macroeconomic headwinds, including inflation and higher energy prices, which are hurting consumer spending. It reported flat revenue for fiscal 2026, which ended in May, with fourth-quarter revenue down 1% year over year.

The weak top-line growth and investments to turn things around have caused Nike’s trailing-12-month free cash flow to plummet 65% year over year to just over $1 billion. This doesn’t leave enough room for the dividend. The company paid out nearly $2.4 billion in total dividends to shareholders over the last year.

Nike generated $3.1 billion in net income over the last year. With over $7.5 billion in cash on the balance sheet, the dividend is unlikely to be cut. Still, the elevated payout ratio to free cash flow raises this risk for investors unless there is a material recovery in profitability.

The good news is that management has made progress in tightening inventory to better manage costs. It is prioritizing margins over maximizing near-term revenue growth, with gross margin expected to improve starting this quarter.

Nike Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(2.39%) $1.03

Current Price

$44.09

Nike’s turnaround will take time

Nike sportswear and Jordan streetwear remain weak, and together account for about half of Nike’s total revenue. The only bright spot appears to be running, which has delivered five consecutive quarters of double-digit growth.

Management is actively working to reduce discounting to boost margins and adjust its product mix to drive sales growth. Over 150 stores have refreshed their inventory with performance-based products, which are seeing stronger demand than lifestyle products. Nike is also introducing a dozen new footwear styles later this year. However, management expects these efforts to take time to generate consistent results.

The turnaround is progressing, but probably not as quickly as Wall Street anticipated. Management is confident in its actions to improve margins. Still, the elevated dividend payout to free cash flow doesn’t make the stock the safest choice for income investors.

I wouldn’t call Nike the “smartest” dividend stock to buy right now. There are more durable consumer brands, such as Coca-Cola, that offer high yields but don’t carry the execution risk associated with a major turnaround effort. Investors who buy Nike shares will need to closely monitor its quarterly earnings to ensure the company is on track to recover margins and free cash flow, which is crucial for sustaining and growing the dividend.

Suno explores developer API, seeking apps ‘that unlock experiences generative music makes possible for the first time’


Suno is exploring the launch of a developer API for its AI music generation platform.

The company’s Chief Product Officer, Jack Brody, revealed the plans in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday (July 1), publishing a link to an intake form inviting developers to apply for early access.

Brody described the initiative as a precursor to what he called Suno’s “partner powered model.”

“Ahead of our partner powered model, we’re exploring a developer API and want to hear from you before we start building,” Brody wrote.

“We plan to start with a curated group of partners so we can develop this thoughtfully, and we’re especially interested in applications that unlock experiences generative music makes possible for the first time,” Brody added.



Suno does not currently offer an official public API.

While third-party developers have built unofficial API wrappers around Suno’s platform, the company has not released self-serve developer access or published its own API documentation.

An API, or application programming interface, lets one software system communicate with another and request its services.

In Suno’s case, a developer API would let outside apps send text prompts to its music-generation models and receive finished audio in return.

Developers could then build music generation into their own products, rather than routing users through Suno’s app or website.

“We plan to start with a curated group of partners so we can develop this thoughtfully, and we’re especially interested in applications that unlock experiences generative music makes possible for the first time.”

Jack Brody, Suno

The intake form, hosted on Suno’s Typeform page, states: “We’re beginning to explore a developer API, starting with a curated group of partners.”

The form adds: “Please complete this form to express your interest. We’ll be in touch with a small group of folks to learn more.” Suno has not disclosed a timeline for the API’s potential launch.

Brody joined Suno as CPO in late 2024, having previously spent a decade at Snap, where he served as Head of Product.

His appointment was one of several high-profile hires as Suno built out its leadership team, alongside former Warner Music Group executive Paul Sinclair as Chief Music Officer and former Merlin CEO Jeremy Sirota as Chief Commercial Officer.

The developer API exploration comes during a period of rapid growth for Suno.

The company raised over $400 million in Series D funding in June at a $5.4 billion post-money valuation, more than double the $2.45 billion it achieved after its $250 million Series C in November 2025.

In February, CEO and co-founder Mikey Shulman said the platform had surpassed 2 million paid subscribers and $300 million in annual recurring revenue, with over 100 million people having used Suno since launch.

Suno’s only licensing partnership with a major music company to date is its November 2025 deal with Warner Music Group, which settled WMG’s copyright lawsuit against the company and included Suno’s acquisition of concert-discovery platform Songkick.

Suno has said it will launch licensed models built on the WMG partnership, though no timeline has been confirmed.

Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment remain in active litigation with the company, and last month sought to add over 61,000 copyrighted sound recordings to their claims.

Last week, Suno launched an incubator program called Spark for independent artists, offering grants, mentorship, and marketing support – though MBW reported that the program’s terms included an anti-disparagement clause barring participants from portraying the company in a negative light.Music Business Worldwide

Vancouver-area home sales up nearly 10% in June amid broad increase in demand: board




Vancouver’s real estate board says the region saw increased activity in June as demand for all home types rose compared with the same month last year.