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The Strongest Sign for the Housing Market in Years


The housing market is doing what nobody expected—and none of the mainstream media is covering it. Trends are forming that most Americans thought were impossible in this type of economy, greatly impacting home prices, days on market, and buyers’ negotiating power. If you know the truth, you can take advantage. If you don’t, you’ll miss what’s actually happening behind the scenes. This is our June 2026 housing market update!

It could be the most encouraging sign for the housing market in years—prices haven’t crashed, Americans are actually buying more homes, and many traditionally hot markets are seeing complete buyer control. It’s a real estate investor’s dream come true, but the media won’t tell you that.

These numbers matter more than you think as investors. You can find better deals, negotiate tens of thousands off the list price, and get cash flow that many thought was dead in 2026. Today, I’m sharing the exact process you can go through to see how aggressive you can be in your investing market so that you can pick up a deal for a steal most people will wish they would have gotten in a few years.

Don’t miss it. This is not going to last forever. 

Dave:
I’ll say it. We are in a full on buyer’s market for real estate. Sellers are watching their homes linger on the market longer and that means you now have the leverage to pick up great deals and to negotiate hard. This may not be the trend you’re hearing about in the headlines, but the data does support it and now is the time to take advantage before everyone else gets the message. I’ll share how I discovered this crucial recent shift which regions are seeing the most positive trends and what you can do about it all in the BiggerPockets June housing market update.
Hey everyone, it’s Dave. Welcome to the BiggerPockets podcast. Today on the show, we are doing our June housing market update and this is going to be a great episode. I think you’re going to be pleasantly surprised by some of the information that I’m going to be sharing with you. I know a lot of the mainstream headlines and narrative about the housing market is overwhelmingly negative, but I actually think there are some encouraging trends that real estate investors should be taking note of and should be using to guide your investing decisions. So I’m going to start the episode today by laying out the big important stuff upfront, what’s going on a national level, the kind of stuff that impacts everyone. But then we’re going to go into a regional update or I’m going to share some trends that are going on across the country to help guide your decision making on your specific portfolio and your next deal.
Then we’ll move on to our risk report, something we do every month where we talk about potential stress in the housing market, because that could create risk in your portfolio or it could create a national crash. So we’re going to keep our eye on what’s going on there. And then we’ll end the episode by talking about what this means for you specifically. Let’s get into it. So first up, let’s talk national big picture stuff going on in the housing market. The headline I want you all to take home today is it’s actually doing okay. I know that’s not what everyone’s saying, but that is actually correct. You heard it right. The market is doing okay. Is it great? No. Is it the healthy kind of market we wish we had something back in the 2010s? No. But is it falling apart? Is something disastrous happening in the housing market?
Absolutely not. That is not happening by a long shot. Instead, the big picture in the housing market right now is that we are in a classic buyer’s market, which does come with risk, but also means a lot of opportunity for people who know what to look for and who understand what’s actually going on. So that’s the headline, but I’m going to share with you some data to back up what I’m saying here. Prices on a national basis year over year, which is how we should be looking at housing market data are basically flat. The Case Schiller, which is really good data, it lags a little bit, but that has us at less than 1% growth year over year in terms of pricing at 0.7%. And flat pricing is exactly why I’ve been calling the period we’re in right now The Great Stall because we’re in it.
All of the market conditions that I’ve been talking about for years that are going to stall out home prices are happening. And flat prices is kind of exactly in line with my headline, right? Is it the best thing ever to happen for real estate investors? No, of course not. We’re not getting the appreciation we saw for a decade or more, but it’s also not falling apart despite what people are saying. So prices pretty stable and stable for real estate investors is good. Same kind of story with inventory and inventory is a super important metric. It’s actually personally I care more about what’s going on in inventory trends week to week, month to month and prices. I know prices are that sexy thing everyone wants to look at, but inventory is such an important number because it helps us understand the balance between supply and demand in the housing market.
And when inventory is moving rapidly, that means a big shift in the whole market might be coming. And what’s happening with inventory right now is it’s also really flat. We actually see that it’s down 1% year over year according to housing wire and the fact that it’s flat and actually a little bit down is crucially important. Flat inventory tells us that the balance between supply and demand is relatively stable. We are not all of a sudden seeing tons of people leave the market as buyers, we’re not all of a sudden seeing a ton of sellers enter the market and flooding the market with inventory, which can push down prices. We’re not seeing any of that. In fact, what we are seeing is a great stall. We’re seeing inventory level up and although there is opportunity for inventory to get better in my opinion, again, this means stability.
We are not seeing wild swings in inventory and for investors, stability is a good thing. The other thing you should take away from this is that inventory being down a little bit is further proof that a crash is highly unlikely. If a crash was going to come, we would see inventory going up. That would almost certainly happen either because the market was being flooded with homes or demand was leaving the market, but inventory stable, which means supply and demand dynamics and prices are likely going to be relatively stable for the foreseeable future. And there is other data that supports this too. It is not just the inventory number. Trust me, I look at everything and I’ll just share with you quickly two other things that give me conviction about this that the market is stabilizing right now is one, new listings, the amount of people who list their properties for home for sale is up but just a little bit.
Again, if there was going to be a crash, we would see that going up rapidly, but instead we’re seeing a few more people list their home for sale, but nothing crazy and it’s really in a historical context not really that high. And then secondly, perhaps I think most importantly and most encouragingly demand in the housing market, the amount of people who want to buy homes is actually doing pretty well. It’s actually up. We’re seeing more people entering the market right now than we did a year ago. I know that is contrary to the narrative that is being projected about the housing market, but listen to this. Pending sales, the actual amount of transactions on real estate in any given week up 17% year over year. More people are buying houses right now than there were a year ago. So all these people saying that buyers are running away from the market, it’s just not true.
It is patently false. You can look this up anywhere. That is not true. We also see this backed up in mortgage purchase applications. The number of people who are going to their bank and asking for a loan to go out and buy a new home, not refinance, go out and buy a new home, that is also up year over year. So don’t let anyone tell you that demand is gone. Is it good in any historical context? No, it is not the best demand we’ve ever seen. It’s actually pretty low. But the thing I’m trying to convey here is that even though we’re not in a great market, it’s not getting worse. It’s not really changing all that much right now. I think people are getting used to where we’re at. Instead of sitting on the sidelines and waiting for mortgage rates to come down, I think people have accepted the new reality that we’re in, in the housing market.
And although I still believe in the great stall and this is going to take a while, probably years for it to get back to a healthy level, the stability that we’re achieving makes decision making for investors a whole lot easier. And we’re going to talk about that more later in the episode, but that’s the main thing that the data is telling me. Before we move on to the regional stuff that I want to talk about, just two other things that I think are notable in terms of the national market that are also encouraging for investors. Number one is that days on market is going up. This, again, similar to inventory, helps us understand the balance between supply and demand in the market, but it also helps us understand who has the negotiating leverage when you’re going out and transacting on a property. When days on market, which is just a measurement of how long, it’s very literal, how long a property sits on the market before it’s put under contract.
When those are really low, the seller has all the power, right? Because that indicates that buyers are bidding on anything that hits the MLS and that sellers have a lot of negotiating power. When days on market go up like they are right now, that tells us that buyers are gaining power. And as a real estate investor, that is something you should be taking note of because that means that when you approach a new deal in a stabilizing market, you can be more aggressive about what you bid. And by aggressive, I don’t mean bidding high. I mean, you could be aggressive in your low balling. So make sure I’m not paying more. I mean, you can be bold in the kinds of offers that you are willing to write in a market with days on market rising and that’s exactly what’s happening. And to back that up, last piece of data here I’ll share is that according to Redfin, right now there is actually 500,000 more sellers in the market than there are buyers.
And this is exactly why days on market is going up and this is exactly the kind of opportunity that real estate investors should be excited about. This is what tells us we are in a full on buyer’s market. Now buyer’s market does not mean everything’s great and you should go out and buy everything. It absolutely does not mean that. It means that you as a buyer have the negotiating power. You have leverage. You have the ability to be picky and to negotiate and to pick only the best assets to add to your portfolio and to be patient. The combination of a more stable market, but better negotiating leverage is an opportunity investors really should be taking advantage of and to me is good news. The market does not need to be perfect. Stability and leverage is a great place to start building your strategy from.
And after the break, I’m going to share some regional trends and how you should go about looking for your next deal depending on what’s going on in your region. We’ll get to that right after this quick break. Stick with us.
Welcome back to the BiggerPockets Podcast. I’m Dave Meyer. Today we are going through our June 2026 housing market update. Before the break, I shared some national level trends that market is pretty stable. Pricing’s pretty stable. Inventory is pretty stable. Demand is actually up right now and that stability creates a good foundation for investors to make decisions off of. But obviously real estate is local. And so let’s talk a litle bit about some regional trends and then I’m actually just going to give you some examples about how to bid on different properties, how to look for different deals depending on the dynamics in your market. So right now, most of the markets are pretty flat. If the national market’s flat, it follows that most markets in the US are pretty close to flat. There are a couple kinds of markets that are actually doing well right now.
The first are affordable markets shouldn’t be surprising. This has been my thesis for four years, that the markets that we’re going to do well in a rising interest rate environment are the ones that have really solid affordability where the average person in that market can go out and buy a home and that has been correct. We’re seeing strength mostly in affordability because affordability drives the housing market. The other thing that is working right now is kind of the opposite. It’s like super expensive AI finance centers. We’re seeing a lot of growth in areas around New York. We’re seeing a lot of growth in San Francisco in particular. And I say this a lot on the market and I’ll say it here, can we just stop betting against New York and San Francisco? I wouldn’t have invested in them a couple of years ago and I’m glad I haven’t over the last couple of years because they have struggled, but I hate hearing people be like, “Oh, those cities are dead.
New York is dead. San Francisco real estate’s dead.” No, it’s not. There’s some of the biggest, most powerful economies in the entire world. The real estate will come back residential at least in almost all circumstances and we’re seeing that a lot right now as well. Now, I think for us for real estate investors, those are probably not markets we’re investing in. They’re way too expensive. They don’t cashflow. It’s very hard to make them work here, but affordable markets are still working. And so take note of that. When you think about where you’re investing and what you’re going to do, ask yourself if you live in an affordable market. If you live in the Midwest, if you live in the Southeast where affordability is good, you can probably bet that housing market activity is going to pick up. If you live in a super expensive market, it’s probably going to remain challenged for the next couple of years.
Just as an example, the markets we are seeing that are the hottest right now that are seeing the highest year over year growth according to Redfin, number one, San Francisco, 11% year over year growth. That is massive, but that is driven probably by the AI boom and excitement around there. We have a lot of IPOs going on there. A lot of people are going to become very rich, that is probably driving up the market there. But the second hottest market in the entire country is Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, which fun fact, not a lot of people know this. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the single most affordable housing market, not in the Northeast, not even in the United States, but in the world. If you look at the price of a home compared to the average income, Pittsburgh has the best ratio in the entire world. And so it is no surprise to me that Pittsburgh, even though it’s not the sexiest housing market, is seeing growth because it’s affordable.
After Pittsburgh, we see St. Louis, another highly affordable market. Newark, New Jersey, affordable, Jacksonville, Florida, affordable. Then we go to Nasdaq County, New York, not affordable, but New York, like I said, had some other stuff going on. After that, Baltimore, affordable, Chicago affordable. Cincinnati affordable. So you see these are the hottest markets. And if you’re in some of these markets, even though they’re affordable, you’re going to have to adjust your strategy a little bit based on that. The markets that aren’t doing well, it’s a combination of affordability and oversupply. Those are the markets that aren’t doing well. Either they’re super expensive like Seattle. That’s one of the worst performing markets in terms of home prices last year. It’s down but only 1%, but it’s probably because it’s relatively unaffordable. But you also see markets like San Antonio and Orlando up there because they’ve just had a lot of supply.
Even though there are good dynamics in those markets, they are relatively affordable, at least San Antonio is. It’s because there’s just too much building there. So these are the factors you need to be thinking about when you’re going out and thinking about your next deal. What’s the supply look like? What does the affordability look like? But before we get into some examples here, I just want to call out that Orlando, our second worst market in terms of declines, decline 2.2%. It’s pretty darn close to flat. So again, even the ones that aren’t doing well aren’t doing terrible. San Antonio is the third worst. It’s down less than 1%. So flat is the name of the gain, but I do want to just show that there is some regional variance, but that variance is shrinking. Two years ago we saw Austin would be like down 8% and Milwaukee would be up 11%.
Huge difference in the best and the worst performing markets. That gap is really closing. We are seeing much closer to flat. We’ll see some markets down one or 2%. A couple are up above five, 6%, but the majority of them are clustered around flat but are trending slightly positive. So let’s talk about what this means for you. First and foremost, go out and look up the data for your market. You can do this for free. You could do it on Redfin. You could do it on HousingWire. I highly recommend those two. You could do it on Realtor or Zillow. It’s totally free and there’s really easy tools. So you have no reason not to go and do this. And the things that I want you to go look at are first and foremost inventory. Remember I talked about why that’s so important. You want to see not just where inventory is, but what the trend is.
Is it going up? Is it going down? Fast or slow. That’s something you should be able to do. Second thing, look at days on market. I explained that earlier. If it’s going up, that means you have more leverage. If it’s going down, you have less leverage. Look at those two things and look at price trends. You should also understand if prices are going up or down in those area. Now, before you make an investment, you want to do a lot more research, but if you just understand those three things, you can sort of figure out how to approach your next offer or what kind of deals you should be looking for. And I’ll just give you a couple of examples of what I mean by this. So if I was in a market like Orlando, I mentioned that earlier. This is a market where prices are down, but inventory is also falling.
So that’s the combination we’re talking about. We’re seeing prices are down. So you’re thinking, okay, this is slow market. Maybe I can be aggressive. But inventory is falling. Days on market are falling. That tells me that even though they’ve been in a correction to Orlando, sellers are starting to respond. They are responding appropriately because we’re seeing less people start to sell. And that means a bottom is forming. When we see that days on market are going down, inventory is going down. That means buyers are losing their leverage. They still might have relatively good leverage, but it’s declining day by day. And so to me, the strategy here is that you should try and go out and buy sooner before sellers can fully adjust. Take advantage of some of the stress that is still in that market right now. If you like the overall fundamentals, the window of maximum leverage of when you’re going to be able to have the most power over sellers as a buyer, that window might be closing soon.
It’s not like today or next week, but like you can just see in the trends that that window is closing. So this might be a good time to go write a lot of offers. Still need to buy below market comps. I’d still try and get things well below list price in these markets. But it seems like if you like the underlying fundamentals in Orlando, good time to go out and get a good asset below market price before things get reset and the balance between supply and demand comes back together. So that’s what I would do in a market like Orlando. But if I’m in a different market like Seattle, an expensive market that’s in a decline, I would treat that totally different. I would only in Seattle buy really, really good deals at steep discounts right now and I’m going to be super patient because prices are only down 1%, right?
Actually less than Orlando, not really that bad. But active listings inventory is up 13% and it’s trending higher. So this tells me even though prices are only down 1%, prices are probably going to go down more. The balance between supply and demand is moving towards buyers. Sellers are going to be in a weak position and their position is getting even worse. So that doesn’t mean that Seattle’s market is going to crash, but it means your leverage as a buyer is likely going to increase because active listings are up and days on market are up. This tells me there’s going to be more motivated sellers. There’s going to be a little bit more stress into the market. So that means good deals are coming, but you can also afford to be patient because that trend is still emerging here where six months from now it might even be worse in Seattle.
Prices might be down more. And so that doesn’t mean you can’t buy now, but it means that I would be very aggressive in my low balling. I would have to take things 10, 15, 20% off local comps before I bought it because otherwise I can just wait. And so the only reason you shouldn’t wait is if you get a screaming deal and that’s the kind of deal you should insist on if you’re in a market like Seattle where conditions are moving more towards a buyer’s market. Last, I’ll give you one more scenario like buying in Chicago, which is one of the hottest markets I mentioned, top 10. So what we’re seeing here is that prices are up 5%. That’s good, right? That’s above the rate of inflation even. So that’s rare right now. And that trend is likely to continue because active listings pretty stable, right?
Days on market going up nationally, they are down in Chicago. So this means that in this market, buyers don’t have that much power. It’s not like Seattle where they’re gaining power or in Orlando where they have power, but it might be going away soon. This is a market where sellers still have a lot of power. And so this means I’m not going to be able to go out and low ball on market deals as much as I could in the other kinds of markets. So instead of doing that, I think the strategies you have to use are either be patient and offer on a lot of stuff because that still can work. There’s still going to be motivated sellers. There’s still going to be some inefficiencies in the market that you can take advantage of. You could still look for things that have been sitting.
You could still find things for value add, but you also might want to look off market here because it’s just going to be harder to find really good deals at deep discounts in a market that’s still really hot. This is still a balanced market, if not a seller’s market. And so that should change your approach. Can you still buy in Chicago? Absolutely. Are you going to get a 10% discount on an MLS deal? Probably not. Maybe you don’t need it because if prices keep going up, maybe you don’t need as steep as a discount, but this is kind of the thing that you should be thinking about is that deals are probably going to be a little bit thinner in markets like Chicago or Indianapolis or places like that, but that might be worth it to you because there’s more likely to be appreciation in the next couple of years than in a market like Seattle or Orlando.
So this is the analysis you should be doing for yourself. Again, Redfin Housing Wire. You can do this stuff for free, but use this stuff to formulate a strategy to take advantage of the stuff going on in the market. Also, one more thing about the Orlando market. If you want to go check out deals in this market where there are good deals, you should come to BPCon because that is where the BiggerPockets Conference, BPCon is this year, this October 2nd through 4th, great time to go check out a really interesting market and you will get my full analysis and my predictions for the 2027 market before anyone else. I am going to be doing my keynote where I give my forecast for 2027 there in Orlando. You should really check it out. You can get tickets right now. There are actually still early bird tickets available just I think for a couple more days.
Go to biggerpockets.com/conference to get your ticket today. We got to take a quick break, but when we come back, we’ll be talking about our risk report. Don’t want to miss that. Stick with us.
Welcome back to the BiggerPockets Podcast. I’m Dave Meyer. This is our June 2026 housing market update. Next up, we’re going to talk about our risk report. This is something we do every month to keep an eye on just general risk in the market. Now, you can probably tell from my tone over the course of this episode already that I don’t see a ton of risk of a national crash, but I want to just share with you the data because I do think it’s important to be transparent about what I’m seeing and where there are potential signs of risk and also be reassured by some of the data that shows that that risk is overall pretty low. When we look at risk in the housing market, the main things I want to look at are one is inventory. So I already talked about that. We’re not seeing that rise, so that indicates lower overall risk.
But the other sort of forward-looking thing you need to look at to project if inventory is going to go up or there’s going to be broad-based declines on a national level are the state of mortgages. Are people paying their mortgages on time or are delinquencies going up and what’s going on with foreclosures? And so during the risk report, I always share this data every month and what I’ll tell you for this month is the national delinquency rate remained entirely unchanged in April. That’s the last month we have data for. I know this is June, but we don’t have May data. In April, it stayed at 3.35%. So overall, delinquency rate looking pretty good. In fact, the delinquency rate remains about half a percentage point or 45 basis points below where it was in January 2020 before all the data got turned upside down. So has it gone up in recent years?
Yes, it has gone up from what I believe are artificial lows from COVID when there was a lot of programs put in to push out foreclosures and push out delinquencies into later years and that kind of worked. I think we should acknowledge that that worked, but of course when those programs expired, there are going to be rise in delinquency and a rise in foreclosure. And so it’s gone up a little bit, but from artificial lows and it’s still below where we were in 2019, early 2020, when no one was worried about delinquency rates or foreclosure rates, right? We’re below that. So that is the big headline and to me signals overall low risk. The other thing that we’ve seen that I find super encouraging is that early stag delinquencies are down. And this is just super important because even though we’ve seen overall delinquency rates go up a little bit, I explained some of the context there.
The fact that early stage delinquencies are down tells us something super important. It confirms the thesis, the idea that why it’s gone up in recent years is more about stuff that got pushed out from COVID because early stage delinquency is going down means there are not many new people starting to fall behind. We’re still working through a backlog of people who fell behind a while ago, but we are not seeing a lot of new people enter the foreclosure funnel, right? That’s really important. It’s really encouraging, in my opinion. And it’s also really different from what we’re seeing in other parts of the credit market. If you look at student loans, credit card debt, auto loans, delinquency rates are going up, but mortgages, no, they are not going up. They’re actually staying stable. Early stage, it’s going down. That’s good. You want more good news? Because I got more good news for you.
The cure rate is also up. It’s exactly what it sounds like. Cure rate is basically how many people were delinquent or falling behind but get paid up and current. That actually went up and it went up a lot. The average recently has been about 45,000 mortgages a month are cured. Last month it was 62,000. That’s more than a 30% increase in the cure rate. So encouraging picture in terms of overall stress in the housing market. Of course, that can change. That’s why we do this every month. So I can tell you if it’s changed, but it’s changing right now for the better. It is actually looking better than it was a month ago or two months ago or at the beginning of the year. And so I think I’m very encouraged by that. The one area I will say that is not looking as good, but I’m honestly not concerned about is that overall foreclosure activity is up.
So delinquencies are kind of like, it’s kind of a long funnel, right? It starts by going late on your mortgage, then you get seriously delinquent, then you go into pre-foreclosure, then you go foreclosure, then it’s sort of a funnel. So the later parts of the funnel are up a little bit. The overall foreclosure activity is up. It actually went up a lot year over year at 32%. So that sounds like a lot. You’re going to see that on social media. Let me just tell you, you will hear people say foreclosures just went up 32% and they are right, but keep this in mind, foreclosures still below 2019 levels. So again, no one was worried about it back then, so why would you be worried about it right now? So overall risk in the market for a crash remains relatively low. Is it higher than it was in 2022?
Sure. Yes, it is. But right now I see zero evidence that a crash is imminent and I stand by what I’ve been predicting for several years now, which is that we were in the great stall. Prices are going to be close to flat, up 1%, up 2%, down 2%, something like that on a national basis this year and we’re probably going to be in that kind of market for the foreseeable future. So even though calling it the great stalt does not sound like the sexiest thing ever, there’s opportunity here. The market isn’t great, but it is not terrible. And as an investor, you can invest in In any market, what I think you should be looking for is stability and predictability. This is what allows you to make good decisions and that is why I’m encouraged by this. Not because I think all of a sudden you can buy anything and you’re going to make a ton of money.
No, it’s because it’s more predictable. Your underwriting gets easier. Knowing what deals are good and what you should buy is becoming easier. Negotiating with sellers is getting easier. So take advantage of that. Majority of deals are straight up trash right now, but that’s fine. The ability right now, the opportunity right now is to go out and score a really good deal. Go buy something well below what it’s going to be worth five years from now and you’re going to be very happy and those opportunities really do exist. The key is to understand your market. So go out and look at active inventory, look at days on market, look at price trends, and formulate a strategy to go get a great asset in a great location in your local market. If you can do that, you do that all day in any market. That is how you succeed as an investor.
You don’t have to time the market perfectly. You just have to adapt your strategy to what’s going on in the market. Hopefully this episode has helped you do that by providing you information about the national market, information about your own individual region and how to get more granular on that on your own and by explaining that overall risk of a massive decline in the housing market remains relatively low. If you can understand that, you can succeed in this market. That’s our episode for today. Thank you so much for watching this episode of the BiggerPockets Podcast. I’m Dave Meyer. I’ll see you next time.

 

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Capital One Spark Cash Card $1,000 Bonus with $10K Spend


Capital One Spark Cash Card $1,000 Bonus

Capital One brought back the Capital One Spark Cash Card late last year, a product which had not been available for applications since 2021. The normal bonus on this card has been $750 since then. Now the bonus has been improved and new cardholders can earn $1,000. Plus the annual fee is waived the first year. Let’s see the details.

Signup Bonus

  • For a limited time, earn a one-time $1,000 cash bonus when you spend $10,000 in the first 3 months.
  • $0 Intro annual fee for the first year, and then $95 after that.
  • OFFER LINK

Card Details

  • Unlimited 2% Cash Back: Earn 2% cash back for your business on every purchase, everywhere, with no limits or category restrictions.
  • Travel Rewards: Earn unlimited 5% cash back on hotels and rental cars booked through our travel booking site, where you’ll get the best prices on thousands of trip options.
  • Rewards Don’t Expire: Rewards won’t expire for the life of the account and you can redeem your cash back for any amount.
  • No Foreign Transaction Fees: Make purchases outside of the U.S. with zero transaction fee.
  • Virtual Card Numbers: Make safer payments online without exposing your actual card number with merchants.

Guru’s Wrap-up

The Capital One Spark Cash Card is different from the other two, similarly named business products, Spark Cash Plus and Spark Cash Select. Those are charge cards. That means that all charges made on these cards are due and payable in full when you receive your periodic statement. The Capital One Spark Cash Card is still a business credit card, and not a charge card. This card does report to personal credit bureaus.

Now the card also has a much better welcome bonus of $1,000 after spending $10,000 in the first three months. The annual fee is still waived for the first year as well. The card also earns 2% back on all purchases, so you will get a total of $1,800 once you complete the spending. We saw a $1,500 bonus two months ago, but with a $15K spend requirement.

It’s also worth noting that you can convert the cash back earned with this card to miles. You can transfer the cash back to a miles earning card such as Venture X for example. You can do this online if you’re transferring to yourself, or call in if it’s for someone else in your household.

Azzi Fudd signs on to international basketball league Project B



For years, WNBA players played abroad during their off-season as a way to supplement their low salaries. The need to compete year-round was viewed as a downside in the sport, requiring players to spend their time in overseas markets and push their bodies, and limiting their ability to build strong personal brands and gain sponsorship opportunities in the U.S. year-round.

Today, the calculation has changed. The latest example is Azzi Fudd, the No. 1 draft pick of 2026 and now a star on the Dallas Wings. She’s the latest player to join Project B, Fortune is the first to report. Project B is an international men’s and women’s basketball league being built by a former Facebook exec, the cofounder of Skype, and advised by LeBron James’ business partner Maverick Carter. In early 2025, Bloomberg reported that Project B was seeking to raise as much as $5 billion as it works to make basketball the top global sport—ahead of soccer. Cofounder Grady Burnett says that number was a “little high” and the league has completed its capital raise; he declined to confirm how much funding the league has raised.

Project B hasn’t started play yet, but is planning to debut in January Formula 1-inspired “grand prix-style” basketball for men’s and women’s players in six cities, including Tokyo and Valencia, Spain. The model is that underutilized arenas will pay Project B to bring international stars to their cities, allowing the league to build an asset-light business. “It’s putting athletes on a global stage, connecting with fans in all parts of the world,” Burnett says. Like the domestic 3-on-3 league Unrivaled, which has also emerged as an off-season opportunity for women’s players, it offers players equity in the business.

For Fudd, international play was appealing. As an elite college athlete, the 23-year-old has been busy training stateside for most of her life and is excited by the opportunity to travel. “I want to be able to broaden my experience and go outside of just America,” she told Fortune. Her dad, Tim Fudd, played basketball abroad and she grew up hearing stories from him and other players about their experiences in other countries.

For the right player, international play can also be a business opportunity. Fudd traveled with Steph Curry to Chongqing, China last summer, and fans approached her with copies of Slam magazine, photos to sign, and custom Labubus. “People who are fans of me all around the world—I’m so far from home, in a country I’ve never been to, and people cheer for me, give me gifts, and welcome me with open arms—it was such an unreal experience,” she remembers. “It opened my eyes to just how much more is out there and how basketball can open the doors to so much.”

It’s also a different calculation for a post-NIL player like Fudd, who came into her professional career with more than 800,000 followers on Instagram and a similar following on TikTok. She already has major sponsorships in the U.S., like a deal with the hair color brand Madison Reed. She’s not building a personal brand in the U.S. from scratch in her first year, like players of earlier generations. The additional opportunity for her now is building her fandom abroad; for the Chinese market, she’s getting on the TikTok-like platforms Douyin and Rednote.

“What’s incredible now is that players have that option—they can go if they want, they don’t have to, they can stay if they want. It’s not forced,” Fudd says.

Meanwhile, the WNBA and NBA are both becoming more international themselves. With this year’s higher salaries after its new collective-bargaining agreement, the WNBA is attracting more players from outside the U.S.; in the NBA, an international player has won MVP for the past eight seasons. Burnett looks to soccer, which has multiple leagues that bring in more than $1 billion in revenue; he sees an opportunity to build the same competitive landscape in basketball.

Project B faced some controversy due to reports it was funded by Saudi money, a hot-button issue in sports. Burnett says the league accepted no Saudi capital; it worked with the Saudi Public Investment Fund-owned entertainment vendor Sela, but he says that partnership is no longer active.

Other players who have signed on to Project B include Nneka Ogwumike, Alyssa Thomas, Kelsey Mitchell, and Jewell Loyd. The league hasn’t announced any men’s players yet—and the men’s league is poised to be more disruptive to the NBA, where the off-season is short and the league would conflict. Burnett has framed its strategy as “extending the careers of established players” from the NBA.

3 “Magnificent Seven” Stocks to Buy and Hold Right Now


The “Magnificent Seven” stocks are core positions in many portfolios. You don’t become megacap monsters without the huge earnings power and investor interest that Magnificent Seven stocks bring.

In the latest Hazeltree Crowding Report, which tracks which stocks institutional investors are holding, six of the seven Mag 7s — excluding Tesla — were among the top 10 most popular long positions in May.

But of those six, three appear to be the most attractive right now — Nvidia (NVDA +3.08%), Microsoft (MSFT +0.19%), and Meta (META +1.86%).

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Nvidia

All three of these stocks have one thing in common — they are trading at a significant discount.

Nvidia stock is trading at just 23 times forward earnings, down from 40 this time a year ago. Its long-term valuation is even more attractive as it has a five-year price/earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratio of just 0.63. A PEG ratio below 1 means that the stock is undervalued relative to its long-term earnings expectations — and the lower the PEG ratio, the cheaper it is.

Nvidia Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(3.08%) $6.30

Current Price

$210.95

This alone signals that Nvidia is in the buy zone, given its huge earnings power. In the latest quarter, revenue jumped 20% sequentially and 85% year over year while earnings surged 214% year over year. For the current quarter, Nvidia anticipates revenue of $91 billion, an 11% increase over last quarter, and a gross margin of 74.9%, down slightly from 75% last quarter.

Looking out, this fiscal year analysts anticipate 88% earnings growth for Nvidia to $8.96 per share. For the next fiscal year, its fiscal 2028, Wall Street expects 42% earnings growth for Nvidia.

Analysts have a median price target of $300 per share for Nvidia, which suggests a 44% return over the next 12 months.

2. Microsoft

Microsoft stock has not had a great year, down 21% year to date. Microsoft’s share price decline is due to various factors, including its formerly high valuation, concerns about overspending on artificial intelligence (AI), worries related to its partner OpenAI’s profitability, slightly slowing AI cloud growth, and other issues.

But most of these are short-term concerns. In the latest quarter, Microsoft’s results alleviated some of those issues as it had blowout earnings that topped estimates. More importantly, its cloud revenue surged 29% year over year while its Azure AI cloud sales rose 40%. Also, it restructured its deal with OpenAI so it is no longer an exclusive provider and no longer pays revenue share to OpenAI.

Microsoft Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(0.19%) $0.71

Current Price

$379.62

In addition, Microsoft anticipates double-digit revenue growth this fiscal year, including 5% sequential sales growth in the current quarter. Furthermore, Azure sales are anticipated to rise 40% year over year in the current quarter and accelerate in the second half of calendar year 2026.

The kicker is Microsoft’s dirt cheap valuation. It is trading at around 19 times forward earnings, which is near the lowest it has been in the last 10 years.

This makes Microsoft stock a no-brainer buy right now.

3. Meta Platforms

Meta has had its share of issues as of late, with shares sinking due to a recent report in the Financial Times that it was raising money for AI spending — which Meta officials called “pure speculation.”

Meta stock also tanked some 5% recently when it was learned that one of its top executives in charge of AI implementation was leaving the company.

Overall, Meta stock is down 13% year to date, but like Nvidia and Microsoft, it is extremely cheap. Meta stock is trading at just 18 times forward earnings and has a PEG ratio of 0.82.

Meta Platforms Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(1.86%) $10.58

Current Price

$578.16

This is an incredibly cheap valuation for one of the largest, most successful companies in the world. In the latest earnings report, it grew revenue 33% and earnings 62%. Furthermore, it expects 7% sequential revenue growth in the current quarter.

Expenses are worth watching, as Meta guides for a 41% increase in spending to about $165.5 billion at the midpoint of its range for this fiscal year. It also raised its capital expenditures range to $125 billion to $145 billion, up from $115 billion to $135 billion, to fund its AI data centers.

But Meta’s low valuation just makes it too cheap to pass up. Analysts have a median price target of $808 per share, which suggests 43% upside (at the time of this writing). Like the others, its a screaming buy.

Entrepreneurship Expert: How To Build A $1m Business Without Hard Work!



This episode will teach you everything you would learn in a business degree, saving you $200,000 and 10,000 hours

Josh Kaufman is a renowned business expert and the author of the international best-selling book, ‘The Personal MBA’ which has sold over 900,000 copies worldwide. He is also the author of books such as, ‘The First 20 Hours’, and ‘How to Fight a Hydra’.

00:00 Intro
02:00 Why Did You Write The Personal MBA
04:32 What Is An MBA?
10:30 Should You Do A MBA?
14:19 How Difficult Is Starting And Running A Business?
16:57 First Steps To Setting Up A Business
19:29 Loads Of Business Are Finding Problems To Solve
27:49 How To Give Value To The End Consumer
35:47 How Do You Find Out If Your Idea Is Good?
39:11 This Is The Wrong Approach When Starting A Business
40:49 Why Should You Start With Value?
42:35 How To Market
44:04 Psychology & Marketing
46:06 Creating A Drive In The Marketing Strategy
48:23 Think Different
50:52 Be Brave To Do Something Completely Different
58:39 How To Become A Good Marketer
01:00:31 The Sales Piece In Any Business
01:04:38 Customer Service Matters
01:06:09 The Sales Framework
01:13:06 How Important Is Hiring?
01:14:50 What Role Does Competition Play?
01:19:09 Let’s Talk Money
01:24:17 What Numbers Should I Pay Attention To?
01:26:35 Experimenting
01:34:55 Every Complex System Starts In A Simple Way
01:39:06 Mastering A Job
01:43:54 Ten Major Principles To Learn Anything
01:55:24 Removing Any Friction In The Process
02:01:38 Last Guest Question

Are you ready to think like a CEO? Gain access to the 100 CEOs newsletter here: ⁠

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Walmart+ Members Can Earn Up To 10% Back On Travel Bookings (via Expedia)


Walmart announced last week that their Walmart+ members can earn up to 10% back in Walmart Cash on travel bookings through the Walmart portal which is powered by Expedia.

Press Release

  • Walmart+ members can now earn double the Walmart Cash, now up to 10%, on eligible hotels, car rentals and activities booked through Walmart+ Travel powered by Expedia. Members will also continue to earn 2% Walmart Cash on flights, with blended Walmart Cash back available on vacation packages.

I guess you’re giving up on using a shopping portal to get this 2-10% instead. The 10% on hotels and car rentals seems interesting. Let us know if I’m missing something here. 

Hat tip to reader Sam

 

Mr. Cooper and three bureaus reported on-time borrowers late, suit alleges


Their credit reports told a different story. According to the filing, Nationstar/Mr. Cooper reported them 60 days late in May 2025 and 90 days late in June 2025 – the very months they were making their payments. There was no 30-day-late mark leading up to it. The delinquency reporting, the suit says, started straight at 60 days. 

So they disputed it. On or about April 30, 2026, the couple says they wrote to all three bureaus and included the receipts: the trial-plan correspondence, a mortgage statement showing the payment amount, and proof of payment. In May 2026, the filing says, each bureau “verified the inaccurate reporting as accurate.” Nationstar/Mr. Cooper, after the dispute notices reached it, did the same, according to the suit – even though, the couple alleges, it had its own record of the on-time payments. 

The legal architecture runs through the FCRA. The couple alleges the bureaus failed to follow reasonable procedures to assure “maximum possible accuracy” under Section 1681e(b), and failed to reinvestigate reasonably under Section 1681i. Against the servicer, they bring a furnisher claim under Section 1681s-2(b). 

For anyone running a servicing shop, the lesson here is the trial-period reporting trap. Coding a borrower as delinquent while they are current on a trial plan is a known compliance hazard, and the filing leans on existing case law to argue that doing so is “misleading at best.” The stakes are concrete: the couple says a prospective lender told them the FHA handbook forces a two-year wait after a 90-day-late mortgage mark, which they say shut them out of buying a new home. Their rent, they add, is rising $500 a month. 

There is also a corporate footnote for the deal watchers. The filing states Nationstar/Mr. Cooper “has surrendered its authority to transact business or conduct affairs in Michigan due to its acquisition by another lender,” and names a Rocket legal team as registered agent. 

Department of Education Bumps Autopay Interest Discount to 1% — Here’s Who Wins


The U.S. Department of Education announced that its quadrupling the interest rate discount for federal student loan borrowers who enroll in autopay, raising it from 0.25% to a full 1 percentage point starting July 1, 2026.

Borrowers who sign up for automatic payments (or who are already enrolled) will get a 1% reduction on their federal student loan interest rate. The discount is temporary: borrowers who enroll by September 30, 2026 (or are already enrolled) keep the benefit through June 30, 2028.

Already on autopay? You don’t need to do anything. Loan servicers will automatically apply the extra 0.75% on top of the existing 0.25% discount.

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Why It Matters

This is a nice change for borrowers on standard repayment plans (Standard, Extended, Graduated), where monthly payments are tied to the loan balance plus interest. A lower rate means more of each payment goes to principal, less goes to interest, and the loan gets paid off faster.

The impact is smaller for the roughly half of borrowers in income-driven repayment (IDR) plans. Their monthly payments are based on income, not the balance, so a rate cut doesn’t lower what they pay each month. It can still help shrink the eventual “tax bomb” (the potential tax liability on a forgiven balance) by slowing how much interest piles up over the years. But given this discount is only temporary, the savings is minimal.

The Catch

The new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), launching the same day, already tackles runaway interest a different way. RAP waives unpaid monthly interest when borrowers make on-time payments and adds a matching principal payment of up to $50 a month, so balances decline rather than grow. For borrowers headed into RAP, the autopay rate cut and the plan’s interest subsidy do much of the same work.

Borrowers also have to stay enrolled in autopay to keep the discount, and it only applies to Direct Loans originated after July 1, 2012.

By The Numbers

Before the pandemic, more than 80% of borrowers in active repayment used autopay. Today, only 40% do. The Department says it expects the larger discount to push enrollment back up and improve repayment rates across the federal loan portfolio.

Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent called it a “temporary interest rate reduction” that should help borrowers “stay on track for key student loan benefits,” including Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which requires 120 on-time payments.

Borrowers should realize the total value of this benefit is just a few hundred dollars. On a $40,000 student loan balance, the extra 0.75% is worth roughly $600 in saved interest over the two-year window (July 1, 2026 – June 30, 2028). 

How This Connects

The change lands as millions of borrowers face a forced choice. With the SAVE plan gone, borrowers must pick a new plan, and starting July 1, the main options are RAP and the new Tiered Standard plan, which sets fixed terms of 10, 15, 20, or 25 years based on balance. 

The College Investor’s breakdown of RAP notes that RAP’s biggest edge is its interest subsidy: unlike IBR, your balance won’t grow even if your payment doesn’t cover the interest. For borrowers weighing those plans, see how the Repayment Assistance Plan works and these two remaining repayment options now that SAVE is gone.

If you’re on a standard plan and not yet on autopay, enrolling before September 30 is close to free money. If you’re in IDR or moving to RAP, the rate cut helps at the margins but the plan you choose matters far more than the discount.

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Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent Explains the July 1 Student Loan Changes

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How The Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) Works: Payments, Eligibility, And Forgiveness

How The Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) Works: Payments, Eligibility, And Forgiveness

Editor: Colin Graves

The post Department of Education Bumps Autopay Interest Discount to 1% — Here’s Who Wins appeared first on The College Investor.

Healthcare Investment Momentum Expands as Behavioral Health Sector Attracts Rising Capital Interest in 2026




Healthcare Investment Momentum Expands as Behavioral Health Sector Attracts Rising Capital Interest in 2026

Can Singapore become Asia’s neutral AI hub? U.S., China firms set up shop in the country



Singapore has spent decades selling the world on the promise that it can be trusted by all sides. For a new generation of AI companies, that pledge has never been more valuable.

OpenAI and Google DeepMind both established applied AI labs in the city-state over the past year, while Anthropic began advertising local positions in finance, product support, and economic research. Chinese firms like Tencent have also deepened their investment in the country.

“All the AI companies I work with, whether they’re from China, Korea or Japan, all use Singapore as a hub,” Gunja Gargeshwari, the chief revenue officer of Israel-headquartered web scraping firm Bright Data, told Fortune on the sidelines of the SuperAI summit in Singapore. “It’s easiest to operate in the region if I have people in Singapore—it’s where conversations are happening, and where the innovation hubs for different providers are being set up.” Bright Data, for instance, has chosen to position Singapore as its APAC headquarters, even though 60% of its Asian customer base hails from China and India.

“We have the chance to stand out here,” said Nathan Xu, the CEO of San Francisco-based AI notetaker company Plaud. “Unlike many companies that originate entirely from the U.S., if Plaud can position ourselves aggressively in Singapore, then we’re a cool company to prospective users across the globe.”

Plaud hired its first Singapore-based employee in 2024. On June 10, the company said it would spend 10 million Singapore dollars ($7.8 million) to expand its local operations. It also plans to grow its headcount from 100 to 150 by the end of the year. 

Singapore’s appeal to the AI industry is as much due to geopolitics as economics. The country markets itself as an economic safe haven, with a long track record of regulatory clarity and strong governance. 

“Some say we are boring, and we will never have the same offerings as New York and Paris,” Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said during a policy conference last July. “But at the same time, we are stable, we are predictable. We are reliable and we are trusted, and these are intangible assets that others would die to have.”

Founders like Xu also point to the country’s rigorous education system as an incubator for tech talent. “The biggest pain for me and the company is hiring the best engineers, and what’s interesting about Singapore is that it’s home to some of the best universities in the world,” Xu explains. (In this year’s QS World University Rankings, the National University of Singapore ranked #8, while the country’s Nanyang Technological University came in at #12.) “It’s a place which curates generations of talents around software engineering, computer science, AI, data science and operations.”

AI firms go global

The AI build-out in Singapore reflects a broader change across the industry. Global AI firms are shifting away from training massive models to instead figuring out how to monetize their work in the real world.

“The defining feature of the AI cycle through 2025 was capital expenditure… while this has expanded capacity and driven technology leadership, it has also invited skepticism,” wrote BNY’s wealth analysts in a March report. “Attention has now turned decisively from scale to return on investment.”

For firms of Chinese origin, like Manus AI, Tencent, and Alibaba, Singapore often serves as a first and crucial step in going global. To build out their presence in the country, Chinese tech giants are dangling hefty annual pay packages: Singapore-based roles for holders of PhDs in AI can range between $150,000 to $273,000.

“For some of my Chinese customers, the researchers can’t leave the country without telling the government—I kid you not,” said Gargeshwari. “So opening an office in Singapore and having local employees is a necessity for them to do business.”

For U.S. AI firms, overseas markets like those in Asia Pacific represent a massive untapped customer base. 

OpenAI opened a regional office in Singapore in 2024. Last month, the firm committed 300 million Singapore dollars ($234 million) to growing the country’s AI ecosystem. It also announced the opening of an applied AI lab—the first outside of the U.S.—which is set to make Singapore one of its hubs for forward deployed engineers: specialized software engineers who embed directly within customer organizations to customize and deploy tech solutions.

Notion, the AI-powered productivity platform, opened a Singapore office in mid-2025. “Our number one priority is to meet and interface with current and potential customers,” said Randy Hunt, the company’s head of design. “I could do a demo for you over video, and while that may be effective, if I can do it sitting next to you, it resonates better.”

Anthropic is betting on enterprise AI instead of the consumer market, which makes Singapore, where many MNCs house their APAC headquarters, a natural choice.

Cracks in the system

Yet, foreign governments are starting to challenge Singapore’s neutrality.

Manus AI and its parent company, Butterfly Effect, relocated its global headquarters to Singapore in mid-2025 to both avoid Western regulatory scrutiny and better access global capital. In December, it sold itself to Meta for $2 billion. Beijing quickly moved to block the deal, and in April ordered the acquisition to be unwound. 

In the end, Manus’s legal status as a Singapore company didn’t matter: its continued footprint in China was enough for Beijing to decide it had jurisdiction. 

“Regulators looked straight through the Singapore holding structure to the technology’s Chinese origin,” Sebastian Wiendieck, the head of legal practice in China at law firm ROEDL, told CNA. “This marks a new normal: any China-founded AI startup, regardless of its offshore domicile, will face intense national security scrutiny if it tries to sell to a U.S. buyer.”

The U.S., too, could hurt Singapore’s AI ambitions. Last week, the U.S. government barred non-U.S. individuals from using Anthropic’s powerful Mythos model. Singapore could end up losing access to powerful frontier models from U.S. companies like Anthropic and OpenAI.  

Still, AI firms remain positive about expanding into Singapore. The country released its national AI R&D plan in January, alongside a 1 billion Singapore dollar injection to fund the buildout of AI-related infrastructure and capabilities. The country also set out plans to build an AI industrial park called Kampong AI, set to open in 2028 with workspaces and housing facilities to woo AI start-ups.

“We feel like we are welcomed here,” Xu said. “We didn’t know we’d be able to set up such a big and meaningful presence here; a year ago, we had zero people here, but now we have close to a hundred.”