Business
Barron Trump SOLLOS yerba mate brand announces pineapple coconut flavor
Check out what’s clicking on FoxBusiness.com.
First son Barron Trump’s new beverage venture has announced its first two flavors ahead of its planned launch, now set for May.
SOLLOS Yerba Mate, headquartered near Mar-a-Lago, revealed the news in a LinkedIn post last week.
“Introducing our 12-pack: Pineapple + Coconut,” the company said. “Launching May 2026.”
The announcement comes after the 19-year-old, the youngest son of President Donald Trump, was listed as a director of the Palm Beach, Florida-based beverage company, according to January SEC filings in Florida and Delaware.
BARRON TRUMP LINKED TO BEVERAGE COMPANY BASED NEAR MAR-A-LAGO

Barron Trump’s new beverage venture has announced its first two flavors ahead of its May launch. (Mike Segar/Reuters / Reuters)
The product will be available for purchase online at sollos.com, the company said.
The company also shared videos showcasing the design of its new beverage packaging ahead of launch.
In one video, light blue cans featuring “SOLLOS” in bold lettering over an orange-and-yellow sun graphic appear to move through a factory during mass production.
Another clip shows packaging for the 12-pack, including a light blue box with yellow graphic accents.
A LOOK AT THE TRUMP FAMILY’S BUSINESS EMPIRE

SOLLOS Yerba Mate launches a 12-pack pineapple and coconut beverage line. (SOLLOS Yerba Mate/LinkedIn / Fox News)
Yerba mate, a caffeinated herbal tea native to South America, has recently gained popularity in the U.S. as an alternative to coffee.
SOLLOS was previously announced as a beverage brand designed to complement life in the “Sunshine State,” with branding centered on the sun.
“SOL,” meaning sun in Spanish, represents sunrise and the beginning of the day, the company said. “LOS,” spelled backwards from “SOL,” represents sunset. The startup emphasized that the name is intended to capture the full cycle of the sun, reflecting the idea that “It Begins Where It Ends.”
HERE’S HOW MUCH TRUMP ACCOUNT BALANCES COULD GROW OVER TIME

Light blue cans, featuring the logo “SOLLOS,” move through a factory line. (SOLLOS Yerba Mate/LinkedIn / Fox News)
According to SEC filings dated Jan. 23, SOLLOS raised $1 million through a private placement and lists at least five partners.
Barron, a student at New York University’s Stern School of Business, along with four others named in the SEC filing, are listed as executive officers and members of the company’s board of directors.
Others involved in the company include Spencer Bernstein, Rudolfo Castello, Stephen Hall and Valentino Gomez, some of whom attended the same high school as Barron.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
Bernstein, a Villanova University student who previously attended Oxbridge Academy in Palm Beach with Trump, was listed as an executive officer.
“I’ve decided to postpone my final semester at Villanova University to focus on something I’ve been building for the past 8 months,” Bernstein previously posted on LinkedIn.
“Since the end of last school year I have been working alongside my co-founder, Stephen Hall, and a few close friends on SOLLOS Yerba Mate, a lifestyle beverage brand built around clean + functional ingredients.”
Hall, now a student at the University of Notre Dame who also attended Oxbridge Academy, was listed as an executive officer and director.
FOX Business’ Sophia Comptom contributed to this report.
Business
Wall St ends mixed as investors parse Iran negotiations
US stocks have closed mixed, with investors pressing pause as they headed into the weekend and kept an eye on ongoing Middle East peace negotiations.
Business
Trump lashes out at Pope Leo over criticism of foreign policy

Trump lashes out at Pope Leo over criticism of foreign policy
Business
Global banks play hedge card after RBI blow on rupee bets
They are understood to have passed off some of the arbitrage deals, which were hit by the recent regulatory directives, as transactions done to hedge the capital received from overseas parents, two persons told ET.
Arbitrage deals are cut to profit from price differences in the local foreign exchange forward market and the offshore market for non-deliverable forwards (NDFs).
Banks were forced to unwind these deals after the Indian regulator slapped a uniform limit of $100 mn on the net open position (NOP) a
bank can have onshore.
However, some MNC banks are showing the capital that has come in earlier or flowed in recently from their head-offices as underliers for the onshore forward leg in the arbitrage deals. Thus, this buy-dollar forward contract with a proper underlier is shown as a transaction to cover the risk arising from a slide in the rupee – and not as any part of an arbitrage deal.
Foreign banks function as branches in India which are part of the global books. The capital coming in as dollars or euros into an MNC bank’s India operations, are converted into rupees to support and grow the business here.
“Technically, this may be a response to the NOP limit. But whether this explanation would stand regulatory scrutiny is unclear as RBI may tend to look into the timeline – when the capital came in, when the forward deals were struck, which of these are now claimed as hedges, how they were accounted for, etc. Also, are there communications between India and the HQ to back the explanation?” said another person.THE NDF DEALS
When the rupee comes under pressure, banks cut arbitrage deals by buying dollar forward in India and selling dollar forward in the NDF market which has been flourishing in London, Singapore, Hong Kong, and New York since the ‘90s when foreign portfolio managers,hedge funds and others explored ways to bet on the USD-INR rate following partial convertibility of the rupee.
Typically, when geopolitical turmoil and sell off by foreign funds pulls down INR, the USD trades a little stronger (and INR quotes a tad weaker) in NDF compared to the onshore market. So, the USD-INR rate is higher in NDF than the forward USDINR rates in India.
MNC and Indian banks cash in on this by buying USD in the onshore forward market, and simultaneously selling USD-INR in the NDF market. Forward contracts with tenures of one to three months are the most liquid.
RBI came down heavily as the banks with their arb deals were providing liquidity to hedge funds and other international speculators who were shorting the INR. When these players shorted INR, they went long on USD and therefore bought USD-INR forward contracts in NDF. Their counterparties were the Indian banks selling USDINR forwards in the NDF – the offshore leg in the two-legged arbitrage deals.
REGULATORY BYPASS
The central bank, which rushed in with restrictions in two phases, had also taken an exception to the practice of corporates in India, who cannot access the NDF, using banks to enter the offshore market. Since USD-INR was slightly higher in NDF, large corporate exporters would sign forward deals with banks in India which did a backto-back deal in the NDF market to offer the companies rates that are very close to the NDF rate – thus, allowing clients to convert more rupees from their export proceeds. This partly shifted liquidity from the onshore to offshore market.
While a forex dealer or a corporate treasurer may find such company-bank-NDF deals kosher, legal practitioners would find them in violation of the central tenet of the Foreign Exchange Management Act: what cannot be done directly, cannot be done indirectly.
Business
IXN: Global Tech Leadership Remains, Eyeing A New Record High
IXN: Global Tech Leadership Remains, Eyeing A New Record High
Business
Karratha FIFO camp holds residential potential
The flexible design of a large modular camp on the outskirts of Karratha could lend itself to townhouse living.
Business
US Foods Holding: A Truly Defensive Winner Of The Trade-Down Economy
US Foods Holding: A Truly Defensive Winner Of The Trade-Down Economy
Business
Australia won’t join Trump’s Strait of Hormuz blockade
Australia has not been asked to help stop ships travelling through the critical Middle East waterway and doesn’t expect to be, the prime minister says.
Business
FIIs cover short bets as markets rebound, but stay wary
The long-short ratio-the proportion of bullish (long) positions to bearish (short)-of foreign portfolio investors’ Nifty futures wagers rose to 22% on Friday, close to the 18-21% range seen in the last week of February before the start of the US-Iran clash on February 28.
The reading had fallen to 9.9% on March 13 and stayed between 10% and 18% for most of the fighting period as these investors had increased the hedges against their portfolios. The ratio had made a lifetime low of 5.98% on September 30, 2025.
ET BureauThe short covering came amid Nifty’s weekly gains of 5.9% until Friday, when it ended at 24,050.6, its highest closing level in a month.
“FIIs had begun covering shorts in the derivatives segment in the past few days, signalling early reversal cues,” said Nilesh Jain, head of technical and derivatives research, Centrum Finverse.. “Friday’s return to buying in the cash market after multiple sessions is a positive development and could support further pullback alongside continued short covering.”
FPIs were buyers to the tune of ₹672 crore in the cash market on Friday, after remaining sellers in all trading sessions in March and April so far. Further cuts in bearish positions will depend on the progress of the US-Iran talks, which began on a sour note over the weekend . “While the long-short ratio has improved due to short covering, we do not see many fresh long additions, suggesting that FIIs remain cautious rather than bullish,” said Siddarth Bhamre, head of institutional research at Asit C Mehta. “Continued selling in cash markets with one day of pause is not a sign of a U-turn in sentiment.” Since end of September 2024, when the downtrend in Indian equities kicked in, the long-short ratio of FPIs’ Nifty futures positions has mostly stayed between 10% and 20%, indicating predominantly bearish bets. Before the slide started, the reading was at 81%.
Somil Mehta, head of retail research at Mirae Asset Sharekhan said the shift in the ratio is yet to show foreigners are back to their bullish ways. “Sustained improvement in their sentiment will depend on stability in global factors like crude oil prices and geopolitical developments,” he said. The progress in companies’ fourth quarter earnings will be one of the factors for foreigners to revisit their stance on Indian equities.
“If earnings remain under pressure, valuations may not be attractive to foreign investors. They are also likely to wait for currency stability in India,” said Bhamre.
Business
Meatpacker JBS reaches tentative agreement with striking Colorado workers

Meatpacker JBS reaches tentative agreement with striking Colorado workers
Business
Muji owner Ryohin Keikaku shares rise on upbeat earnings, guidance hike

Muji owner Ryohin Keikaku shares rise on upbeat earnings, guidance hike
-
Politics2 days agoUS brings back mandatory military draft registration
-
Fashion2 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Veronica Beard
-
Sports2 days agoMan United discover Nico Schlotterbeck transfer fee as defender reaches Dortmund agreement
-
Tech5 days agoHow Long Can You Drive With Expired Registration? What Florida Law Says
-
Politics12 hours agoWorld Cup exit makes Italy enter crisis mode
-
Crypto World4 days agoCanary Capital Files SEC Registration for PEPE ETF
-
Fashion7 days agoMassimo Dutti Offers Inspiration for Your Summer Mood Board
-
Business2 days agoTesla Model Y Tops China Auto Sales in March 2026 With 39,827 Registrations, Beating Cheaper EVs and Gas Cars
-
Fashion5 days agoLet’s Discuss: DEI in 2026
-
Crypto World5 days agoBitcoin recovers as US and Iran Agree a Ceasefire Deal
-
Politics3 days agoMalcolm In The Middle OG Turned Down ‘Buckets Of Money’ To Appear In Reboot
-
NewsBeat4 hours agoPep Guardiola and Gary Neville agree over Arsenal title problem that benefits Man City
-
Business3 days agoOpenAI Halts Stargate UK Data Centre Project Over Energy Costs and Copyright Row
-
Business1 day agoIreland Fuel Protests Enter Day 5 as Blockades Spark Shortages and Government Prepares Support Package
-
Tech7 days agoItalian court says Netflix must refund customers up to $576 over price hikes
-
Tech7 days agoHaier is betting big that your next TV purchase will be one of these
-
Tech7 days agoGamer Restores the Original PlayStation Portal From Two Decades Ago
-
Tech7 days agoThe Xiaomi 17 Ultra has some impressive add-ons that make snapping photos really fun
-
Tech7 days agoSamsung just gave up on its own Messages app
-
Tech7 days agoSave $130 on the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic: rotating bezel, sleep coaching, and running coach for $369

You must be logged in to post a comment Login