The Major League Soccer champion just taught a masterclass that can benefit leaders in every industry.
The Major League Soccer champion just taught a masterclass that can benefit leaders in every industry.
Finastra is looking to help its bank clients streamline their mortgage lending processes with AI with multiple lending solutions. The London-based fintech has launched multiple AI-driven solutions including Loan IQ and LaserPro and is seeing banks gain efficiencies with its offerings, Andrew Bateman, executive vice president at Finastra’s lending business unit, told FinAi News. Loan IQ helps banks track their existing loans; LaserPro allows financial institutions to manage documentation and compliance on one platform, Bateman explained. “To understand the impact, you need to look at loan closure rates and the time […]
Actor Natasha Lyonne may not come from the tech world, but her production company is emerging as a trailblazer in bringing AI content to the big screen—and she has thoughts about the tech’s increasing influence.
Lyonne, who is most well-known for an on-screen roles in Netflix’s “Russian Doll” and “Orange is the New Black,” is also a writer, director, and the cofounder of Asteria Film Co., an artist-led animation and film studio that aims to provide high-quality and copyright friendly generative AI for marquee content.
Other AI video-generation models like OpenAI’s Sora 2 and Google’s Veo 3 have run into controversy for scraping the web and sometimes clashing with copyright rules. Asteria, which Lyonne co-founded in 2022, is taking a different approach.
Asteria partnered with Moonvalley AI, which makes AI tools for filmmakers, to create Marey, named after cinematographer Étienne-Jules Marey. The tool helps generate AI video that can be used for movies and TV, but only draws on open-license content or material it has explicit permission to use.
Being careful about the inputs for Asteria’s AI video generation is important, Lyonne said at the Fortune Brainstorm AI conference in San Francisco last week. As AI use increases, both tech and Hollywood need to respect the work of the cast, as well as the crew and the writers behind the scenes.
“I don’t think it’s super kosher copacetic to just kind of rob freely under the auspices of acceleration or China,” she said.
While she hasn’t yet used AI to help make a TV show or movie, Lyonne said Asteria has used it in other small ways to develop renderings and other details.
“It’s a pretty revolutionary act that we actually do have that model and that’s you know the basis for everything that we work on,” said Lyonne.
Marey is available to the public for a credits-based subscription starting at $14.99 per month.
While her production company aims to lead the AI charge in Hollywood, Lyonne said it’s important to remember the human aspect of tech. With so many countless possibilities for AI’s uses, she noted it can at least be used to make human lives better, and not purely for “cutting costs.”
“We need human beings in AI so that the tools don’t run us,” she said.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Equifax (NYSE: EFX) secured 27 patents in the second half of 2025, bringing the total number of patents secured for the year to 62. Twenty of these patents support the company’s approach to artificial intelligence, complementing its EFX.AI strategy and “helping to accelerate the development of cloud-based, AI-enabled solutions that help to create financial opportunities for consumers.”
As of Nov 2025, Equifax has nearly “700 issued or pending patents spanning 15 countries, encompassing distinctive techniques to accelerate the use of AI, including machine learning for data & analytics and risk modeling.”
Over 320 of the organization’s pending and approved patents reportedly support its approach “to responsible AI, with many of these patented AI techniques used in customer-facing solutions.”
The custom-built Equifax Cloud is a technology and security infrastructure that continues to set the company apart in the industry.
Backed by approximately $3 billion investment in security and technology, The Equifax Cloud and custom data fabric “enable the organization to drive AI innovation and maximize EFX.AI capabilities for faster solution implementation, new product innovation, cloud-native model deployment and expedited consumer decisioning.”
The latest technology and innovation covered by the most recent Equifax patents include:
At Equifax, they believe knowledge drives progress.
As a global data, analytics, and technology company, they play an essential role in the global economy by “helping FIs, companies, employers, and government agencies make critical decisions.”
Their blend of data, analytics, and cloud tech “drives insights to power decisions to move people forward.”
Headquartered in Atlanta and supported by employees worldwide, Equifax operates or has investments in “countries in North America, Central and South America, Europe, and the Asia Pacific region.”
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Advertising Disclosure: When you buy something by clicking links within this article, we may earn a small commission, but it never affects the products or services we recommend. If you’ve visited a thrift shop or estate sale lately, you’ve probably noticed a few shoppers who look less like casual browsers and more like focused workers. These folks are probably professional resellers or…
The Justice Department released thousands of files Friday about convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, but the incomplete document dump did not break significant ground about the long-running criminal investigations of the financier or his ties to wealthy and powerful individuals.
The files included photographs of famous people who spent time with Epstein in the years before he came under suspicion, including some candid snapshots of Bill Clinton, who flew on Epstein’s jet and invited him to the White House in the years before the financier was accused of wrongdoing. But there was almost no material related to another old Epstein friend, President Donald Trump, aside from a few well-known images, sparing the White House from having to confront fresh questions about a relationship the administration has tried in vain to minimize.
The records, consisting largely of pictures but also including call logs, grand jury testimony, interview transcripts and other documents, arrived amid extraordinary anticipation that they might offer the most detailed look yet at nearly two decades worth of government scrutiny of Epstein’s sexual abuse of young women and underage girls. Yet the release, replete with redactions, seemed unlikely to satisfy the clamor for information given how many records had yet to be released and because some of the materials had already been made public.
Democrats and some Republicans seized on the limited release to accuse the Justice Department of failing to meet a congressionally set deadline to produce the files, while White House officials on social media gleefully promoted a photo of Clinton in a hot tub with a woman with a blacked-out face. The Trump administration touted the release as proof of its commitment to transparency, ignoring that the Justice Department just months ago said no more files would be released. Congress then passed a law mandating it.
In a letter to Congress, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche wrote that the Justice Department was continuing to review files in its possession, was withholding some documents under exemptions meant to protect victims and expected additional disclosures by the end of the year.
Trump, who was friends with Epstein for years before the two had a falling-out, tried for months to keep the records sealed.
But bowing to political pressure from fellow Republicans, Trump last month signed a bill giving the Justice Department 30 days to release most of its files and communications related to Epstein, including information about the investigation into his death in a federal jail. The law set a deadline for Friday.
Trump is hardly glimpsed in the files, with the small number of photos of him appearing to have been in the public domain for decades. Those include two in which Trump and Epstein are posing with now-first lady Melania Trump in February 2000 at an event at his Mar-a-Lago resort.
Trump’s connection to Epstein is well-documented, but he has sought to distance himself from his former friend. He has said he cut off ties with Epstein after the financier hired young female employees from Mar-a-Lago and has repeatedly denied knowledge of his crimes.
The FBI and Justice Department abruptly announced in July that they would not be releasing any additional records, a decision that was supported by Trump. But the president reversed course once it became clear that congressional action was inevitable. He insisted the Epstein matter had become a distraction to the Republican agenda and releasing the records was the best way to move on.
The White House, meanwhile, has moved to shift focus away from Trump’s ties to Epstein, with Attorney General Pam Bondi last month saying that she had ordered a federal prosecutor to investigate Epstein’s connections to Trump’s political foes, including Clinton.
Neither Trump nor Clinton has ever been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, and the mere inclusion of someone’s name in the files from the investigation does not imply otherwise.
Among other prominent Epstein contacts is the former Prince Andrew, who appears in a photograph released Friday wearing a tuxedo and lying on the laps of what appear to be several women who are seated, dressed in formalwear. Pop star Michael Jackson also appears in multiple photos, including one showing him standing next to a smiling Epstein.
Unlike Trump, Clinton is featured prominently in the files, though the records included no explanation of how the photographs of the former president related to any investigation or the context surrounding them.
Some photos showed him on a private plane, including one with a woman, whose face is redacted, seated alongside him with her arm around him. Another shows him in a pool with Epstein’s longtime confidant, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, and a person whose face was also redacted. He is also seen in a hot tub with a woman whose face was redacted.
Senior Trump White House aides took to X to promote the Clinton photos.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote “Oh my!” and added a shocked face emoji in response to a photo of Clinton in the hot tub.
“They can release as many grainy 20-plus-year-old photos as they want, but this isn’t about Bill Clinton,” Clinton spokesman Angel Ureña said in a statement.
“There are two types of people here,” he said. “The first group knew nothing and cut Epstein off before his crimes came to light. The second group continued relationships after that. We’re in the first. No amount of stalling by people in the second group will change that.”
After nearly two decades of court action, a voluminous number of Epstein records had already been public before Friday, including flight logs, address books, email correspondence, police reports, grand jury records, courtroom testimony and deposition transcripts.
Besides public curiosity about whether any of Epstein’s associates knew about or participated in the abuse, Epstein’s accusers have also sought answers about why federal authorities shut down their initial investigation into the allegations in 2008.
“Just put out the files,” said Marina Lacerda, who says she survived sexual assault by Epstein. “And stop redacting names that don’t need to be redacted.”
One of the few revelations in the documents was a copy of the earliest known concern about Epstein’s behavior — a report taken by the FBI of a woman in 1996 who believed photos and negatives she had taken of her 12-year-old and 16-year-old sisters for a personal art project had been stolen by Epstein. The documents don’t show what, if anything, the agency did with that complaint.
Police in Palm Beach, Florida, began investigating Epstein in 2005 after the family of a 14-year-old girl reported being molested at his mansion. The FBI joined the investigation. Authorities gathered testimony from multiple underage girls who said they’d been hired to give Epstein sexual massages.
Ultimately, prosecutors gave Epstein a deal that allowed him to avoid federal prosecution. He pleaded guilty to state prostitution charges involving someone under age 18 and was sentenced to 18 months in jail.
Epstein’s accusers spent years in civil litigation trying to get that plea deal set aside. One of those women, Virginia Giuffre, accused Epstein of arranging for her to have sexual encounters, starting at age 17, with other men, including billionaires, famous academics, politicians and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, then known as Britain’s Prince Andrew.
Mountbatten-Windsor denied ever having sex with Giuffre, but King Charles III stripped him of his royal titles this year.
Prosecutors never brought charges in connection with Giuffre’s claims, but her account fueled conspiracy theories about supposed government plots to protect the powerful. Giuffre died by suicide in April.
Federal prosecutors in New York brought new sex trafficking charges against Epstein in 2019, but he killed himself in jail after his arrest. Prosecutors then charged Maxwell, his longtime confidant, with recruiting underage girls for Epstein to abuse. She was convicted in 2021 and is serving a 20-year prison sentence.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Red Rocks Credit Union teamed up with Interface.ai to develop an AI agent for the credit union’s call center. Since the launch of Roxie, the credit union’s AI agent, just over two weeks ago, the agent has handled 10% of customer calls end-to-end, Chief Executive Darius Wise told FinAi News. Although Roxie is handling call volume, the $330 million, Denver-based credit union does […]
Peter Idziak (pictured top), a senior associate and mortgage attorney at Polunsky Beitel Green, said some of those states have even begun passing laws that would have been largely unnecessary with the CFPB still in place.
“I definitely think just in the industry as a whole, as we’ve seen the CFPB step back from both supervision and enforcement, that you’ve seen states step up, and that’s occurred in a couple of different ways,” Idziak told Mortgage Professional America. “One, you’ve seen more active state regulators and state AGs either enforcing existing state laws or federal consumer protection laws, because they are able to enforce a lot of those under Dodd-Frank.
“You’ve also seen states themselves start passing legislation in areas that maybe in the past, they were a little less interested in, because there was a feeling that you had a federal regulator that was enforcing a federal standard.”
When federal regulators were enforcing a federal standard, if there were any questions at the state level, they would just pick up the phone and call the CFPB. Idziak said he’s heard that’s no longer an option.
“In the past, and I’ve heard this from more than one regulator, if they’re looking to a federal rule, like a CFPB rule, they’ll call up the CFPB and ask them how they interpret it,” Idziak said. “And one regulator told me, ‘It’s their role. I’m going to follow their interpretation.’ But if there’s no one to call anymore, this is where you get regulators, because the CFPB isn’t responding, now they feel they have more freedom. They’re creating or interpreting rules in their own way.”
This article is presented by Express Capital Financing
Before I bought my first property, I thought understanding a “market” meant understanding a city. If Phoenix was booming, I assumed the whole metro was booming. If Cleveland cash flowed, I figured anywhere within 20 minutes of downtown must be a good deal. And if Nashville was full of cranes and construction, then every submarket had to be a winner.
It took precisely one disappointing deal for me to realize how far off that thinking was.
Real estate does not behave like one big organism, moving in one direction at once. It doesn’t reward every neighborhood equally. And it absolutely does not care what city-level headlines say. Once you really start studying successful investors (or the lenders who fund them), you begin to see that the difference between a profitable deal and a painful one is often just a few streets, a school boundary, or a subtle shift in local demand.
What seasoned investors understand, and what most beginners miss, is that real estate is hyperlocal. Not just neighborhood-by-neighborhood, but often block-by-block. And once you see how local the game truly is, you finally understand why the same city can produce both incredible deals and terrible ones at the same time.
I’ve spoken with thousands of investors over the years and watched them learn this lesson in different ways. Some discover it when they find out their flip sat on the market 87 days while an identical house one mile over sold in a bidding war. Others learn it when a rental that looked great on a spreadsheet ends up in a pocket with high turnover and weak tenant wages. And still others figure it out the easy way, usually because a lender, like the team at Express Capital Financing, stepped in and explained what the numbers were really saying.
The pattern is always the same: Investors don’t fail because they chose the wrong strategy. They fail because they used the right approach in the wrong market.
Years ago, I watched two investors buy similar single-family homes in the same metro, only six miles apart. Both were fixers, needed about $40,000 in work, and were purchased the same month.
Investor A bought in an emerging neighborhood where renovated homes were selling in under 10 days. Families were moving in, retail was expanding, crime was trending down, and local school ratings had improved for three consecutive years. Investor A’s flip sold above asking within 72 hours.
Investor B bought in a pocket that looked similar on paper, but the retail buyers weren’t actually moving into that specific corridor. It was wedged between two major roads, the schools were struggling, and renovated homes simply didn’t command much of a premium. The flip sat on the market for nearly three months—and eventually sold at a loss.
Same city, renovation, contractor, and timeline—entirely different outcomes.
That was the moment I stopped thinking about “cities” and started thinking about “micro-markets.”
Every area falls into one of three general personalities. Knowing which one you’re operating in determines everything: your financing, renovation style, hold period, exit strategy, and even your risk tolerance.
These are the high-growth areas fueled by corporate relocations, population booms, and steady economic expansion. Cities like Denver, Nashville, Austin, Raleigh, and Salt Lake City live in this category. Prices tend to climb faster than rents, inventory stays tight, and competition is fierce.
These markets reward patience and value-add projects. You don’t buy for cash flow here; you buy for equity, long-term appreciation, and the ability to force value through renovation. But you also have to be a disciplined underwriter, because mistakes get expensive fast.
These are the reliable, steady, cash-on-cash performers. Think the Midwest, Rust Belt, and many Southern metros. You can still buy under $150,000, cash flow from day one, and find motivated sellers and wide spreads.
These markets reward long-term buy-and-hold investors who understand tenant profiles, wage growth, and the real cost of maintaining older homes. Appreciation exists, but it’s typically slow and predictable rather than dramatic.
These are the sweet-spot cities where investors get both cash flow and appreciation: Tampa, Charlotte, Greenville, Oklahoma City, and parts of Phoenix. They aren’t as volatile as high-flying appreciation markets, but they still offer long-term upside and decent cash flow.
Hybrids are some of the best places to BRRRR because deals still exist, demand is steady, and rental growth continues year after year. Investors who understand construction costs and market ceilings do incredibly well here.
If you want to understand a market the way experienced lenders do, you have to stop looking at big data and start focusing on clues.
Nothing communicates demand more clearly than DOM. A neighborhood where homes go under contract in two weeks behaves differently from one where houses sit for 90 days.
In some pockets, you can buy an unrenovated house for $190,000 and sell a renovated one for $220,000. That’s barely enough spread to justify the work.
In others, you can buy an outdated home at $160,000 and sell a renovated home at $280,000. That’s where serious flips happen.
Strong rental corridors often fall below 16 on this ratio. Appreciation corridors typically sit above 20. Hybrid markets bounce in the middle.
A single school rating change can swing ARV by $50,000-$150,000. This is one of the most consistent patterns lenders see.
Not crime citywide; crime within a three-street radius. Investors, ignore this at your own risk.
Your spreadsheet does not determine your rent; it’s defined by what your tenants earn. If your ideal rent is 30% higher than what the median wage supports, the numbers will not play out the way you want.
Real estate markets are fluid. Interest rates rise, population trends shift, inventory swings back and forth, and buyer psychology changes unexpectedly.
Smart investors adapt, like so:
The most experienced investors follow a predictable pattern when evaluating a new market:
And remember, you’ll lose if you:
But when the strategy and market align, you unlock the real power of real estate: repeatable, scalable, durable returns.
Here’s something most new investors don’t realize: Your lender sees more deals than your agent, contractor, mentor, and spreadsheet combined. They see which ARVs hold, which collapse, which overpay, which deals fail inspection, which neighborhoods produce strong exits, and which consistently burn new investors.
Express Capital Financing works with these patterns daily. They know how to structure financing that reflects real neighborhood behavior, not theory. They know how to help an investor avoid paying too much for a flip, or borrowing too little for a BRRRR, or walking straight into a market mismatch they could’ve avoided.
I’ve heard countless stories where investors avoided massive losses simply because a lender pointed out a weak comp or an inflated ARV ceiling. Sometimes the deal that falls through is the one that saves you.
You don’t need to understand every market in America, follow national headlines, or chase trends across states. What you need is a deep understanding of the small piece of ground you’re investing in. Because when you understand your market at the neighborhood level, everything becomes clearer:
Most investors fail not because real estate is risky, but because they never actually learned how to read the market.
Once you do, you’re playing a completely different game. And when you’re ready to fund the deal the right way, Express Capital Financing is prepared to help.