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Where’s the June Student Loan Status Report? The Settlement Only Required Six


Borrowers and advocates watching the American Federation of Teachers v. U.S. Department of Education docket may be wondering where June’s student loan status report is. The answer: there isn’t one, and there was never supposed to be.

The monthly status reports became one of the few public windows into how fast the Department of Education was processing income-driven repayment (IDR) applications and Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) buybacks.

With the court-agreed upon requirement now satisfied, that window may close — at least until a federal judge decides whether it should stay open.

Catch-Up

Under the October 23, 2025 order (PDF File), the Department agreed to file exactly six status reports. The first was due 30 days after the federal government’s appropriations lapse ended, with each subsequent report due every 30 days after that.

That schedule produced six filings, dated December 15, January 14, February 13, March 16, April 15, and May 13 (with a supplemental follow-up May 19). The sixth report on May 13 was the last one the settlement required.

No June report was missed, because none was owed.

What The Reports Covered

Each report had to disclose, for the prior calendar month:

  • IDR applications received, pending, and decided (with approvals and denials where possible)
  • The number of borrowers whose loans were discharged under IBR, Original ICR, or PAYE
  • PSLF buyback applications received, pending, and decided
  • The number of borrowers discharged through PSLF.

The first report also had to explain how the Department identified borrowers eligible for IDR discharge and how many IBR applicants were denied after July 4, 2025, for lacking a “partial financial hardship.”

The reports have been a key source of information for borrowers to understand how quickly IDR applications and PSLF buyback applications were processing.

What’s Next

The same order says that after the sixth report, the parties “shall confer about the need for further reporting” and, if necessary, tell the court where they stand. That sets up the next hearing on July 8, when the judge can decide whether the Department keeps filing these monthly disclosures or the reporting obligation ends for good.

How This Connects

These filings were the source for some of the starkest data on the student loan backlog.

The Department’s own reports showed IDR applications pending in the hundreds of thousands (roughly 530,295 still waiting as of May 2026) and described how it is processing time-based forgiveness in every-other-month increments.

The timing matters for the millions of borrowers caught in the SAVE plan limbo and those weighing a move to IBR, PAYE, or the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) taking effect in July 2026. If the July 8 hearing ends the reporting requirement, borrowers and watchdogs may lose their clearest month-to-month read on whether the backlog is actually shrinking.

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The post Where’s the June Student Loan Status Report? The Settlement Only Required Six appeared first on The College Investor.

SpaceX Has Successfully Completed Its IPO. Here Are All of the Key Dates Investors Should Be Aware of Over the Next 180 Days.


After all of the hype, speculation, and doubts, Space Exploration Technologies Corp (SPCX 5.22%) has officially completed its initial public offering. The company raised nearly $86 billion after underwriters on the deal exercised the greenshoe, allowing them to purchase additional shares from the company.

SpaceX had surpassed a $2.5 trillion market cap (as of June 15). The IPO is the largest in history and closed the book on the many naysayers who wondered if the company could raise so much money at an initial valuation of $1.77 trillion.

Still, this is only the beginning of what’s likely to be a very closely watched public company, given its space-related businesses and its already high market cap of over $2 trillion. Investors will want to keep a close eye on this one. Here are all of the key dates to watch over the next 180 days.

Image source: Getty Images.

SpaceX will soon join many market indexes

One appealing feature of the SpaceX IPO is that it will soon be added to many major market indexes, which have added fast entry provisions and removed eligibility requirements to enable SpaceX’s inclusion.

When an index adds a new stock, every index fund and exchange-traded fund (ETF) must also buy the stock, creating demand.

Aside from the broader benchmark S&P 500, which SpaceX won’t be able to join for a year, the stock is expected to be added to most major U.S. market indexes within its first three weeks of trading, according to Jacob Friedman of Focused Wealth Management.

But even before this, options and leveraged ETFs for SpaceX are expected to begin on June 16. Options allow investors to make bets on what SpaceX’s price will be on a given date in the future, giving them the right, but not the obligation, to buy the stock at that time.

Options add liquidity to a stock and, therefore, can narrow its bid-ask spread. Levered ETFs are ways to increase your exposure to a stock, so gains or losses are exaggerated, depending on how a stock moves. These are incredibly volatile and are only recommended for the most sophisticated of investors.

While it’s a bit of a moving target, here are the dates SpaceX is expected to join many of the major indexes:

  • June 18: Inclusion into the CRSP U.S. Large Cap Index and S&P Total Market index.
  • June 26: Inclusion in the Russell and MSCI indexes.
  • July 6: Inclusion into the Nasdaq-100.

The expiration of lock-up provisions

While inclusion in various indexes is a positive for the stock because it drives forced buying and thereby heightened demand, the expiration of lock-up provisions will be a negative for the stock because it leads to more shares flooding the market.

Lock-up provisions dictate when company insiders and employees who have held company stock can sell their shares. SpaceX has a unique, staggered approach.

The first key date for the lock-up expirations will be shortly after SpaceX releases its second-quarter earnings results for the three months ended June 30. An exact date has not been set, but the results are expected to be released around late July or early August, according to Morningstar.

Eligible insiders will be able to sell 20% of their shares on or after the second full trading day following the release of the results. If the stock trades above $175.50 (30% above the IPO price), insiders can sell an additional 10% of their shares.

Insiders will also be able to sell an additional 7% of their shares on or after the following dates:

  • Aug. 21 (70 days after IPO)
  • Sept. 10 (90 days after IPO)
  • Sept. 25 (105 days after IPO)
  • Oct. 10 (120 days after IPO)
  • Oct. 25 (135 days after IPO)

All remaining insider shares can be sold 180 days after the IPO, which is scheduled for Dec. 9.

It is all these inclusion and lock-up expiration dates that make the SpaceX IPO so tricky, as they create artificial demand and excess supply. Perhaps they balance one another out somewhat, but I still think it will be difficult to get a true idea of how the market really values the company until after all of these events occur.

That’s why investors might be best served by waiting until after the first 180 days have gone by before deciding whether to purchase the stock.

‘A Funeral Home Atmosphere’: The Company Behind Johnnie Walker and Don Julio Is Suddenly Bracing for Major Layoffs



Following a sharp slump in global spirits consumption, the company’s CEO has ordered a reduction in headcount.

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Housing market shows resilience as sales beat forecasts


The housing market continues to balance out, as home prices grew modestly, inventory increased and home sales exceeded expectations in May, a new industry report found.

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The national median home sale price hit $395,000 last month, a 1.8% rise from May 2025, according to Homes.com’s latest monthly housing market report. Active listings also reached 1.4 million homes, up 4.3% year over year, while sales fell 1.2% annually.

“Although home sales remained below their level from a year earlier, activity in May was firmer than anticipated following earlier increases in mortgage rates,” said Brad Case, Homes.com chief residential economist, in a press release Wednesday. “Given those headwinds, the month’s sales performance suggested that demand remained relatively steady.”

Mortgage rates have been up and down this spring. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage increased for five consecutive weeks to begin March, followed by a 30-basis-point rise from April to the end of May. The 30-year rate has since hovered around 6.5%.

Despite this, about 335,000 homes were sold in May, with year-over-year changes varying slightly across property types. Single-family sales dropped 1%, while condo sales saw a 4% decline and townhome sales decreased 0.2%. Single-family homes also accounted for the most transactions at 277,160, compared to 25,754 townhome and 32,148 condo sales, according to the report.

Single-family homes led the group in price growth as well, jumping 1.5% annually, while condos and townhomes saw 1.1% and 0.3% increases, respectively.

“Steady demand alongside rising home prices suggests the housing market is proving more resilient, even with activity still somewhat subdued compared with historical norms,” Case said.

Home sales fell 3.2% over the past three years, but were up 13.5% over the last five. Similarly, price growth rose 6.8% over the last three years and 49.1% since May 2021.

Regional differences in prices, sales and inventory

Prices increased most in San Francisco, by 9.6%, and relatively affordable Midwest cities, namely Pittsburgh, by 6.9%, St. Louis, by 6.6% and Detroit, by 6.1%. Prices fell most in Texas, Florida and coastal markets, led by San Jose, California, at -5.8%, San Antonio at -3.1% , Orlando, Florida, at -2.1% and Austin, Texas, at -2.1%, the report found.

Inventory grew in 72% of the 933 markets tracked by Homes.com, as Midwest cities like Columbus, Ohio, Pittsburgh and St. Louis made notable gains of 27.6%, 16.7% and 15.7%, respectively. 

Florida and California were home to the five markets with the largest decreases in inventory: Jacksonville, Florida, at -16.9%; San Francisco at -11.3%; Tampa, Florida, at -11.2%; Inland Empire, California, at -10.3%; and Miami at -9.1%. Miami was the only one to also post an annual decline in sale price, according to the report.

Home sales fell in 26 of the 40 largest markets in the United States, including New York at 14.6%, which has seen a decline in sales as of late. In contrast, San Francisco saw sales volume rise 12.2% in May, despite a drop in inventory and spike in prices. San Jose and Columbus experienced sales jump by 8% annually as well, the report found.



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Market Structure Reaches the Boardroom


Market structure is usually treated as a trading-desk issue: where orders go, how wide spreads are, and how much market impact investors face. But new research shows that market structure can also shape decisions in the boardroom.

In a recent Journal of Corporate Financestudy, we find that companies with more off-exchange, or “dark,” trading rely more heavily on stock-based CEO pay. The reason is not that equity becomes cheaper to grant. It is that dark trading can make stock prices more informative, giving boards a better benchmark for evaluating management performance

Analyzing 12,667 firm-years of US public companies from 2007 to 2021, we find that firms with more dark trading allocate roughly 10.6 percentage points more of CEO compensation to stock—a 21% increase relative to the sample average. Over the same period, the share of trading volume executed off-exchange rose from 23% to 28%.

The findings reveal a direct link between where trading occurs and how companies incentivize their executives. Market structure does more than affect transaction costs; it influences the quality of price signals that boards rely on when designing compensation. For investment professionals, that has implications for interpreting pay disclosures, assessing governance quality, and evaluating the potential effects of market structure regulation.

PayPal Mafia member and ex-Sequoia steward Roelof Botha joins SpaceX board—reuniting with Elon Musk after decades



Roelof Botha, longtime investor and former steward at Sequoia Capital, has joined the board of SpaceX, a filing revealed. 

The news comes less than a week after SpaceX’s historic IPO and about seven months after Botha stepped down as Sequoia steward, the legendary venture capital firm’s title for its leader. His tenure coincided with a notably difficult time in the VC firm’s history. Botha, as an investor, famously backed winners like YouTube, Instagram, Block, and MongoDB, among others. 

Botha, who was on the cover of Fortune in 2024, also has a longstanding relationship with Elon Musk—SpaceX founder, Tesla CEO, and world’s richest man by a mile. The two (both originally from South Africa) first worked together in the dotcom era when Botha served as CFO at PayPal, where Musk was a cofounder. Botha and Musk reportedly bumped heads back then, over culture and software, but have continued to work together through the decades: Sequoia is among SpaceX’s key venture backers. 

Fortune spoke with Botha last year in a wide-ranging interview that included him sounding off on Musk. The conversation happened around a time with particular public uproar around Musk’s DOGE efforts. 

“I’ve known Elon for over 25 years,” Botha said at the time. “He was the first person to offer me a job in America. He believed in me when I was an unknown student at Stanford. I have a lot of appreciation and understanding that he’s not perfect. None of us are. He deeply cares about doing the right thing. You may fault some of his actions. Maybe there are unintended consequences. Maybe he hasn’t considered all the ramifications, but the intent is pure.”

Botha declined comment for this article.

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Kevin Warsh’s first Fed meeting: Promises on price stability, but don’t expect forward guidance



In his first appearance as chairman of the Federal Reserve, Kevin Warsh confirmed this afternoon the base rate will hold at its current level of 3.5% to 3.75%.

Taking over the title from Jerome Powell—who stays on at the Fed as a governor—Warsh said: “Economic activity is expanding at a solid pace, despite elevated uncertainty that owes, in part, to the conflict in the Middle East. Productivity growth and capital investment [are] both strong. Job gains have kept pace with the workforce, and the unemployment rate has changed a little.”

On inflation—a political lightning rod at present given pressures around affordability—Warsh was clear: “Persistently high prices are a burden for the American people. But the recent past need not be prologue. I am pleased to report that members of the FOMC are unambiguous and unanimous.

“This committee will deliver price stability.”

The June meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has been one of the most hotly anticipated gatherings at the central bank for many years. Paramount in the furor is the question of Federal Reserve independence: In the final months of Powell’s tenure, President Donald Trump and the White House took unprecedented action (from legal cases against Powell and fellow Governor Lisa Cook, to a barrage of insults, to threats of firing the chairman) in their campaign for lower rates.

Warsh—who secured the president’s nomination amid the onslaught by politicians against the legally mandated independent central bank—is therefore subject to heavy scrutiny as to whether he will prove to be a sock puppet of the Oval Office.

Powell staying on as a governor has only highlighted the issue further, with the embattled former chairman saying he wouldn’t leave the institution until the Department of Justice investigation into his testimony about renovation projects at the Fed had been settled. Powell, now a symbol of Fed autonomy, staying on has been seen by many analysts as a further shield against political intervention.

Warsh, himself a former governor under Chairman Ben Bernanke between 2006 and 2011, is a staunch advocate of Fed independence (in an “Ode” to the central bank, among other statements, he described it as “precious” and necessary), and has denied bowing to any such pressure.

Warsh lightly alluded to such headwinds, opening his press conference by saying: “It’s an honor, a true honor to be back at the Federal Reserve and to take up this duty at a time of such consequence … This week’s FOMC meeting exemplified the very best of the Fed’s traditions, rigorous debate, open-mindedness, commitment to mission, responsibility, and accountability for performance.”

The announcement of a hold is precisely as markets had expected: Ahead of the meeting, CME’s FedWatch barometer was showing a 99.6% chance the Fed funds rate would hold steady. John Canavan, lead analyst at Oxford Economics, wrote in a note to clients hours before the press conference he expected a hold with dovish bias removed from the policy statement.

He added: “It’ll take time for Warsh to make his mark on the institution, but he could announce next week that he’s dropping some of the post-meeting press conferences as part of a less-is-more communication strategy.”

The “back seat Fed” discussed by the likes of Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent presents another question mark hanging over the early days of Warsh’s tenure. The former Morgan Stanley executive has been clear he thinks some elements of forward guidance—such as the dot plot, a chart that records each policymaker’s individual projection for the path of short-term rates—hold the central bank to a predetermined course, rather than allowing it to be reactive.

The dot plot was also released today in the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), with 19 policymakers usually responding anonymously. In the June report, only 18 responses were recorded—Warsh confirmed in his press conference that he had abstained.

The FOMC’s statement was notably slimmed—a fact Warsh highlighted—and on his famed distaste for forward guidance, he added: “As a general proposition, forward guidance isn’t the business we should be in.”

Long-term trajectory

In the run-up to the meeting, the data have not supported the highly requested cut the White House has been so hopeful for. Inflation, heated by conflict in the Middle East, with oil prices spiking as a result, is well ahead of the FOMC’s 2% target. In the latest CPI report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the all items index increased 4.2% before seasonal adjustment.

Turning to the other driving force of the Fed’s mandate—maximum employment—the BLS has average news: The unemployment rate is holding steady at 4.3%—a figure healthy enough not to prompt a cut to drum up economic activity.

But while the short term offers little room to cut, Wall Street knows Warsh has dovish longer-term views. For a start, the president made it clear the person to land the nomination would need to be more open to a lower base rate than the previous incumbent.

Warsh is also bullish on the economy, previously describing AI as the “most productivity-enhancing wave of our lifetimes.” Moreover, some tightening at the long end of the yield curve could open the door for cuts in due course, as could a plan to reduce the Fed’s balance sheet, which may similarly restrict financial conditions.

Glimmers of this optimism could be spied in the FOMC’s statement, issued ahead of Warsh’s press conference. The unanimously agreed-upon release read: “Economic activity is expanding at a solid pace despite elevated uncertainty that owes, in part, to the conflict in the Middle East. Productivity growth and capital investment are strong. Job gains have kept pace with the workforce, and the unemployment rate has changed little.”