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Can Ryan Kavanaugh and Partners Save Hollywood Again?

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In a world where fast fashion once dominated the conversation, there is now a powerful shift happening at the top of the fashion pyramid.

Nobody in Hollywood will say it on the record, but everyone knows: the system is broken. Studios have retreated into franchise bunkers, greenlighting only sequels, prequels, and IP extensions with built-in audiences.

The streamers, who were supposed to be the cavalry, have pivoted hard from growth to profitability — which in practice means fewer shows, smaller orders, and a near-total unwillingness to bet on anything that doesn’t come pre-loaded with data-validated demand. Original storytelling, the kind that built this industry, has been priced out of the conversation.

The numbers are ugly. Hollywood’s share of qualified film and television projects fell from 23 percent in 2021 to 18 percent just two years later. Entertainment industry layoffs topped 17,000 in 2025 alone. Filming activity in Los Angeles cratered — down 40 percent from 2022 levels before dropping another 13 percent last summer. David Simon, one of the most respected showrunners alive, told an interviewer that he hasn’t had a greenlight in two years. David Chase said the same thing, warning that the business is devolving back to the pre-golden-age network model where executives prioritize financial safety over ambition.

And the foreign sales market, once the financial oxygen that kept mid-budget films alive, has tightened considerably. International buyers want proven IP. They want franchise value. They don’t want to write seven-figure checks for an original thriller from a first-time director, no matter how good the script is. The economic architecture that used to make a $40 million original film pencil out — presales covering a chunk of the budget, domestic theatrical providing upside, home video and international filling in the gaps — barely exists anymore.

So what happens next? Does Hollywood just keep cranking out franchise entries until audiences stop showing up entirely? Or does a computer take away everyones jobs and turn content like a tuna can factory? Perhaps AI has not been given a fair chance to be the savior, not the terminator for media companies and personel.

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Enter Acme AI & FX. Never heard of them? That’s by design. For almost two years now they have quietly been building. No web site, no PR just building. Building what they call the ethical, talent friendly AI Studio.

Acme is not another AI startup promising to replace human creativity with algorithms. It’s closer to the opposite — a production infrastructure company that uses proprietary AI technology to make the physical act of filmmaking radically cheaper and faster while keeping every human job intact. Their approach centers on performance capture shot entirely on Acme’s proprietary grey stage. Actors perform. Directors direct. Writers write. Department heads run their departments. What Acme eliminates is the staggering cost of everything else: location shoots, set construction, travel, permits, the logistical sprawl that eats 20 to 30 percent of a typical feature budget before a single frame of story gets captured.

The technology generates 100 percent photorealistic environments. Not “pretty good for AI” — photorealistic. Every exterior, interior, cityscape, and landscape that would normally require a location scout, a construction crew, and a travel budget is instead built digitally at a quality level that holds up on a 60-foot screen. The performances remain entirely actor-driven. This is not deepfake territory. Nobody is being digitally puppeteered. The actors act. The AI handles the world around them.

One source who spent time at Acme’s London facility — but declined to go on the record due to NDA obligations — described what they witnessed there. “You’ve got to see it. It’s unbelievable,” the source said. “Over a one-week period, I watched at least numerous studio heads and the like come through. Most of them clearly showed up ready to shut down the concept of shooting in AI on the spot, and every single one of them left saying some version of ‘how quickly can we start.’ They have a pre-production AI tech that is something this industry has been dreaming of. I know I’m repeating myself, but it’s unbelievable.”

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The economics are striking. Acme can deliver a film at roughly 20 percent of traditional below-the-line cost while cutting shoot schedules by 60 to 70 percent. Think about what that means for the greenlight problem. A $50 million film that studios won’t touch because the downside risk is too steep? At Acme’s cost structure, you’re making substantially the same movie for a fraction of the price. Suddenly the risk-reward math works again — not just for franchise plays, but for original stories, character-driven dramas, ambitious genre films, the entire category of movies that Hollywood has abandoned because the production economics stopped making sense. It sounds too good to be true. And in Hollywood usually when it is too good to be true it isnt true. In this case, however, we were able to visit them during their last production, Bitcoin: Killing Satoshi and saw it all come to life.

Garret Grant, who joined ACME as a partner, said  “When I was first approached about joining ACME was expecting to lose my job to an ai producer.  That’s not what’s happening here. My entire department is intact. My crew is working. The difference is I’m not spending three weeks in prep dealing with location permits and weather covers and travel logistics. We’re just making the movie. I’ve been doing this for 25 years and I’ve never had a shoot move this fast without something falling apart.”

Acme has already built studios in London and has broken ground in Spain , with plans to open facilities in New York and has a mini studio in Los Angeles. Their flagship production, Killing Satoshi, is nearing the finish line — a $70 million conspiracy thriller directed by Doug Liman (The Bourne Identity, Edge of Tomorrow) and starring Casey Affleck and Pete Davidson, Gal Gadot and Isla Fischer,  almost done with production. The film was shot entirely on Acme’s grey stage with all AI-generated environments, in partnership with 30 Ninja’s. It tracks the mystery of Satoshi Nakamoto, the anonymous inventor of Bitcoin who allegedly still controls a wallet worth tens of billions, and the powerful forces working to ensure that identity stays hidden. Nick Schenk, who wrote Gran Torino for Clint Eastwood, penned the original screenplay. It’s exactly the kind of high-concept, original, non-franchise film that the traditional studio system won’t make anymore. Acme made it.

And the pipeline is already filling up behind it. The trailer for Stop That Train, a new  Adam Shankman movie, just dropped — with Acme serving as the VFX/AI partner on the project. The company is very firm about not announcing their projects, but letting the directors or studios lead that. All told, the company has over 15 projects ( films and television) in various stages of pre-production and production, plus advertising work. This isn’t a proof-of-concept experiment. It’s a production operation scaling in real time, with finished product to show for it.

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A senior executive at one of the major talent agencies, speaking on background, framed Acme’s emergence in market terms. “The foreign sales conversation has gotten brutal. Buyers want IP, they want franchise, they want safety. But when you can show them a film with a real director and real cast at this budget level, the risk profile changes completely. I’ve already had two distributors ask me what else Acme has coming. That never happens with a company this new.”

The leadership group behind Acme — Ryan Kavanaugh, Garrett Grant, Lawrence Grey, and Matthew Kavanaugh — brings a combination of Hollywood production pedigree and financial engineering experience that is genuinely rare. Kavanaugh in particular has spent his career arriving at the intersection of crisis and innovation, usually with a structural solution that the rest of the industry eventually adopts wholesale.

The elephant in the room. Ryan Kavanaugh’s Realtivity Media, a company, he founded and built into the largest mini-major studio, underwent a hostile takeover in 2015 which led to Kavanaugh putting it into a chapter 11, and, after a two year battle, buying it back out of chapter 11.  In that process he became Hollywood’s favorite whipping boy. Article after article with salacious headlines that seemed to point to Kavanaugh having done something wrong, some kind of giant scandal. The biggest “scamndal”was a fraud lawsuit brought by one of the hedge funds called RKA. It was front page everywhere. What wasn’t front page and still is left as a footnote, that RKA lost the case in a Motion to Dismiss. That means a judge found that they did not even have the basic elements to have brought the case in the first place, let alone have it adjudicated. Thats the story, nothing less nothing more. But the only thing hollywod likes more than a star is a falling star. Now onto why him?

Consider the track record. In the mid-2000s, when studios were cash-starved and struggling to finance their own slates, Kavanaugh introduced slate financing — a model that bundled groups of films to spread investment risk across portfolios rather than individual bets. That model channeled more than $25 billion into Hollywood through deals with Warner Brothers, Universal, Sony, and Lionsgate. He pioneered the finance structure for post-bankruptcy Marvel that allowed it to become an independent studio, creating the architecture that led directly to the Marvel Cinematic Universe — the single most valuable entertainment franchise in history. In 2010, he brokered the first-of-its-kind deal with Netflix that effectively created the Subscription Video on Demand window, a move that boosted Netflix’s market cap from $2 billion to $10 billion and laid the groundwork for the streaming revolution. He was also among the first to recognize that film IP could be systematically repurposed for television, a strategy that is now standard industry practice. In 2014 he gave the Keynote at MIPCOM, where he spent an hour explaining how movies, his movies made the best pilots for TV shows-their underlying IP. It was met with much skepticism, however Kavanaugh had one thing the most successful and longest running show in MTV’s history Catfish, based off of a movie he was involved with Catfish.

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Every one of those moves happened at a moment when the conventional wisdom said the industry was stuck. Every one of them restructured the underlying economics in a way that unlocked a new wave of production. The pattern is hard to ignore.

What Kavanaugh and his partners are doing with Acme follows the same logic: identify the structural bottleneck choking the industry, then build the infrastructure to eliminate it. Right now, the bottleneck isn’t capital — Netflix alone is spending $18 billion a year on content. The bottleneck is production cost. It’s the fact that making a film still requires an industrial-era apparatus of physical construction, global logistics, and time-intensive shoots that push budgets past the point where anything but a guaranteed franchise hit makes financial sense. Acme’s technology collapses that cost structure without collapsing the workforce. Actors keep their jobs. Department heads keep their jobs. Directors keep their creative authority. What goes away is the waste.

Hollywood has been waiting for someone to solve this equation — to figure out how AI can lower costs without gutting the creative workforce that makes the product worth watching. The industry’s greatest fear about artificial intelligence has never really been about the technology itself. It’s been about who would wield it and what they’d prioritize. A technology company with no production experience optimizing for efficiency above all else is a terrifying prospect. A production company with decades of filmmaking experience using AI to restore economic viability to original storytelling is something else entirely.

A Director on one of their current projects who spoke to us on background gave the following quite: “I’ve spent the last two years getting told no. Not because the scripts aren’t good — because the budgets don’t work. If these guys can actually deliver what they showed me, and everything I’ve seen says they can, this is the first real reason to be optimistic about this business that I’ve had since before the strikes.”

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Acme AI & FX, with Killing Satoshi nearly complete, Stop That Train freshly unveiled, and a full slate ramping up behind them, is making the case that the answer to Hollywood’s crisis was never about choosing between human creativity and technological capability. It was about building a company that refuses to sacrifice one for the other. Ryan Kavanaugh, Garrett Grant, Lawrence Grey, and Matthew Kavanaugh appear to be betting their reputations on exactly that proposition.

Given Kavanaugh’s history of being right about these things before anyone else catches on, the rest of Hollywood might want to pay attention.

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Array Digital Infrastructure, Inc. (AD) Shareholder/Analyst Call – Slideshow

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Array Digital Infrastructure, Inc. (AD) Shareholder/Analyst Call – Slideshow

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Households pull Rs 54,786 cr worth of equities from secondary markets in FY25; invest record Rs 5.43 lakh crore in mutual funds

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Households pull Rs 54,786 cr worth of equities from secondary markets in FY25; invest record Rs 5.43 lakh crore in mutual funds
Indian households‘ equity exposure to the secondary markets fell by Rs 54,786 crore in FY25 indicating investors likely booked profits amid valuation concerns and heightened volatility according to an article published by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi).

In contrast, equity investments witnessed strong traction in the primary market as household flows into equities through IPOs, FPOs, rights issues and preferential allotments rose to Rs 95,139 crore in FY25 – more than double the Rs 46,879 crore recorded in FY24.

The domestic households put their trust on mutual funds which turned out as the biggest driver of inflows. The investments through MF schemes in the primary market jumped to Rs 5.13 lakh crore in FY25 from Rs 2.85 lakh crore in FY24 and Rs 1.66 lakh crore in FY23. Secondary market mutual fund flows, including ETFs, also rose sharply to Rs 30,885 crore in FY25 compared with Rs 9,783 crore in the previous year. Together, the flows stood at Rs 5.43 lakh crore.

The article authored by Dr Prabhas Kumar Rath, Shyni Sunil and Kalyani H, revealed household savings through the Indian securities market sharply increased to a record Rs 6.91 lakh crore, nearly doubling from Rs 3.58 lakh crore in FY24. Apart from equities and mutual funds, the other preferred instrumests were debts, REITs and InvITs.

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The data highlights a structural shift in household savings behaviour, with financial assets increasingly gaining preference over traditional avenues such as gold and real estate. Sebi noted that the revised methodology now captures a broader set of investments including secondary market participation, REITs, InvITs and private placements, offering a more realistic picture of household participation in capital markets.


The growing appetite for mutual funds was also visible in the stock of household assets. Household mutual fund holdings climbed to Rs 44.39 lakh crore at the end of FY25 from Rs 36.28 lakh crore a year earlier and Rs 24.45 lakh crore in FY23. Even so, household ownership of equities continued to swell due to market appreciation and continued primary market participation. The value of household equity assets increased to Rs 88.92 lakh crore in FY25 from Rs 84.07 lakh crore in FY24 and Rs 53.67 lakh crore in FY23.
The Sebi article said the revised methodology increased the household savings through securities markets-to-GDP ratio to 2.17% in FY25 compared with 1.71% under the earlier approach, indicating that the role of financial markets in household wealth creation had been materially underreported earlier.The Sebi article emphasized that the household savings channeled through the securities market is a crucial component of the financial savings. The data on household savings reported by RBI relied partly on estimations. While data on mutual fund investments were sourced from Sebi, 35% of the equity via public and rights issuances and 40% of the public issuances of corporate debt were considered for equity and debt, respectively, the Sebi note said. “The household shares in equity, debt and mutual funds, thus computed were in turn used by MoSPI in the computation of Gross Savings in the economy,” it said further.

(Disclaimer: The recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times.)

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Perception of private label products is shifting

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Perception of private label products is shifting

Consumers are increasingly favoring private label alternatives to name brands, according to survey. 

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Dorian LPG Stock Surges 12% on Record Q4 Earnings, $1 Dividend as VLGC Rates Soar

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Oil Prices Plunge Below $95 as US-Iran Ceasefire Sparks Relief

NEW YORK — Dorian LPG Ltd. (NYSE: LPG) shares jumped more than 12% in midday trading Wednesday after the liquefied petroleum gas shipping company reported sharply higher fourth-quarter earnings, driven by elevated freight rates and strong demand for very large gas carriers (VLGCs).

The stock rose to $47.64, up $5.31 or 12.56%, as of 11:39 a.m. EDT, with volume exceeding average levels. The move followed the company’s announcement of fiscal fourth-quarter results that far exceeded prior-year figures.

Dorian LPG reported net income of $81.0 million, or $1.90 per diluted share, for the three months ended March 31, 2026. That compared with net income of $8.1 million, or $0.19 per diluted share, in the same period a year earlier.

Adjusted net income, which excludes certain items including unrealized gains or losses on derivatives, totaled $80.4 million, or $1.89 per diluted share. This beat analyst consensus estimates of around $1.48 per share. Revenues climbed 102% to $153.3 million from $75.9 million.

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Time charter equivalent (TCE) rates for the fleet averaged $63,615 per available day, up 80.1% from $35,324 in the prior-year quarter. The Baltic Exchange Liquid Petroleum Gas Index averaged $90.453 during the period, compared with $51.715 a year earlier.

For the full fiscal year ended March 31, 2026, the company posted net income of $193.7 million, or $4.54 per diluted share, on revenues of $481.5 million. Adjusted net income reached $194.8 million, or $4.57 per diluted share. TCE rates averaged $52,238 per day.

John Hadjipateras, chairman, president and chief executive officer, said in a prepared statement: “Our strong results for the quarter reflect a healthy freight market and the dedication of our seagoing and shore side employees. Fortunately, none of our people or ships are in the Middle East Gulf. The delivery of the Areion in late March and the sale of the 2015 built Cobra highlight our approach to fleet management. We are optimistic about the prospects of the freight market while cautious of the uncertainty posed by fast evolving geopolitical events. Our declaration of a $1.00 per share irregular dividend reflects our confidence in the long-term sustainability of LPG demand and our company’s prudent approach to capital allocation.”

The board declared an irregular cash dividend of $1.00 per share, totaling $42.8 million, payable on or about May 28, 2026, to shareholders of record as of May 18, 2026. During fiscal 2026, the company paid four irregular dividends totaling $104.7 million.

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Dorian LPG completed the sale of the 2016-built VLGC Cobra on May 6, 2026, generating net proceeds of $81.9 million after commissions and fees. It prepaid $16.5 million of debt related to the vessel.

The company took delivery of the dual-fuel newbuilding VLGC Areion in March 2026 and secured a $62.9 million debt facility to finance it. The fleet consists of 27 modern VLGCs, including six chartered-in vessels, with an aggregate capacity of about 2.3 million cubic meters. Owned vessels average 10.5 years in age.

Vessel operating expenses fell to $9,780 per calendar day in the fourth quarter from $12,671 a year earlier, partly due to lower drydock-related costs. General and administrative expenses rose to $13.3 million from $8.3 million, driven by higher bonuses and stock-based compensation.

Interest and finance costs declined to $6.9 million from $8.0 million, reflecting lower average debt levels and SOFR rates. Long-term debt stood at $565.8 million as of March 31, 2026.

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The results come amid tight VLGC supply and robust U.S. LPG exports. Geopolitical factors, including disruptions in the Middle East, have supported higher spot rates for gas carriers, though the company noted risks from evolving events.

Dorian LPG operates globally, focusing on modern, fuel-efficient ECO and dual-fuel vessels. It has expanded its low-emission fleet, with dual-fuel ships now representing over 20% of operations following recent deliveries and charters.

Analysts have tracked the sector’s strength. The company has returned significant capital to shareholders since its IPO, with dividends forming a key part of its strategy.

Shares of Dorian LPG have risen more than 74% year-to-date as of the prior close, trading near 52-week highs. The market capitalization reached approximately $2.04 billion.

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The company maintains a cautious outlook on geopolitical uncertainties while highlighting confidence in sustained LPG demand driven by global energy needs.

Industry observers point to limited newbuild deliveries in the VLGC segment as supporting rate strength. Dorian LPG’s active fleet management, including asset sales and newbuild integrations, aims to optimize its position in the market.

The earnings release preceded a conference call held at 10 a.m. EDT on May 20, 2026, where management discussed operational details and market conditions.

Dorian LPG, headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, employs about 587 people. It provides in-house technical management for its fleet and focuses on safety and efficiency in LPG transportation.

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The surge in LPG stock reflects broader investor interest in shipping companies benefiting from current freight market dynamics. Competitors in the VLGC space have also seen volatility tied to rates and geopolitics.

Looking ahead, the company continues to monitor bunker fuel costs, which rose during the quarter, and derivative positions to manage interest rate exposure.

Dorian LPG’s balance sheet remains solid, with cash generation supporting dividends and debt reduction. The irregular dividend policy allows flexibility based on earnings and market conditions.

Investors will watch future TCE realizations, fleet utilization and any updates on newbuild programs or additional capital returns. The stock’s beta of 0.75 indicates lower volatility relative to the broader market.

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The strong quarterly performance underscores the benefits of Dorian LPG’s modern fleet in a favorable rate environment for VLGC operators.

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Are supermarkets profiting from higher food prices?

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Are supermarkets profiting from higher food prices?

Food prices in the UK have risen, but are supermarkets profiting from higher food prices? Ben Chu reports.

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Wendy’s taps former Potbelly CEO Bob Wright to lead burger chain

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Wendy's taps former Potbelly CEO Bob Wright to lead burger chain

A Wendy’s restaurant sign is seen on Nov. 10, 2025 in Austin, Texas.

Brandon Bell | Getty Images

Wendy’s has tapped Bob Wright as its latest chief executive, the company said Wednesday.

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The announcement comes on the heels of the struggling burger chain reporting its fifth straight quarter of same-store sales declines and rumors of a potential take-private deal led by Nelson Peltz’s Trian Fund Management.

Wright previously served as CEO of Potbelly for five years, leading a turnaround of the sandwich chain in the aftermath of pandemic lockdowns. Potbelly went private last year after convenience store owner RaceTrac bought it for $566 million.

Wright officially becomes Wendy’s CEO on Thursday.

The chain has not had a permanent chief executive since Kirk Tanner left Wendy’s in July to become CEO of Hershey. Tanner was only at Wendy’s for about 18 months. Prior to Tanner’s tenure, Wendy’s ousted longtime CEO Todd Penegor, who had led the chain for nearly eight years.

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In the time since Tanner’s departure, Wendy’s has struggled to attract consumers who are increasingly value conscious and has lost market share to rivals McDonald’s and Burger King. In February, the company announced plans to close about 300 restaurants in the first half of the year.

Shares of Wendy’s have tumbled nearly 35% over the last year, dragging its market value down to $1.55 billion.

The company’s skid makes it a much cheaper acquisition target for Trian.

The Financial Times reported earlier this month that the firm is seeking funding to take Wendy’s private. It isn’t the first time that Trian has considered it; most recently, the firm said it was exploring a takeover of Wendy’s in 2022, but later decided against it.

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Trian owns a 7.85% stake in Wendy’s, and Peltz has a 16.24% interest, according to a recent regulatory filing that also called the stock “undervalued.”

Peltz’s relationship with Wendy’s dates back to an activist campaign he led in 2005. In 2024, Wendy’s named Peltz as chairman emeritus after he spent 17 years on the company’s board. Trian executive Peter May and Peltz’s son, Bradley, still sit on Wendy’s board.

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Warner Music Group Corp. (WMG) Presents at J.P. Morgan 54th Annual Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Warner Music Group Corp. (WMG) J.P. Morgan 54th Annual Global Technology, Media and Communications Conference May 20, 2026 10:40 AM EDT

Company Participants

Armin Zerza – Executive VP & CFO

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Conference Call Participants

David Karnovsky – JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division

Presentation

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David Karnovsky
JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division

Okay. We’ll get started. I’m happy to have back at the conference this year, Warner Music Group. On my left is Armin Zerza, CFO and COO. Armin, thanks so much for being here.

Armin Zerza
Executive VP & CFO

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Thank you. Thanks for having me.

Question-and-Answer Session

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David Karnovsky
JPMorgan Chase & Co, Research Division

Great. So you’ve been at Warner Music for almost exactly a year now, initially as CFO, on top of which you’ve now added COO to your responsibilities. So how has your day-to-day focus changed since you’ve arrived? And how do you expect it to continue to evolve from here as you take on this broader operational mandate?

Armin Zerza
Executive VP & CFO

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Yes, David, in fact, I took on most of the responsibilities that I have today very early in my job. So my focus hasn’t really changed. What we are focused on and what I’m focused on as a team is ensuring that we develop and execute against plans that can deliver value to all of our key stakeholders, so our fans, our artists and songwriters, our partners and of course, us and our shareholders. And as you know, I’m personally very focused on ensuring that within that context, we deliver against our growth model, which is high single-digit or higher revenue growth, double-digit profit and EPS growth, and then stronger cash conversion.

And to do that, I’ve been personally engaged in a few key initiatives for the company. The first one is making

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Jeff Bezos says ‘no truth’ to ‘buy borrow die’ tax strategy

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Jeff Bezos says ‘no truth’ to ‘buy borrow die’ tax strategy
Jeff Bezos: I don't want to reduce taxes for the working class, I want to eliminate it

Amazon executive chairman Jeff Bezos said a controversial tax strategy used by the wealthy to borrow against assets to lower their income taxes is largely a “myth.”

“There’s no truth to this ‘buy, borrow, die’ thing,” Bezos told CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin Wednesday in a wide-ranging interview. “I don’t even know where this comes from.”

The “buy, borrow, die” strategy refers to the practice of wealthy founders or investors borrowing against their assets and using the loan proceeds as income. Since the loan isn’t considered taxable income, their income stream avoids tax. Thanks to the step-up in basis tax provision, any gain in the value of their assets during their lifetime is also erased upon their death, avoiding any capital gains tax.

The most famous practitioners of the strategy are Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and the world’s richest man, Elon Musk. Ellison doesn’t take a taxable salary at Oracle but has pledged more than $30 billion of his stock as collateral for loans. Musk has pledged billions of Tesla shares over the years as similar collateral, although he said he paid $11 billion in federal and state income taxes in 2021 when he exercised Tesla options.

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Bezos is the world’s fourth-richest man, with a net worth around $269 billion, according to Forbes.

The “buy, borrow, die” strategy has come under attack by Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden, among others, who have proposed targeting the practice by taxing wealth instead of income.

Bezos said he pays taxes on the Amazon stock he regularly sells to fund his Blue Origin rocket company and other ventures.

“Whenever I sell, I pay taxes on it,” he said.

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Bezos also said he could support tax reforms taking aim at the practice, but didn’t give specifics.

“I’m a little skeptical that that’s a true loophole,” he said. “But if it is, and we can fix it, then we should. I don’t think such a loophole should exist.”

He cautioned, however, that closing the loophole wouldn’t solve the underlying issues of government spending, inequality and supporting those at the bottom of the economy.

“If you fix that loophole, it’s not going to solve the full problem, Bezos said, using the hypothetical example of a nurse in Queens, New York, facing a high tax burden. “It’s not going to help her at all.”

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United Fire Group, Inc. (UFCS) Shareholder/Analyst Call Prepared Remarks Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Operator

Hello, and welcome to the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of United Fire Group, Inc. Please note that today’s meeting is being recorded. [Operator Instructions] It is now my pleasure to turn today’s meeting over to Jim Noyce, Chairperson of the Board of Directors of United Fire Group, Inc. Mr. Noyce, the floor is yours.

James William Noyce

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The meeting will please come to order. Good morning, and welcome to the Annual Meeting of Shareholders of United Fire Group, Inc., and thank you all for attending. I am Jim Noyce, Chairperson of the Board of Directors. And in accordance with our bylaws, I will be presiding at this meeting.

Today’s meeting is being broadcast by live audio webcast. We believe this virtual meeting option will maximize participation of shareholders regardless of their location. Thank you very much to those who are participating virtually today. We will conduct our meeting in 2 parts. First, we will address our formal business — our formal items of business, followed by a question-and-answer session. You may submit questions through the virtual meeting website. An agenda that outlines the order of business for the meeting has been made available.

The matters on which the shareholders at the meeting are voting include: election of the 5 Class A directors identified in the proxy statement; ratification of the Audit Committee’s appointment of Ernst & Young LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2026, approval on an advisory basis of the compensation of the company’s named executive officers; and approval of the amendment and extension of the 2021 Nonemployee Director Stock Plan.

Sarah Madsen, Senior Vice

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Airbnb expands beyond rentals with airport pickups, hotels and AI travel tools

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Airbnb expands beyond rentals with airport pickups, hotels and AI travel tools

Airbnb is pushing far beyond home rentals, rolling out airport pickups, grocery delivery, luggage storage, car rentals, boutique hotels and exclusive travel experiences as it expands deeper into travel services.

The company announced Wednesday that travelers can now book grocery delivery through Instacart in more than 25 U.S. cities, airport rides through Welcome Pickups in over 160 cities worldwide and luggage storage through Bounce at more than 15,000 locations globally. 

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Airbnb also plans to launch in-app car rentals later this summer.

“We want to bring a little bit of magic to every trip you’re on,” Airbnb Chief Business Officer Dave Stephenson told FOX Business.

AIRBNB APOLOGIZES AFTER ‘SUPERHOST’ ALLEGEDLY USED AI-DOCTORED PHOTOS TO CLAIM $16K IN FAKE DAMAGES

Couple arriving at airport terminal with luggage cart and black SUV parked nearby

Travelers arrive at an airport pickup area. Airbnb is rolling out new ride services through Welcome Pickups in more than 160 cities worldwide. (iStock / iStock)

At the same time, Airbnb is adding boutique and independent hotels in major cities including New York, Paris, London, Rome and Singapore, alongside new AI-powered features like review summaries, listing comparisons and smarter customer support tools.

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The expansion builds on Airbnb’s broader push into travel services and experiences beyond traditional home stays.

“[When COVID-19] hit, we had to retrench and focus on the core, and then we did that for a number of years and really worked on and perfected the kind of core business,” Stephenson said. “But then a couple of years ago, part of me coming into this new role was to get us ready to expand into services [and] experiences, which we did May of last year.”

Airbnb now offers more than 3,000 curated experiences worldwide, including tours tied to landmarks such as the Tower of London, Tokyo Skytree and the Taj Mahal.

DISNEY CRUISE CANCELED AFTER BOARDING LEAVES PASSENGERS WAITING HOURS AND QUESTIONING RESPONSE

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CBO, Dave Stephenson of Airbnb

Airbnb Chief Business Officer Dave Stephenson of Airbnb is pictured on May 28, 2024, in Seoul, South Korea.  (Han Myung-Gu/WireImage / Getty Images)

The company is also leaning into FIFA World Cup 2026 travel with exclusive fan events and athlete-led experiences.

Stephenson said Airbnb expects World Cup demand to outpace the surge it saw during the Paris Olympics, when more than 700,000 guests stayed in Airbnb properties.

“The average homeowner is going to earn about $3,000 from sharing their place,” he said.

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Airbnb is also adding new social and group-planning tools. A revamped Trips tab will show reservations alongside nearby restaurants, attractions and experiences, letting users save spots and build shared itineraries.

Later this summer, Airbnb will launch a new travel map and “connections” feature, allowing users to see where friends have stayed, browse their reviews and bookings, and message them directly for travel tips.

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The Airbnb logo is displayed on a smartphone in front of property listings.

The Airbnb logo is displayed on a smartphone in front of home listings. (Mateusz Slodkowski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

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“These group itineraries — I think it’s going to be a really cool new feature that people will find really valuable, because when you travel in Airbnb, you tend to travel with family and friends,” Stephenson said.

The new services and hotel offerings are available now in select markets, while car rentals and additional app features are expected to roll out later this summer.

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