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Why Aren’t Mortgage Rates Rising with the Middle East Conflict Seemingly Worsening?


You might be wondering why mortgage rates remain fairly low despite tensions in the Middle East remaining quite high.

While there was a glimmer of hope a few days ago when Israel and Lebanon announced a ceasefire and an Iranian official declared the Strait of Hormuz open, it appeared to be short-lived.

It turned out the Strait wasn’t open and then U.S. forces fired upon an Iranian vessel and took custody of it.

Meanwhile, a second round of negotiations involving Vice President J.D. Vance are apparently not being attended by the Iranians.

And Trump is back to making big threats again on social media. So you wonder why bond yields and mortgage rates aren’t rising once more.

Mortgage Rates Are Holding Up Remarkably Well Despite Near-$100 Oil

Historically, oil prices and mortgage rates are positively correlated, in that if one goes up, so does the other.

In short, when energy costs rise, inflation expectations rise and bond traders (and MBS investors) demand a higher yield aka interest rate.

Yes, mortgage rates are up since oil went up in price, but not by a whole lot.

And over the past three weeks and change, 10-year bond yields have drifted lower, falling from around 4.50% to 4.25% today.

They had been just below 4% before the war in Iran broke out, but are now well off their recent highs.

The rationale is that the war is baked into bond yields now, and that tensions have eased from their absolute heights.

But when you see all the flip-flopping, you start to wonder if yields are high enough to compensate.

While there was some promise of a peace deal last week, we are back to things being very tenuous again.

Trump took to his Truth Social account yesterday, saying if Iran doesn’t make a deal, “the United States is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran. NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!”

It’s more of the same threats made before the peace talks and feels like we are ratcheting back up to the tensest levels.

At the same time, Iran has said it’s not even going to attend the next round of talks in Islamabad.

And the existing ceasefire between the two countries ends on Wednesday night…

None of this exactly exudes confidence that the worst is behind us, or that a deal is imminent.

Instead, it sounds like things could get worse before they get better.

But it appears mortgage rates are staying lower based on optimism and hope. That things will get better and a deal will be reached. It sure doesn’t sound promising though.

Labor Market Matters More Than War-Related Inflation

If it’s not that, then it’s because labor is worse than we think, and jobs and unemployment are going to continue to deteriorate.

The Fed seems to be more concerned about the labor market and the lack of job creation, and that can trump any uptick in inflation related to oil prices.

Back in mid-March, Fed chair Jerome Powell said, “Effectively, there’s zero net job creation in the private sector.”

Obviously that’s a problem, and when you throw in the threat of AI taking existing jobs on top of that, it’s very bleak.

That could lead to more accommodative action from the Fed like rate cuts and keep bond yields down in the process.

And perhaps that, coupled with historical precedent that geopolitical issues don’t drag out as long as expected, may explain why mortgage rates aren’t even higher today.

At last glance, they’re only about .25% to .375% above the pre-war levels, which is remarkably decent given oil prices remain near $100 a barrel.

You can see how much that affects your payment and total interest via my mortgage rate calculator.

My quick take is be grateful and don’t be at all surprised if they rise again in the months of May and June.

Read on: Mortgage rates are lowest in the month of February historically.

Colin Robertson
Latest posts by Colin Robertson (see all)

Foresight Solar sees limited NAV impact from UK carbon tax removal




Foresight Solar sees limited NAV impact from UK carbon tax removal

The Biggest Financial Traps Men Fall Into Between 35 and 45 (Nobody Warns You)



If you’re between 35 and 45, earning more than ever but still feeling financially stuck, this video is for you. We break down the hidden money traps that look like success—bigger homes, nicer cars, more responsibility—and explain why they quietly destroy flexibility and peace of mind. Learn how to lower your financial break-even point, reclaim options, and build real stability without sacrificing your family or your lifestyle.

Disclaimer: The purpose is to inform viewers about finance in a responsible, educational way, not to provide financial advice. This video is for educational and entertainment purposes only. I am not a financial advisor. Please consult with a professional before making major financial decisions.

#savemoney #personalfinance #investing

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7 Passive Investments Paying 8%+ Every Year


Passive income is the engine of financial independence, whether you’re 30 or 65. With enough passive income from investments, working becomes optional.

But some investments outshine others in paying high yields. And the higher the yield, the less money you need to invest to generate the same income.

I’ve personally invested in every one of the investments outlined below, with small amounts through my co-investing club. The numbers aren’t hypothetical—I’m earning them right now as I write this.

1. Private Notes

A few years ago, I invested with a house flipper who does 60-90 flips a year. I signed a private note with him at 10% interest, and he’s paid me on time every month since.

Last year in my co-investing club, we lent money to a land flipper at 15% interest. If that sounds risky, consider that he put up his home as collateral—with a first-position lien at 65% LTV.

I’ve also lent at 16% to a rental investor who sells to his renters on installment contracts. All continue paying like clockwork.

2. Real Estate Funds

Another land flipping company that my co-investing club has invested with offers a fund that pays a 10% distribution each quarter, plus another 6% if they hit their profit target.

Since the fund launched five years ago or so, it’s hit its profit target every single quarter. So every quarter, a 16% annualized distribution gets deposited in my bank account.

3. Private Partnerships (JV)

The co-investing club I invest with also loves to negotiate custom partnerships with active investors. They do the work, we put up the bulk of the money, and we get our share of the profits.

Even an example that didn’t work out as planned still underscored how great the model is. We partnered with a house flipper and funded a series of flips and negotiated a minimal annualized return of 8%. One of the flips flopped, and it dragged down the average annualized return below 8%. But when the partnership closed out after the prescribed timeline, the operator made up the difference and paid our agreed-upon 8% floor return.

We actually just finished investing money with a builder who specializes in barndominium homes in Central Tennessee. We’re partnering on four builds, each of which will likely take around nine months from start to finish. Assuming these produce similar returns to the last dozen barndos he’s built, we should earn a 16%-20% return for each one.

4. Industrial Syndications

Last year, we invested in an industrial seller-leaseback deal with a single triple-net lease tenant. In the first few months, it paid a distribution yield of 7.5%, and a year later, it’s paying 9.5%.

In fact, the club just finished vetting and investing in a similar deal, projected to pay out virtually identical distributions.

It’s not the first time we’ve invested with that operator, either. This is the third deal we’ve invested in with them, and a previous industrial deal just closed out a few months ago after a two-and-a-half-year hold. It paid out annualized returns of 27.6%.

Some industrial syndications also make recession-resilient investments. That first one I mentioned had a backlog of orders over three years long when we invested, and their clients are largely name-brand companies and the U.S. Navy. They’re not going anywhere.

5. Multifamily Syndications

Not every multifamily syndication pays distributions at all, and some pay low yields in the 2%-4% range. Others pay mid-range yields in the 4%-7% range, and still others pay high yields in the 7%-10%+ range.

We’ve invested three times now with an operator who specializes in workforce housing in Ohio. They’ve paid the projected 8% distribution on time every quarter for each one.

Another operator we invested with last year also specializes in Midwestern multifamily properties. They bought a huge portfolio of relatively small multifamily properties, scattered across several states, which has already yielded enormous cash flow. It currently pays over a 9% distribution yield. 

6. Mobile Home Parks

You can also invest passively in other types of syndications, such as mobile home parks.

Our co-investing club invested in a Nebraska park a few years ago that pays a 10% distribution each quarter. Beyond being a cash cow, it’s also quite recession-resilient, as they’ve systematically unloaded the park-owned homes to tenants. Residents with tenant-owned homes almost never default on their lot rents, because it costs many thousands more to move a mobile home than to pay the few hundred dollars in lot rent.

If you don’t like the structure of a syndication, you could negotiate a joint venture partnership with a mobile home park investor and simply come in as a silent partner.

7. Hotel Syndications

We also invested in a boutique hotel operator with a small cabin resort in Southern California. They pay distributions currently at 11%, after starting distributions early and refinancing to return some of our capital earlier than expected.

How the Freedom Math Changes with 8%-16% Yields

If you follow the 4% Rule and want $40,000 in investment income, you need to invest $1 million. Even with an enormous savings rate as I had, it takes at least six to 10 years to become a millionaire if you earn a middle-class income.

With investments paying an 8% yield, it takes $500,000 to generate $40,000 in income. At 10%, it takes $400,000 invested. At 12%, it takes $333,333. And at 14%, it takes $285,714.

And at a 16% yield, it takes $250,000.

Yes, I get it: No one’s putting their entire portfolio in assets paying a 16% yield. These high-yield investments make up just one portion of your portfolio, alongside low-yield investments like index funds mirroring the S&P 500.

The point remains, however: Passive real estate investments paying 8%-16% yields can help you escape your day job sooner. They can prop up your income, letting you quit and pursue your ideal work instead of grinding away at a high-octane job.

Imagine putting even $100,000 in a passive real estate investment paying 16%. That’s an extra $16,000 a year in income.

I don’t know about you, but that’s no trivial raise. This is precisely why I keep investing month in and month out in new passive investments, many of which pay high yields like the examples above.

Earn Up to 10,000 Bonus Miles with Amex Offer for Delta Gift Cards


Amex Offer for Delta Gift Cards

New Amex Offer dropped today for Delta Gift Cards, giving cardholders an easy way to earn extra SkyMiles on their next purchase. As with most Amex Offers, this is targeted, so you’ll want to check all of your cards to see where the deal landed. The offer is popping up on Delta credit cards, but it may be on other cards as well. Here are the specifics and how to maximize the savings by stacking deals.

Offer Details

There are at least four different Amex Offers available for purchasing Delta Gift Cards:

  • 5x extra miles, up to a maximum of 10,000 bonus miles.
  • 3x extra miles, up to a maximum of 10,000 bonus miles.
  • Spend $750 or more to earn 3,000 bonus miles.
  • Spend $500 or more to earn 2,500 bonus miles.

Offer details and availability may vary by cardholder. Just login to your American Express account(s) to see if you are eligible to add this offer to your card(s).

Amex Offer for Delta Gift Cards 2026

Important Terms

  • Offer expires July 14, 2026.
  • Offer valid online only at US website delta.com/giftcards/amex for e-gift and physical gift card purchases.
  • Not valid on purchases shipped outside of the US.
  • Offer valid only on purchases made in US dollars.

About Amex Offers

Amex Offers are an extra perk on all American Express credit cards, charge cards, and even prepaid cards. You can see these offers in your accounts either as a statement credit or extra Membership Rewards points for spending a certain amount at eligible merchants. You will need to add the offer to a specific card first, and then use that card to get the credit. Here are a few things you should know:

Amex Offer for Delta Gift Cards 2026

Guru’s Wrap-up

This is a good offer that seems to be widely available for most cardholders. Check your accounts and add it now if you think you might use it. Check your accounts and add these offers now if you think you might use them. Remember that you can use the search bar within the “Amex Offers” section in the app to find this offer quickly, instead of scrolling through 100+ deals.

With these Amex Offers for Delta Gift Cards you can lock in savings for future flights. The offers are showing up on Delta credit cards only I believe, so I would check those first. 

Most likely you will have only one of these offers on a specific card so you will not be able to stack them. The bonus miles are in addition to any miles that you regularly earn with your card.

Amex Offer for Delta Gift Cards stack

Currently there is also a promotion running on the Delta Gift Cards website. You will receive a bonus $20 Starbucks gift card when you purchase at least $300 in Delta Gift Cards. That promotion runs until supplies last or until 5/11/26.

10 Frugal Swaps to Save Up to $1,200 Per Month


The other day I saw a thread on Reddit about frugal swaps, and it got me curious.

I clicked in to see how much people were actually saving with these little changes. Some of the ideas were pretty niche like doing all your errands on the drive home instead of going out later.

Others were the obvious ones, like thrifting or picking up free furniture.

The more I read, the more I realized most of those tips sound good in theory, but they don’t really fit real life for a lot of us. If you’re juggling work, kids, and everything else, you’re not going to drive across town to save a few dollars or spend hours hunting for free stuff online.

So I decided to put together a list of frugal swaps that actually make sense. Simple changes you can fit into your routine that save money without making your life harder.

Grocery Swaps That Add Up Fast

Food is one of the easiest places to cut costs. Small changes here can save more than you’d expect.

Switching from brand-name products to store brands can shave off $30–$80 per month, especially if you shop regularly for a family. Swapping fresh produce for frozen (for things like veggies and fruit used in cooking) can save another $20–$50, mainly by reducing waste.

One of the biggest wins is cutting back on convenience. Pre-cut fruits, packaged meals, and takeout cost a premium. Cooking simple meals at home instead of ordering out even a few times per week can easily save $100–$300 per month.

Potential monthly savings: $150–$400

Household Swaps That Reduce Waste

A lot of everyday household spending comes from habits rather than necessity.

Replacing paper towels with reusable cloths can save around $10–$25 per month. Making your own cleaning products using basic ingredients like vinegar and baking soda cuts costs by another $10–$20.

If you use a dryer often, switching to air drying even part of your laundry can lower electricity costs by $15–$40 monthly, depending on usage. Even small swaps like using bar soap instead of liquid versions can add another $5–$10 in savings.

Potential monthly savings: $40–$90

Subscription and Lifestyle Swaps

Subscriptions quietly drain money because they feel small individually but stack up quickly.

If you’re paying for multiple streaming services, rotating just one at a time can save $20–$60 per month. Swapping book purchases for library use or free digital options can save another $10–$30.

Gym memberships are another big one. If you’re not using it consistently, switching to home workouts or walking can save $20–$80 monthly. Adding a simple rule like waiting 24 hours before buying non-essential items can realistically prevent $50–$150 in impulse spending.

Potential monthly savings: $100–$300

Clothing and Shopping Habits

Clothing is often an underestimated expense because purchases feel occasional—but they add up over time.

Shopping secondhand instead of buying new can cut clothing costs by $30–$100 per month (averaged out over the year). Focusing on a simple wardrobe instead of chasing trends reduces unnecessary purchases even more.

Repairing clothes instead of replacing them, and shopping clearance or off-season, can realistically save another $20–$60 monthly.

Potential monthly savings: $50–$160

Everyday Money Leaks You Can Fix

Some of the biggest savings come from fixing small, repeated habits.

Walking instead of driving short distances can save $20–$60 per month on fuel. Driving more smoothly (less aggressive acceleration and braking) can reduce fuel costs by another $10–$30.

Planning meals ahead and packing lunch instead of buying it can easily save $100–$250 per month, depending on how often you eat out.

Potential monthly savings: $130–$300

Lower Energy Use Without Changing Your Lifestyle

Energy bills are one of those expenses that creep up without you noticing. The good news is you don’t need to sit in the dark to save money.

Lowering your thermostat slightly in winter (even by 1–2°F) or using fans instead of blasting AC in warmer months can cut your bill right away. Another easy win is unplugging devices you’re not using TVs, chargers, and kitchen appliances still draw power even when turned off.

Switching to LED bulbs and being mindful about turning off lights when leaving a room also adds up over time.

Potential monthly savings: $20–$80

Bottled Drinks

Grabbing drinks on the go feels cheap in the moment, but it builds into a serious monthly expense.

If you’re buying bottled water, soda, or juices regularly, switching to tap water (or using a simple filter) can save a surprising amount. Making your own iced tea, coffee, or flavored water at home costs just a fraction of store-bought options.

Even replacing one or two daily purchases can make a difference by the end of the month.

Potential monthly savings: $30–$100

Brand-Name Medications

This is one of the easiest swaps because it doesn’t require changing your habits at all.

Most over-the-counter medications like pain relievers, allergy tablets, or cold medicine have generic versions with the same active ingredients. The packaging is different, but what’s inside is often identical.

If you regularly buy these, switching to generics can cut your cost significantly without sacrificing quality.

Potential monthly savings: $10–$40

Paid Apps and Tools

Subscriptions aren’t just streaming services. Many people pay for apps they barely use.

Budgeting tools, photo editors, cloud storage, and productivity apps often have free versions that work just fine. In many cases, you’re paying for features you don’t even need.

Going through your subscriptions and canceling or downgrading even a couple of them can instantly lower your monthly expenses.

Potential monthly savings: $10–$50

Rethink Gift Spending (Without Looking Cheap)

Gifts can quietly blow up your budget, especially if you’re buying for multiple people throughout the year.

Instead of last-minute, full-price gifts, planning ahead makes a big difference. Buying during sales, setting a fixed budget per person, or giving something simple but thoughtful (like homemade treats or a small experience) keeps costs under control.

When you spread those savings across the year, the impact is bigger than it seems.

Potential monthly savings (averaged): $20–$100

How Much Can You Save in Total?

When you put all these swaps together, the numbers start to look pretty decent. The key is that you’re not relying on one big change you’re stacking small savings across different areas of your life.

If You Only Do the Basics

If you stick to the easiest changes like cooking at home a few more times a week, switching to store brands, cutting one or two subscriptions, and packing lunch occasionally you’ll already notice a difference. These are low-effort swaps that don’t really change your lifestyle, but they quietly reduce everyday spending.

With just these basics, you’re realistically looking at saving around $250–$500 per month, which adds up to $3,000–$6,000 per year. That’s a decent cushion without feeling like you’re sacrificing much.

If You’re Somewhat Consistent

Once you start layering in a few more habits like meal planning, cutting impulse purchases, being more mindful with energy use, and shopping smarter you move into a more intentional way of spending. You’re not restricting yourself, just being more aware of where your money goes.

At this level, monthly savings can reach $500–$900, or about $6,000–$10,800 per year. This is where most people land when they start taking saving seriously but still want flexibility in their lifestyle.

If You Go All-In

If you apply most of the swaps consistently rarely eating out, keeping subscriptions minimal, avoiding waste, and thinking through purchases you eliminate most of the common money leaks. You’re still living comfortably, just without unnecessary spending.

In this case, savings can climb to around $900–$1,500 per month, which is $10,800–$18,000 per year. That’s a significant shift, and it can completely change how your finances feel month to month.

What This Looks Like in Real Life

For most people, the sweet spot sits somewhere in the middle. You don’t need to do everything to see results. Even a mix of simple and moderate changes can realistically save $400–$800 per month without making life feel restrictive.

That kind of money can cover a vacation, build an emergency fund quickly, or just take pressure off your budget. The biggest difference comes from consistency, not perfection – once you plug the small leaks, the savings start to build on their own.

Hillhouse-backed Ascentium buys Dezan Shira, hopes to tap inward, outbound China investment



Ascentium, an Asia-based business services platform backed by Hillhouse Investment, is acquiring Dezan Shira & Associates, a 33-year-old advisory firm best known for its Asia Briefing intelligence platform. The deal is Ascentium’s most recent in more than a dozen acquisitions, plugging a gap in the company’s mainland China coverage while deepening its footprint in hot Southeast Asian growth markets. 

“We did not have a meaningful capability to service multinational corporations that wanted to go into mainland China,” Lennard Yong, Ascentium’s co-founder and CEO, tells Fortune. The acquisition adds new offices in mainland Chinese cities like Guangzhou and Tianjin, and pairs Ascentium’s outbound expertise with Dezan Shira’s inbound knowledge.

Chinese outward investment reached $174 billion last year, a 7% increase. A 2025 report from McKinsey notes that China is now a net investor overseas, partly due to decreased inward flows from the U.S. and Europe, but also because Chinese firms are racing to diversify supply chains and chase consumers in emerging markets. “Ascentium has the capability to bring Chinese companies out globally,” Yong explains.

China’s exports to ASEAN jumped 13.4% last year; exports to Vietnam alone surged more than 22%. Exports to the U.S., by contrast, plunged 20%, due to U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff regime.

Alberto Vettoretti, a managing partner at Dezan Shira who joined the firm in the late 1990s, has noticed the shift in where his customers are coming from. Five years ago, most of his customers were American or European. “Now, one-third of our customers in Vietnam are Chinese,” he says. “The switch in nationalities has been quite large.” 

Vietnam in particular is benefiting from greater inward investment from China and other economies. The Southeast Asian country grew by 8.0% last year, with manufacturing expanding by almost 10%; the country’s stock market is set for a FTSE upgrade to emerging market status later this year. The Dezan Shira deal will double Ascentium’s capacity in the country.

“When you talk to people in Vietnam, they’re all very hungry,” Vettoretti says. “You see a lot of young entrepreneurs coming up through the ranks.”

The roll-up logic

Yong, a chartered accountant who previously spent five years as group CEO of Tricor, founded Ascentium in 2024 with his cofounder Wendy Wang. The platform now provides finance and accounting, payroll, HR, and cross-border services (among others) across 46 cities in 27 markets, in a footprint stitched together from several acquisitions across the region, including InCorp Global and Links International. (Ascentium is a clear example of a roll-up strategy, popular among private equity, where a company will acquire other firms to rapidly build capability and scale.)

Dezan Shira & Associates, founded in Hong Kong in 1992, spans 27 offices across the region. “We coveted the business they built with sweat and tears over three decades, and they’ve mastered the art of knowing how to set up businesses onshore in China.”

Yong notes that, eventually, the Dezan Shira brand will be folded into Ascentium, though he says the migration will be “controlled.” 

“We are not in the fast-moving consumer goods space,” Yong says. “It makes more sense for our clients to have a singular brand.”

Broadly, Yong hopes that Ascentium, as an Asia-focused company, will be well placed to capture Asian growth. “The world has evolved from a unipolar world to a multipolar world,” he says. “There are companies in Saudi Arabia, in the UAE, in Singapore, in Hong Kong, in Shanghai that are no longer reliant on North American and European trade flows.”

“We choose to be anchored in Asia because we want our CEOs to be very close to the Fortune 500 firms of tomorrow,” Yong adds.

Bank of Canada adds Gosselin, Vincent to full-time rate-setting council




The Bank of Canada has selected two new deputies for full-time positions on its rate-setting governing council.

Chord Music-linked ABS vehicle plans $500M deal, backed by $830M catalog led by Suicideboys, Morgan Wallen, and Ryan Tedder rights


A new issuing vehicle linked to Universal Music Group-backed investment platform Chord Music Partners is set to raise $500 million in debt through an Asset-Backed Securitization (ABS) transaction.

That’s according to a pre-sale report published by Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA) on April 16, which assigns a preliminary A (sf) rating to the $500 million Series 2026-1 Notes to be issued by Canon Music Issuer Trust. 

Canon is a newly established vehicle that sits beneath the broader Chord platform, with its collateral pool representing a specific portion of Chord’s assets.

The notes are collateralized by royalties from a catalog of more than 3,750 works from artists and songwriters, including Suicideboys, Morgan Wallen, Ryan Tedder, Diplo, and Twenty One Pilots.

As of February 2024, Chord’s overall portfolio spanned more than 60,000 copyrights. That figure will have grown since, with MBW revealing in August 2025 that Chord was raising more than $2 billion in additional capital for further catalog acquisitions.

Chord is controlled by Dundee Partners, the investment office of the Hendel family, with UMG holding a minority stake.

An independent valuation prepared by Virtu Global Advisors has valued the Canon Music collateral pool at $830 million as of September 30, 2025, using a discounted cash flow method with an 8.00% discount rate. KBRA notes that the valuation “developed long-term projections for the Catalog over a projection period of approximately 40 years.”

According to KBRA’s report, the single largest sub-catalog within the Canon Music Issuer Trust collateral pool is G59 Records – the independent label co-founded by the New Orleans rap duo Suicideboys – which contributed 23.3% of the catalog’s net royalty income in the twelve months to June 2025.

The KBRA report does not specify when or how Chord acquired an interest in the G59 catalog, nor the scope of that interest – whether it covers master recordings, publishing rights, or both; whether the interest is a full acquisition or a stake; or whether the arrangement is structured as a direct buyout or a joint venture.

In March 2025, Billboard first reported that Suicideboys (aka cousins Scrim and Ruby da Cherry) were shopping both their master recordings and publishing rights via Tim Mandelbaum of law firm Fox Rothschild, with the masters alone touted at over USD $300 million.

At the time, MBW reported that Sherrese Clarke Soares’s HarbourView was the rumored frontrunner for the publishing rights. No buyer has been publicly announced since.

Chord Music Partners declined to comment.

Publishing rights account for approximately 34% of the Canon Music catalog’s net royalty income in the twelve months to June 2025, with sound recording rights making up the remaining 66%.

After G59, Morgan Wallen follows at 15.8% of Canon catalog’s trailing-twelve-month net royalties, with Ryan Tedder at 15.3%, Diplo at 9.6%, and Twenty One Pilots at 3.8%.

Taken together, G59 Records, Morgan Wallen and Ryan Tedder account for 54.4% of the catalog’s net royalty income over that period. Based on the Valuation Agent’s sub-catalog valuations, the top three sub-catalogs (Ryan Tedder, G59 and Morgan Wallen) account for 51.7% of the overall catalog value before uplifts, recaptures and third-party royalty reductions.

The weighted average age of the Canon catalog is approximately 10 years, with 46% of content released more than 10 years ago and 74% released more than five years ago.

The Series 2026-1 Notes represent the first issuance from Canon Music Issuer Trust, and the second ABS deal linked to Chord’s broader catalog.

Chord’s first securitization was issued in February 2022 through a separate vehicle, Hi-Fi Music IP Issuer, while Chord was majority-owned by KKR.

The new issuance comes two years after UMG’s $240 million acquisition of a 25.8% stake in the platform from KKR, which valued Chord at $1.85 billion.

Chord was originally established in 2021 by KKR and Dundee Partners to acquire a $1.1 billion portfolio of copyrights from a Kobalt fund. KKR exited the business in March 2024 via the UMG/Dundee buyout.

In August 2025, MBW exclusively reported that Chord was raising more than $2 billion in investable capital, with another $1 billion-plus on the way. New investors confirmed at the time included Searchlight Capital Partners, which contributed $400 million in equity.

As reported by MBW at the time, Chord had been ‘deliberately quiet’ in terms of announcing deals over the past year, sources told MBW, but some nine-figure agreements leaked in the meantime, including a Morgan Wallen acquisition reported in May 2025.

That deal saw Big Loud, the Nashville-based record label home to the country superstar, sell a minority stake in Wallen’s master recording catalog to Chord for north of USD $200 million, according to MBW’s sources, although financial details were not officially disclosed.

According to the pre-sale report, the Morgan Wallen sub-catalog – the second-largest in the Canon Music Issuer Trust collateral pool at 15.8% of the catalog’s trailing-twelve-month net royalties – sits within a notable structural carve-out.

Rather than owning the Wallen rights directly, the Issuer will hold a 24.5% limited partner interest in a partnership that owns the Wallen sub-catalog through a subsidiary. That partnership is a joint venture between Chord and Wallen’s record label, Big Loud – a structure that reflects Chord’s acquisition of a minority stake in Wallen’s masters from Big Loud in May 2025.


The Canon Music deal arrives in the middle of a busy cycle for music-rights ABS.

In July 2025, Concord closed a $1.765 billion ABS that it billed as “the largest and longest tenured asset-backed term securitization of music rights to date.”

Other recent issuers include Blackstone-owned Recognition Music Group (formerly Hipgnosis), Kobalt, HarbourView, Influence Media Partners, and Seeker Music Group.

The manager of the Canon Music transaction will be Universal Music Investments Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of UMG. Redding Ridge Asset Management LLC – an Apollo affiliate that has structured multiple music ABS deals, including Concord’s – will serve as backup manager, with The Bank of New York Mellon acting as trustee and calculation agent.

The notes carry an advance rate of 60.2% against the catalog value, providing 39.8% overcollateralization, with an Anticipated Repayment Date of May 2031 and a final maturity date of May 2076.

Music Business Worldwide

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