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Teladoc’s Recovery Story Is Starting to Take Shape. Should You Buy the Stock?


After years of lagging broader equities, Teladoc Health (TDOC +1.10%) is finally bouncing back. The company’s shares are up by 28% to date, while the S&P 500 has climbed just 9%. The telemedicine specialist still has plenty of work to do, but could it finally be on the road to full recovery? Let’s see whether Teladoc can maintain the momentum it has had this year.

Why Teladoc is bouncing back

At first glance, Teladoc doesn’t seem to be doing that much better. In the first quarter, the company’s revenue declined 2% year over year to $613.8 million. Sales from its BetterHelp virtual therapy division fell 9% year over year to $218.4 million, while the number of paying users on BetterHelp also fell 9%. Further, Teladoc remains unprofitable. It posted a net loss per share of $0.36, which, in fairness, was much better than the $0.53 loss per share it recorded in the year-ago period.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Still, overall, Teladoc’s financial results look mediocre. Why is the stock performing well? Part of the answer is that the market is paying attention to several developments that could help fix some of the company’s issues. Consider BetterHelp, which was once Teladoc’s biggest growth driver. For years, the company tried to get health insurance coverage for this unit. It has finally done so in many U.S. states thanks to an acquisition. Teladoc is seeing clear evidence that this is helping.

As the company reported, virtual therapy users who benefit from insurance coverage averaged about 20% more sessions than cash-paying patients in their first 90 days. Teladoc also expects to end 2026 with an annual run rate of at least $125 million for the company’s BetterHelp insurance-covered sessions — a meaningful improvement over the $75 million it had as of the end of the first quarter. Teladoc is also making progress elsewhere.

Notably, the company’s international expansion is still going well. In the first quarter, Teladoc’s international revenue grew by 17% year over year to $122.3 million. Meanwhile, Teladoc is implementing various artificial intelligence (AI)-powered initiatives across its business that could have a meaningful impact over the long run. For instance, the company has reduced the administrative work that BetterHelp’s therapists do through AI-assisted documentation, allowing them to spend more time focusing on patients.

This is good for everyone involved. Teladoc could continue to see much-improved financial results and stock price performance if it can keep launching initiatives like these.

Teladoc Health Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(1.10%) $0.10

Current Price

$9.20

Is the stock a buy now?

Although Teladoc has addressed some of the issues it has encountered in recent years, it isn’t out of the woods just yet. Here are several things that could go wrong for the telemedicine company. First, although it is making some progress with BetterHelp, thanks to third-party coverage, the virtual therapy space is very competitive. That’s one reason why Teladoc faced — in the company’s own words — “mounting pressure” within its direct-to-patient cash-paying virtual therapy business.

Insurance coverage is helpful, but even with that, BetterHelp’s upside might be limited by the increasingly competitive nature of this industry. Second, although Teladoc’s international revenue has been growing faster than the rest of the business, the company’s global ambitions may eventually backfire. Managing legal and regulatory requirements, insurance rules and regulations, prescriptions, and many other matters that Teladoc engages in across different countries could turn into a nightmare.

We might see Teladoc’s expenses rise significantly as the company continues its expansion plans abroad. As a result, it may be difficult for the company to turn profitable. Lastly, although Teladoc’s AI-related work looks promising, it is unlikely to give it a significant advantage over most of its competitors, many of whom are also likely implementing similar strategies. The bottom line is that Teladoc has yet to demonstrate it can perform consistently, while it still faces significant headwinds. So, even with the progress it has made, its shares look fairly risky. Investors should keep that in mind before initiating a position. And only those comfortable with volatility should consider doing so.

If I Had to Start Over in Real Estate Today, I’d Do This


At 22, I went to work for a hard money lender doing purchase-rehab loans. I bought my first rental property at 24, which kicked off a decade of active real estate investing before I accepted how badly I’d bungled my early investments and unloaded all of them.

By my late 30s, I’d wiped the slate clean. My early losses and later wins offset one another, and I did end up starting over from scratch. After that, I managed to go from nothing to $1 million in under seven years despite a modest household income. 

This is all to say this isn’t just a theoretical exercise for me. So, knowing everything I know today after 23 years in real estate, how would I start over today? 

I’d House Hack for “Free Housing”

When I bought my first home, I rented out the other bedroom to a housemate I met on Craigslist. To this day, she and her now-husband are two of my closest friends. At one point, we spent a week in northern Italy together. 

Granted, I was in my early 30s at the time and single. Today, I’m married with a daughter—and I’m still looking at buying a two-unit home to house hack

If you can knock out your housing payment by having renters pay your entire mortgage, you can supercharge your savings rate. And that means building wealth extraordinarily fast. 

I know, because I spent 10 years living overseas with free housing, which helped us invest huge amounts each month even with a middling household income. 

Plus, house hacking gives you a first taste of rental investing and landlording. I discovered that I hated the constant hassles with contractors, tenants, property managers, the permit office, city inspectors, tax assessors, and lenders. But I refused to learn any lessons the easy way and had to learn them the hard way. 

Hopefully, you can do better than I did in that regard. 

I’d Start Passive, Not Active

Active investing requires dozens of micro-skill sets. A few include:

  • Finding deeply discounted off-market deals (that’s actually a major skill set; nothing “micro” about it)
  • Building a financing toolkit of different lenders and credit types
  • Screening and managing contractors (who are notoriously difficult to work with)
  • Screening and managing tenants (ditto)
  • Screening and managing property managers 
  • Navigating the local permitting process and inspections

Skills aside, it cost a massive amount of my time. Owning rentals is a side hustle, and I spent too much of my nights and weekends putzing around with properties. 

Oh, and it comes with more liability than novice investors realize: legal liability from lawsuits (I was sued twice as a landlord, and it really, really sucked), as well as debt liability when you sign a personal guarantee. 

Do you know what’s much easier? Evaluating passive real estate investments—and then wiring the money and calling it a day. 

Still, it raises the question: Where do you find passive real estate deals (especially as a non-accredited investor), and how do you vet them? 

I’d Plug Into an Existing Community of Investors

Investing might feel like a solo sport, but it doesn’t have to be. 

I invest alongside a co-investing club, putting in relatively small amounts ($2,500+) in a new deal every month. The club gets together once or twice a month on a group video call where we all grill the operator together with questions, then boot them off the call for an internal discussion of the deal’s risks and upsides. 

We all get the benefit of each other’s knowledge and experience, vetting the deal together. That makes it easy for even novice investors to make intelligent, informed decisions. 

It also helps to leverage communities like BiggerPockets. Before investing with a new operator, I run a search on the BiggerPockets forums to see what other investors have said about them. 

Real estate investing gets much easier when you approach it as a team sport. 

I’d Practice Dollar-Cost Averaging

When most people start investing in real estate, they park $50,000$100,000 in each new investment. For active investors, that’s the down payment, closing costs, initial repairs, and so forth. For passive investors, that’s the minimum investment. 

That makes it really hard to invest consistently, which is why I don’t do that anymore. 

Instead, I invest $2,500 or more each month in new deals as a form of dollar-cost averaging. Just as I invest monthly in stocks, I invest monthly in real estate. 

It helps me avoid the losing game of trying to time the market. This, by the way, is far more tempting when you invest $50K-$100K at a time. 

When you invest through a co-investing club, you go in on investments together, so each person can invest small amounts. Collectively, we might invest $400K-$800K at a pop, but each member only puts up a few thousand (or more if they want). 

I have a diversified portfolio spread across dozens of cities and states and many operators and property types. I can only do that because I invest small amounts every month. 

I’d Get Strategic About Taxes

Some of my investments come with the same tax benefits as active investments. Better in fact, because the operator usually does a cost segregation study to give me a huge write-off in Year 1. 

Other investments come with no tax benefits, such as secured notes. But they pay such a high income yield that I don’t mind—I just offset them with the tax-friendly investments. 

As investments sell and hit me with high tax bills, I’d use the lazy 1031 exchange strategy to offset them and keep kicking the can down the road. It’s super simple and doesn’t require any of the hassles like qualified intermediaries or rigid timelines. All I have to do is invest in a new equity investment in the same calendar year. 

You can also do plenty of creative strategies with your IRA or 401(k), especially with Roth accounts. 

If I Wanted to Start a Real Estate Business

Most people just want to add real estate to their investment portfolio without starting a side hustle or business around it. But what about investors who do want to make a business out of real estate investing? I’d consider two paths: cosponsoring deals or combining wholesaling and rental investing. 

When you cosponsor deals, you get a cut of the returns in exchange for helping to raise capital among your friends, family, and followers. It’s a great way to get your foot in the door to becoming a real estate syndicator yourself and get some deals on your track record (even though you didn’t actually run them). 

Alternatively, you could wholesale fixer-uppers to active investors. Some of those deals you could keep for yourself, renovating them and keeping them as rentals (the BRRRR strategy). The wholesaling business creates monthly revenue while you gradually build a portfolio of income properties. 

Why Today’s Market Looks More Appealing Than Most

I stand by what I said about dollar-cost averaging and not timing the market. That said, it’s still worth observing the current market cycle. 

Analysts such as BiggerPockets’ Dave Meyer see deals getting better for investors, as the shift toward a buyers’ market continues. That’s great news for both active and passive investors. 

Multifamily values crashed 25%-30% in late 2022 and early 2023. The recovery has started but remains early enough that there’s plenty of room to run. 

And when inflation surges (like it’s doing right now), real assets outperform everything else. Real assets have intrinsic value, so people simply adjust what they’re willing to pay even as the value of the currency changes. 

You don’t need to plop down $50,000 for a down payment or minimum investment. You can get started with a few thousand dollars if you invest alongside a co-investing club and gradually build your empire. I now own an interest in over 5,000 units across the country, but I don’t have to lift a finger for any of them. 

That’s how I’ve been investing for the last eight years since I started over in my late 30s. And it’s how I keep investing every month to build a machine that generates income on its own. 

Rakuten: $100 Bonus on Citi Strata Premier


The Offer

Direct Link to offer

Note: bonus will only show if you are earning Rakuten cashback or Bilt points, not if your account is set up to earn Membership Rewards points.

Our Verdict

Nice spruce-up to the regular signup bonus if you want this card. It’s interesting to see Rakuten partner with more and more card issuers to add a bonus as this isn’t something that’s typically done with affiliate networks:

Hat tip to tossedintheglaze

Judge denies Sony Music bid to add over 30,000 recordings to Udio lawsuit


A New York federal judge has denied Sony Music Entertainment‘s request to add 30,442 sound recordings to its copyright infringement lawsuit against AI music platform Udio.

The ruling from Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein, which you can read in full here, keeps the case at the 333 works that remain in the case.

Sony filed the motion on May 22 in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, saying it had identified the additional recordings after gaining access to Udio‘s training data in discovery.

“Adding more than 30,000 works near the close of document discovery would require substantial additional production and review, generate further disputes, and materially alter the scope of the case before me.”

Alvin K. Hellerstein, US District Judge

“Adding more than 30,000 works near the close of document discovery would require substantial additional production and review, generate further disputes, and materially alter the scope of the case before me,” Hellerstein wrote.

The expanded complaint would have multiplied Udio‘s potential exposure to statutory damages, which US copyright law caps at USD $150,000 per work for willful infringement.

Sony Music, together with its subsidiaries Arista Music and Arista Records, is the sole remaining major-label plaintiff suing Udio.

The lawsuit began in June 2024, when the RIAA sued Udio and rival Suno on behalf of the major labels, accusing the platforms of “mass infringement” of copyright.

Universal Music Group settled with Udio in October 2025, striking a licensing deal for a planned AI music service. Warner Music Group followed in November, resolving its claims and signing a licensing deal of its own. Independent licensing body Merlin reached a deal in January 2026, and publisher Kobalt followed in April.

The most recent development came in June, when the National Music Publishers’ Association announced what its president and CEO David Israelite described as the “first-ever industry-wide licensing deal with a major AI music company.”

Israelite said the deal was the first to “value songs and sound recordings equally” when it comes to AI training, describing Udio as a platform that “allows people to reimagine music using the distinct styles of songwriters and artists.”

“To do this, Udio accepted that it needs permission from publishers and labels,” he said. “And they’ve come to the table to bring creators in as business partners. As it should be.”

Israelite framed the dual-track approach of litigation and licensing as deliberate.

“Litigating against bad AI actors and licensing good AI partners is not in conflict,” he said. “NMPA will do both.”


Sony Music remains the only major music company yet to reach a deal with Udio.

Sony‘s decision to keep litigating places it at odds not just with Udio‘s new partners, but with the broader direction of travel in the industry. The label has, however, been vocal about what it regards as the only acceptable framework for AI companies building music products.

Sony Music Group Chairman Rob Stringer, speaking as Sony joined Spotify and its major-label peers on AI products last year, said that “direct licensing in advance of launching new products is the only appropriate way to build them and demonstrates how a properly functioning market benefits everyone in the ecosystem.”

Addressing investors in mid-2025, Stringer said the company has “actively engaged with more than 800 companies on ethical product creation, content protection and detection, enhancing metadata and audio tuning and translation,” and committed that “we will share all revenues with our artists and songwriters, whether from training or related to outputs, so they are appropriately compensated from day one of this new frontier.”

Sony‘s continuing case is widely expected to produce a pivotal ruling on the fair use question that could set legal precedent for every AI music company.

By choosing to litigate rather than license, Sony is betting that a court ruling will establish the industry standard — a different calculation from the licensing partnerships that Universal and Warner chose to pursue.

In its April answer, Udio argued that any copying of copyrightable expression is “quintessential fair use,” describing its tool as a “back-end technological process, invisible to the public,” that produces a non-infringing new product.

Udio also admitted that it “obtained audio data from YouTube for use as training data,” while arguing that downloading publicly available videos is not unlawful.

Udio has further accused the labels of copyright misuse, pointing to “anticompetitive activities that extend an unlawful monopoly” over music.

One part of the case is already moving against the company: on April 15, Hellerstein declined to dismiss Sony‘s claim that Udio circumvented YouTube‘s technological protections, a Digital Millennium Copyright Act allegation.

However, the judge noted that whether those measures ultimately constitute access controls under the statute “requires a greater factual record than the pleadings contain,” leaving the door open for Udio to renew its arguments once the record is developed.

The divergence among the majors has played out as Universal builds what it has called a “licensed and protected” environment with Udio, due to launch in 2026.

A parallel case against Suno, which Sony and Universal are pursuing together in Massachusetts, involves far more works: the labels there are seeking to add 61,026 recordings.

With document production set to close on August 25, both sides are expected to move for summary judgment on whether Udio’s training amounts to fair use.Music Business Worldwide

Why Most Indians Stay Financially Stressed #shorts #marathi #finance Marathi Podcast



CA Rachana Ranade opens up like never before in this power-packed podcast filled with investing secrets, money mindset hacks, career struggles, wealth-building strategies, and real-life experiences that every Indian should hear. From starting investments with just ₹500 or ₹10,000 to understanding SIPs, emergency funds, insurance, CIBIL scores, and financial discipline — this episode covers everything a beginner needs to know about becoming financially strong. She also shares her honest opinions on real estate, gold investment, women and money, salary management, and how middle-class families can create long-term wealth step by step.
From a viral Zepto delivery story to revealing that she once wanted a career in music instead of becoming a CA, this conversation is filled with relatable moments, emotional insights, and practical financial advice for students, salaried employees, entrepreneurs, and anyone dreaming of financial freedom. If you’ve ever wondered how to manage money better, where to invest first, how much SIP to start, or how rich people think differently — this episode is a must-watch till the end.

#rachanaranade #financepodcast #stockmarketindia #sip #mutualfunds #investing #personalfinance #moneymanagement #wealthcreation #financialfreedom #investment #businesspodcast #womenandfinance #indianstockmarket #emergencyfund #cibilscore #realestate #goldinvestment #middleclass #marathipodcast #sarvakaahi

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As refi market dries up, equity products continue to drive business for brokers


“We pay up to 2 1/2 points on our HELOCs,” he said. “We recently enhanced our HELOC to allow up to a $1 million HELOC, and 2.5% on a $1 million deal, that’s $25,000. You do four of those, that’s $100,000 a year.”

He noted that homeowners are sitting on approximately $35 trillion in home equity. Many of those homeowners are deciding to stay put and fix up what they own, which is becoming more necessary as housing stock continues to age.

Davis said more than 50% of equity originations are renovation loans, with close to $600 billion in renovation projects expected in 2026. The market extends well beyond primary residence owners, with 19 million investment properties whose owners are not willing to surrender sub-3% notes to fund rehabs or new deals.

“People are staying in their homes longer,” he said. “They can’t afford to trade up. They don’t want to give up that low rate. They’re tapping into their equity.”

Meeting borrower needs

For brokers who still aren’t offering second lien products, Davis said their customers are likely to just go elsewhere.

Robinhood Gold Card Review (No Annual Fee Everything 3% Cashback) (2026.7 Update: Has FTF Now)