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Democratic states seek to hike taxes on the wealthy

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Democratic states seek to hike taxes on the wealthy
Tax hikes on rich gather steam: Here's what to know

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Inside Wealth newsletter with Robert Frank, a weekly guide to the high-net-worth investor and consumer. Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.

A new “blue wave” of tax hikes on the wealthy is rippling through state legislatures, as Virginia, Washington state, Rhode Island and others join California in calls for higher taxes on top earners and billionaires.

With states facing potential cuts in federal aid and Democrat lawmakers emboldened by rising populism and a growing economic divide, legislators and governors in many blue states are preparing a range of new taxes on the wealthy. At the same time, many red states continue to cut or eliminate income taxes to become more competitive.

“What you’re really seeing is divergence,” said Lucy Dadayan, principal research associate and state tax expert at the Tax Policy Center at the Urban Institute. “On one side, some states are doubling down on rate cuts, rebates, and tax competitiveness. On the other, some are turning to targeted surtaxes on high earners as a way to fund fast-growing priorities without raising broad-based taxes.”

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While tax hikes are floated by left-leaning state legislators almost every year, the latest push has added momentum. Inflation has increased the economic pressure on middle- and lower-income earners, sparking renewed calls for higher taxes on the wealthy to offset higher health care and education costs. State spending has continued to rise since Covid, renewing the need for revenue.

Many Democratic leaders are also heralding a tax hike on high earners in Massachusetts as proof that the wealthy won’t flee. In 2022, Massachusetts voters approved “The Fair Share Amendment,” a 4% surtax on income over $1 million. The tax generated nearly $3 billion in annual revenue in its second fiscal year – more than twice the original estimates. Many Democratic leaders say the revenue shows that predictions of mass wealth flight in the face of higher taxes are misleading.

Like the Massachusetts amendment, the latest proposed tax increases only target top earners. Jared Walczak, senior fellow at the Tax Foundation, said efforts to single out millionaires and billionaires differ from previous tax hikes, which sought higher, progressive marginal rates on a broader population to raise revenue.

“Now it’s a starker divide,” Walczak said. “It’s not just that as incomes rise people should pay progressively more. It’s an effort to only have taxes on a specific subset of the population.”

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California is leading the charge to tax the wealthy. The state’s Billionaire Tax Act, a ballot measure likely to head to voters in November, would impose a one-time 5% tax on the total net worth of California residents worth $1 billion or more. The tax would be the first of its kind, since it would tax assets rather than wealth. It would also be retroactive, taking effect Jan. 1, 2026.

While its passage remains uncertain, some billionaires have already moved out of the state. Google co-founder Larry Page moved to Florida in December, dropping more than $170 million in Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood and moving his family office and several business registrations. David Sacks, the tech billionaire and AI and crypto czar for the White House, said he moved to Texas after 30 years in California. He told CNBC the proposed Golden State tax amounts to “an asset seizure” and would likely become permanent once approved.

“It’s not one-time, it’s a first time,” he said.

Since the proposal is a ballot measure, the billionaire tax would bypass the governor and legislature. California Gov. Gavin Newsom opposes the tax, saying it would drive the wealthy to lower-tax states. In other blue states, however, tax hikes on the wealthy are coming from the top down.

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In Virginia, the election of Gov. Abigail Spanberger gave Democrats control of the state’s General Assembly and governorship. Legislators have proposed a new tax bracket of 10% on those making more than $1 million a year. Currently, all income over $17,000 is taxed at 5.75%. A second proposal would add a state-level net investment income tax, applied to capital gains, dividends and rental income, for modified adjusted gross income over $500,000.

Virginia’s neighbors, meanwhile, are cutting taxes. West Virginia lawmakers are in the process of phasing out their income tax, while North Carolina’s flat tax fell from 4.25% to 3.99% in January. North Carolina aims to bring down its income tax rate to 2.49% in the coming years.

Elizabeth Bennett-Parker, a member of the Virginia House of Delegates who’s proposed the net investment income tax, said the revenue is needed to help working families better afford health care, education and groceries. She cited Massachusetts as an example of success.

“Other states have recently passed laws to ensure the ultra-wealthy pay their fair share and have not seen significant impacts on population,” she said. “There is momentum across our country to rebalance state tax codes, following the extreme Trump tax bill that further skewed the federal tax codes to benefit the wealthiest Americans.”

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In Washington state, legislators are making a bold bet on a possible millionaires tax. Washington is one of only nine states that currently don’t have statewide income taxes. Opponents say an income tax would violate the state constitution and existing law.

Yet in 2022, the state imposed a 7% tax on long-term capital gains of over $250,000. The following year, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, a longtime Seattle resident and one of the world’s richest people, announced that he was moving to Miami. Opponents said in 2022 that the capital gains tax would open the door to a broader income tax.

Now, that prediction is coming true. Washington state legislators are proposing 9.9% tax on those earning more than $1 million a year. They’re hoping that a state Supreme Court ruling that upheld the capital gains tax will offer a potential legal path for a broader millionaire tax.

“It was very predictable that once you had a court ruling that allowed for the capital gains tax, the dominoes would start to fall,” Walczak said. 

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In Michigan, a proposed “Invest in MI Kids” measure would amend the state constitution to impose a 9.25% top rate on those with incomes over $500,000 for single filers and $1 million for joint filers. Supporters say the new tax would generate an additional $1.7 billion in revenue for education.

The new rate would also be on top for municipal taxes, with Detroit residents facing a combined rate of 11.65%. At the same time, Michigan’s neighbors, Indiana and Ohio, have flat individual income tax rates of 2.95% and 2.75%, respectively.

Rhode Island, fresh off last year’s so-called “Taylor Swift Tax” on expensive vacation homes, is now considering an added 3% surtax on incomes over $1 million. An estimated 2,300 Rhode Island millionaire earners would see their top tax rate jump from 5.99% to 8.99%, according to an analysis by the state budget office. It estimates that 5,500 nonresident millionaires who have tax liabilities in the state could also be affected.

In New York, newly elected Mayor Zohran Mamdani continues to pressure Gov. Kathy Hochul to raise taxes on the wealthy to fill what he says is a $12 billion budget hole and to pay for added services. He’s proposed an added 2% income tax on millionaire earners, which would bring the top combined city and state tax rate for New York City residents to 16.8%. Adding in federal taxes, and the top rate would be 53.8%.

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While the fates of the tax proposals remain uncertain, experts say the growing chorus of higher taxes in many blue states will cause business owners and top earners to consider moving to lower-tax states.

“Doubling down on higher taxes in states like California, Washington and others makes them far less attractive, especially given how many other options are now available to businesses and individuals who want to move,” Walczak said. “In California you’re always wondering what will come next in terms of taxes. In Texas, that’s not a concern.”

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Form 144 MASTERCARD INC. For: 24 February

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Next Welsh Government needs to help realise huge potential of renewables

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RenewableUK Cymru has published its manifesto ahead of the Senedd Election in May

Generic picture of a wind turbine.

Renewables(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service)

The next Welsh Government needs to deliver a joined up clean power strategy to avoid the risk of losing billions in investment and the creation of thousands of high-skilled jobs.

Ahead of the Senedd Election representative body for the sector, RenewableUK Cymru, has published its manifesto which outlines how Wales could unlock a £10bn of economic opportunity for Welsh businesses, create 8,000 secure, well-paid jobs, and deliver affordable, home-grown energy – providing government and industry work together in a formal clean power partnership.

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The manifesto, entitled, Cymru Clean Power: Call for Government 2026, highlights that electricity demand in Wales is projected to double – potentially triple – by 2050.

READ MORE: Largest ever number of renewable projects in Wales backed in UK Goverment auction roundREAD MORE: The verdict on the promise of £14bn of rail investment in Wales over the long-term

Two planned AI growth zones – one in south Wales and the other in north Wales – alone could require as much electricity as a city the size of Cardiff. Electrified heavy industry, electric vehicles and heat pumps will all add to that demand. However, the manifesto highlights that most of Wales’ electricity still comes from imported gas, exposing households and businesses to volatile global prices.

The manifesto says that the choice facing voters and politicians is clear: “continue importing fossil fuels or build a home-grown clean energy system that powers jobs, industry and communities across Wales.”

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RenewableUK Cymru’s analysis also shows that by accelerating large-scale wind, solar and tidal projects, would also deliver average salaries of £49,000 — around £10,000 above the Welsh average, generate up to £183m in community benefit funding over the next decade and protect households from price volatility by reducing reliance on imported gas

It also highlights that Wales must also modernise its grid network that connects power to homes, businesses and industry. It warns that without increased capacity, new renewable projects will stall and investment decisions will drift elsewhere.

Jessica Hooper, director of RenewableUK Cymru, said: “As parties set out their priorities for Wales, energy is our defining economic choice. Clean energy is one of the UK’s fastest-growing industries. Wales has the natural resources, the projects in the pipeline, and investors ready to go. But without a grid fit for the future, that opportunity will not be realised.

“A Cymru clean power partnership would turn potential into delivery – securing affordable, home-grown energy, billions in investment, thousands of well-paid jobs and millions in funding for communities across Wales.”

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Last week Plaid Cymru leader, Rhun ap Iorwerth, said if elected the party’s intention is to require minimum community-ownership stake of between 15 and 25% for all energy projects over 10 megawatt, or equivalent means of capturing community benefits, while also increasing the number of communities who have the capacity and ability to buy in to projects at scale,

It would also establish a national energy body for Wales that would be responsible for developing large-scale projects – embedding meaningful community ownership, and supporting smaller-scale community energy initiatives.

There have been projects, like Alwen Forest windfarm that has just been consented, with a 20% community ownership stake, but that took eight years to work through. It is not clear whether the sector would be willing to invest in Wales at the scale required with such community ownership thresholds.

In terms of distribution lines ( a devolved matter), that are mainly required in rural areas to connect renewable projects to the National Grid, Plaid would prohibit the use of large steel lattice pylons lines 132 kilovolt or below, with a clear presumption in favour of under grounding, with overhead alternatives permitted only where installation is via low wooden poles or equivalent, less intrusive infrastructure.

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Putting cables underground would be far more expensive option and could potentially deter invest. RenewablesUK Cymru points to research shows burying power lines can cost up to five times more than overhead lines. It add this would have significant implications for bill payers and that a “pragmatic, cost-effective approach” to grid modernisation will be essential.

The Plaid leader said: “Plaid Cymru supports renewable energy unequivocally just as we believe that the wellbeing of communities has to be at the heart of the Welsh Government’s energy strategy.

A Plaid Cymru government will require a minimum community-ownership stake of between 15 and 25% for all energy projects over 10 megawatt, or corresponding means of capturing community benefits as a key condition for consent.

“We propose a single national energy body for Wales responsible for developing large-scale projects, embedding meaningful community ownership, and supporting smaller-scale community energy initiatives – all framed by the clear remit of retaining more of the value of Welsh renewables in Wales and helping to reduce energy bills over the medium to long term.”

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Plaid has dropped a previous pledge to achieved net zero carbon emissions in Wales by 2035. Mr ap Iorwerth said: “I think most people now can see that 2035 isn’t realistic. We are very close. Time rolls by, and we have to take a pragmatic look at that. I think everything points to needing to be a point in the future where we need to keep an eye on the prize.”

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Google apologises for Baftas alert to 'see more' on racial slur

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Google apologises for Baftas alert to 'see more' on racial slur

Google said the news alert was an error that should not have happened.

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Apple Stock Hits $266.18 Close Amid Q1 Record Earnings and Spring Hardware Buzz

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Apple Logo on a Glass Window
Apple Logo on a Glass Window

Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) shares saw a positive start to the week, closing at $266.18 on Monday, February 23, 2026. This represents a 0.60% increase (+$1.60) from the previous session, as the stock continues to recover from a brief dip earlier in the month. The upward momentum reflects ongoing strength from record-breaking holiday earnings and anticipation for Apple’s spring product roadmap.

Market Performance and Valuation

Apple’s market capitalization remains near the $4.0 trillion mark, solidifying its position as the world’s most valuable company. The stock is approximately 8% below its all-time high of $288.61 (reached in late 2025) but has shown resilience in early 2026. Trading volume was steady at 37.3 million shares, reflecting broad institutional support. As of February 24 intraday, AAPL trades around $272.40 (up 2.34% or +$6.22), with a day range of $267.74–$274.89.

Record-Breaking Q1 2026 Results

Investors continue to digest Apple’s fiscal first-quarter results (reported January 29, 2026), which shattered Wall Street expectations:

  • Total Revenue: A record $143.8 billion, up 16% year-over-year.
  • Earnings Per Share (EPS): An all-time high of $2.84, beating the consensus estimate of $2.71.
  • Services Explosion: The segment reached a massive milestone, crossing $30 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time (up 14% YoY). With a gross margin of 76.5%, Services now serves as a high-profit anchor.
  • Installed Base: CEO Tim Cook confirmed Apple’s active device ecosystem has surpassed 2.5 billion devices.

Spring Product Anticipation

While no official “Special Apple Experience” event has been announced for March 4, analysts expect a late March hardware refresh focusing on:

  • M5 MacBooks: Refreshed MacBook Pro and MacBook Air models powered by next-generation M5 silicon (expected H1 2026).
  • iPad Updates: Potential M5 iPad Pro refresh alongside OLED iPad Air rumors.

The iPhone 17 lineup (expected fall 2026) remains a key long-term catalyst, with supply chain reports pointing to A19 chips, improved modems, and design refinements driving 38% China growth seen in recent quarters.

Strategic Outlook

Despite EU regulatory scrutiny and global tariff concerns, analyst sentiment remains bullish. Morgan Stanley and Wedbush maintain price targets between $280–$300, citing Apple’s pivot toward an AI-driven services platform (P/E ~34.4, EPS $7.91). As February closes, focus remains on spring hardware reveals that could push AAPL toward new highs.

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Reeves adviser sparks backlash after saying UK doesn’t ‘need any more restaurants’

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Reeves adviser sparks backlash after saying UK doesn’t ‘need any more restaurants’

A senior adviser to Rachel Reeves has drawn sharp criticism from the hospitality sector after saying Britain does not “need any more restaurants”.

Alex Depledge, appointed last year as the Government’s entrepreneurship adviser, argued that ministers should prioritise high-growth industries such as technology and advanced manufacturing rather than hospitality and retail.

Speaking to Insider Media, Depledge said: “We don’t need any more restaurants. I’m not anti-hospitality, but that’s not where my efforts are.” She added that the UK should focus on scaling sectors such as clean tech and creative industries to drive long-term economic growth.

Her remarks prompted an immediate backlash from publicans and restaurateurs already grappling with higher national insurance contributions and business rate reforms.

Sacha Lord, chairman of the Nighttime Industry Association and a former adviser to Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, said the comments deepened confusion about Labour’s stance towards hospitality. “Small and medium-sized businesses are the largest employers in the private sector,” he said, adding that the sector had been “blindsided” by recent tax changes.

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TV chef Michel Roux Jr also criticised the remarks on social media, while pub campaigner Andy Lennox urged Depledge to reconsider what he described as “unwise words”.

Hospitality accounts for around 7 per cent of UK employment, with roughly 2.6 million people working in the sector, according to the Office for National Statistics. The number of restaurants fell 1.3 per cent in 2025 to 89,600, as operators faced rising costs and squeezed consumer spending.

Depledge, who founded property and software businesses including Resi UK and Good Lord, defended her focus on sectors capable of generating higher productivity and wages. She suggested that while small businesses remain vital, their overall contribution to the economy has remained broadly stable over decades.

The Chancellor has introduced targeted relief for pubs, including a temporary 15 per cent business rates discount, but restaurants and hotels have continued to press for broader support.

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The episode underscores growing tension between Labour’s push to champion “future-facing” industries and the concerns of traditional sectors that remain major employers across the country.


Paul Jones

Harvard alumni and former New York Times journalist. Editor of Business Matters for over 15 years, the UKs largest business magazine. I am also head of Capital Business Media’s automotive division working for clients such as Red Bull Racing, Honda, Aston Martin and Infiniti.

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Microsoft (MSFT) Stock Closes at $428.15 as Cloud and AI Momentum Offsets Broader Tech Caution

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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the US tech giant plans to invest $3 billion in India on AI and cloud infrastructure over the next two years

Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ: MSFT) shares finished Monday, February 23, 2026, at $428.15, down 0.68% from the prior session’s $431.09 close, reflecting modest profit-taking amid ongoing investor debate over the pace of AI spending returns and competitive dynamics in cloud computing. The stock has risen approximately 4.2% year-to-date in 2026, outperforming the broader Nasdaq’s slight decline, but remains about 6-8% below its all-time high of $467.56 reached in late 2025.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the US tech giant plans to invest $3 billion in India on AI and cloud infrastructure over the next two years
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella
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Microsoft’s market capitalization stood at roughly $3.18 trillion at Monday’s close, keeping it among the world’s most valuable companies. Trading volume reached about 18.4 million shares, near average for the blue-chip name. The stock has traded in a relatively tight range of $420-$440 in recent weeks, supported by strong fundamentals but capped by macroeconomic uncertainty, tariff concerns, and scrutiny of hyperscaler capital expenditure levels.

The company’s fiscal second-quarter 2026 earnings, reported January 28, 2026, provided the last major catalyst. Revenue reached $65.6 billion (up 16% year-over-year), beating estimates of $64.4 billion, while adjusted EPS of $3.23 topped consensus of $3.11. Intelligent Cloud revenue surged 21% to $26.8 billion, driven by Azure growth of 33% (with AI services contributing 16 percentage points of that increase). Productivity and Business Processes grew 13% to $20.4 billion, led by Microsoft 365 and Dynamics 365, while More Personal Computing rose 11% to $18.4 billion, helped by Windows and Surface.

CEO Satya Nadella emphasized Azure’s AI momentum, noting that the platform now serves more than 70,000 enterprise customers with AI workloads and that Copilot adoption continues to accelerate across Microsoft 365, GitHub, and Power Platform. The company highlighted that Azure AI revenue doubled sequentially in the quarter, underscoring demand for OpenAI-powered tools and custom AI solutions.

Guidance for the March quarter called for revenue of $63.7 billion to $64.9 billion (implying 13-15% growth) and operating income margins in the mid-40% range. Management reiterated confidence in long-term AI infrastructure investments, with capital expenditures expected to remain elevated in 2026 to support data center expansion and GPU capacity for training and inference.

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Analyst sentiment remains overwhelmingly positive. Consensus rating is Strong Buy, with an average 12-month price target around $495-$510 (implying 15-19% upside from current levels). Recent updates include Morgan Stanley raising its target to $525 from $500 (Overweight), citing Azure’s AI leadership and Copilot monetization potential. Wedbush kept Outperform at $540, while Piper Sandler maintained Overweight at $520. A few cautious voices, including MoffettNathanson, hold Market Perform ratings with targets near $450, citing valuation concerns and risks if AI ROI disappoints.

Microsoft’s forward P/E stands at approximately 32-34x consensus 2026 EPS estimates of $13.50-$14.00, considered reasonable given durable growth in cloud, productivity software, and AI. The company generates robust free cash flow (over $80 billion annually) and maintains a pristine balance sheet with more than $80 billion in cash and short-term investments.

Key growth drivers include:
– Azure’s continued outperformance versus AWS and Google Cloud in AI workloads.
– Microsoft 365 Copilot, now used by millions of paid enterprise seats and expanding into consumer and small-business segments.
– GitHub Copilot, which has surpassed 1.8 million paid subscribers.
– Xbox and gaming, bolstered by the Activision Blizzard acquisition and Game Pass growth.

Challenges persist. Regulatory scrutiny continues in the EU and U.S. over cloud licensing practices and the OpenAI partnership. Competition in AI from Google, Amazon, and emerging players remains intense, while macroeconomic factors — including new tariffs implemented February 24, 2026 — could raise hardware and energy costs for data centers.

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Institutional ownership is strong, with Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street holding significant stakes. Insider sales have been routine, but no major red flags have emerged.

Looking ahead, the next major update is fiscal Q3 2026 earnings, expected late April 2026. Investors will seek confirmation of Azure AI momentum, Copilot adoption metrics, and any new AI product launches or partnerships. The March quarter guidance range leaves room for upside surprises if AI services continue to accelerate.

Microsoft stock balances stability and high-growth potential. Its diversified revenue streams, massive installed base (more than 1.5 billion monthly active Windows devices and hundreds of millions of Microsoft 365 users), and leadership in enterprise AI position it as a core holding for long-term investors, even as valuation debates and macro crosscurrents introduce near-term volatility.

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SoFi Technologies (SOFI) Stock Climbs 2.1% to $14.85 as Q4 Results Show Record Revenue

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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says the US tech giant plans to invest $3 billion in India on AI and cloud infrastructure over the next two years

SoFi Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ: SOFI) shares rose 2.1% on Monday, February 23, 2026, closing at $14.85 after trading in a range of $14.52 to $15.12. The gain came as investors digested the fintech company’s strong fourth-quarter 2025 results reported earlier in February and looked ahead to continued member and product growth in 2026.

SoFi Technologies
SoFi Technologies

SoFi’s market capitalization stood at approximately $15.8 billion at Monday’s close, reflecting a recovery from lows near $6 in mid-2025. The stock has surged more than 140% over the past 12 months and is up roughly 35% year-to-date in 2026, driven by accelerating profitability, diversification beyond lending, and optimism around the company’s “one-stop-shop” digital banking platform.

The latest catalyst was SoFi’s Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings release on January 27, 2026. The company reported record quarterly revenue of $734 million (up 48% year-over-year) and full-year revenue of $2.55 billion (up 44%). Adjusted net revenue reached $760 million in Q4, while adjusted EBITDA hit $210 million (up 141%) and the company generated GAAP net income of $332 million for the year — its first full year of profitability.

Member growth remained robust, with 10.9 million total members at year-end (up 34% year-over-year) and 8.1 million products (up 44%). Average revenue per active member rose to $92, reflecting cross-selling success across lending, financial services, and technology platforms. The company added 560,000 new members in Q4 alone, the strongest quarterly addition on record.

CEO Anthony Noto highlighted diversification as a key driver. Non-lending segments — including SoFi Money (checking/savings), Invest, Credit Card, and Galileo technology platform — now account for more than 40% of adjusted net revenue, up from less than 20% two years ago. Galileo processed $208 billion in annualized payment volume in Q4, up 60%, while SoFi Invest assets under management reached $28 billion.

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The company also showcased strength in personal loans and student loan refinancing, with originations totaling $5.9 billion in Q4 (up 62%). SoFi maintained strong credit performance, with personal loan delinquencies and charge-offs remaining below industry averages despite a higher-rate environment.

Guidance for 2026 calls for full-year adjusted net revenue of $3.235 billion to $3.310 billion (27-30% growth), adjusted EBITDA of $875 million to $895 million, and GAAP net income of $320 million to $340 million. Management reiterated its long-term target of $10 billion+ in adjusted net revenue and 50%+ EBITDA margins by 2030, with a path to consistent GAAP profitability.

Analyst reaction was largely positive. Consensus rating is Moderate Buy, with an average 12-month price target around $16.50-$18.00 (implying 11-21% upside from current levels). Recent updates include Keefe, Bruyette & Woods raising its target to $18 from $15 (Outperform), while Piper Sandler maintained Overweight at $20, citing durable member growth and margin expansion. A few firms, including Barclays, hold Equal-Weight ratings with targets near $14, expressing caution over competitive pressures in lending and potential regulatory risks.

SoFi’s valuation trades at a forward price-to-sales multiple of about 4.8x 2026 estimates, considered reasonable for a high-growth fintech with improving profitability. The company maintains a strong balance sheet with more than $2.5 billion in liquidity and no significant near-term debt maturities.

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Key growth drivers include:
– Continued member and product expansion through cross-selling (average products per member rising toward 1.0).
– Scaling of non-lending segments, particularly Galileo (serving fintech partners) and SoFi Invest.
– Potential new product launches in banking, insurance, and wealth management.
– International expansion, with early traction in Canada and plans for further markets.

Challenges remain. Interest rate sensitivity in lending, competition from traditional banks and other fintechs (Block, Affirm, Upstart), and regulatory scrutiny of student loan refinancing and crypto offerings could weigh on performance. Macroeconomic factors, including new tariffs implemented February 24, 2026, may indirectly affect consumer spending and borrowing demand.

Looking forward, the next major update is Q1 2026 earnings, expected late April or early May. Investors will watch for continued member adds, margin trends, and any new initiatives announced at investor days or conferences.

SoFi has transitioned from a student loan refinancing specialist to a full-service digital financial platform, with profitability now in sight. The stock’s recent strength reflects growing confidence in the company’s ability to execute its long-term vision, though volatility persists in a competitive and rate-sensitive environment.

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Lamborghini cancels electric vehicle, citing lack of consumer demand

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Lamborghini cancels electric vehicle, citing lack of consumer demand

Lamborghini will cancel its plan to release an electric vehicle in 2028 due to what the company is calling a lack of consumer demand.

Lamborghini CEO Stephan Winkelmann spoke with The Sunday Times in an interview and said the EV will no longer join its lineup after the company’s analysis found little demand for the EV, which was named the Lanzador in 2023. The company is owned by Volkswagen through its subsidiary, Audi.

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Winkelmann told The Sunday Times the “acceptance curve” for EVs in Lamborghini’s target market was “close to zero” and flattening amid a lack of interest from the luxury automaker’s clientele.

He added in the interview that EV development poses a risk of becoming an “expensive hobby” for Lamborghini and that the automaker plans to make traditional internal combustion engine vehicles “for as long as possible.”

STELLANTIS TAKES MASSIVE $26B HIT AFTER MOVING AWAY FROM EVS

Lamborghini vehicles at an auto show in Qatar.

A Lamborghini Revuelto high-performance electrified vehicle, left, and a Lamborghini Lanzador electric concept automobile on the opening day of the Geneva International Motor Show Qatar 2023, in Doha, Qatar. (Christopher Pike/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Winkelmann said Lamborghini customers appreciate an “emotional experience” with their cars and that “EVs, in their current form, struggle to deliver this specific emotional connection,” he told the outlet.

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With Lamborghini canceling plans to move forward with the EV, the company plans to replace it in the lineup with a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle (PHEV).

When asked in the interview whether the company will ever have an EV in its lineup, Winkelmann told the outlet, “Never say never, but only when the time is right. For the foreseeable future, only PHEVs. We will continue to develop electrification because we also need to be ready.”

LAMBORGHINI SET ANOTHER SALES RECORD IN 2022 AND IS SOLD OUT INTO 2024

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
VWAGY VOLKSWAGEN AG 12 +0.17 +1.44%

Lamborghini’s plan not to proceed with fielding EVs in its lineup for the foreseeable future comes as other major automakers have taken financial charges from shifting their EV roadmaps due to weaker than anticipated consumer demand.

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Stellantis, the parent company of brands such as Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram, announced a $26.5 billion charge earlier this month as it cut back its EV production. 

Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa said the “strategic reset” came after the company’s past assumptions about demand for EVs were “over optimistic.”

GM TAKES $7B HIT AFTER SHIFTING EV STRATEGY DUE TO SLOWING DEMAND

The Lamborghini Lanzador electric concept.

Lamborghini CEO Stephan Winkelmann next to a Lamborghini Lanzador electric concept during The Quail, A Motorsports Gathering in Carmel, Calif., Aug. 18, 2023. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

General Motors took a $7 billion financial charge after it adjusted its EV strategy to account for the weak demand.

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Ford CEO Jim Farley said earlier this month that the “customer has spoken” when discussing a net loss of $11.1 billion in the fourth quarter amid large writedowns to its EV programs.

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US imposes cyber-related sanctions on Russian, UAE individuals and entities

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US imposes cyber-related sanctions on Russian, UAE individuals and entities

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Adobe (ADBE) Stock Faces Sharp Decline Amid AI Disruption Concerns, Trading Near 52-Week Lows

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Executives at Silicon Valley chip maker Intel say 'fluid' US trade policies and regulatory moves have increased the chances of economic slowdown

Adobe Inc.’s stock has endured a steep sell-off in early 2026, dropping more than 26% year-to-date and trading near its 52-week low as investors grapple with fears that generative artificial intelligence could upend the company’s dominant position in creative software.

Adobe runs validation test
IBTimes UK

As of late February 2026, Adobe (NASDAQ: ADBE) shares hovered around $246 to $258, down from a 52-week high of approximately $453 reached in March 2025. The decline marks a roughly 43% retreat from that peak and reflects broader market skepticism about the software giant’s ability to fend off faster-moving AI competitors.

The slide accelerated in recent weeks, with the stock falling 17.7% over just 21 trading days in one stretch, according to market analysis. Analysts and investors point to intensifying competition from tools like Midjourney, Canva, and offerings from Microsoft, OpenAI, and Alphabet as key pressures. These platforms offer accessible, low-cost generative AI features that challenge Adobe’s traditional subscription-based model for products such as Photoshop, Illustrator, and Premiere Pro.

Despite the downturn, Adobe reported solid financial results for fiscal 2025, ending with record revenue. In its Q4 and full-year earnings released in December 2025, the company posted strong performance in its Digital Media and Digital Experience segments. Management guided for fiscal 2026 revenue between $25.9 billion and $26.1 billion, with non-GAAP earnings per share expected in the range of $23.30 to $23.50. Annualized recurring revenue (ARR) growth is targeted at 10.2%, driven largely by AI integrations.

Adobe has aggressively incorporated generative AI into its ecosystem through its Firefly family of models. Firefly, trained on licensed content including Adobe Stock images, powers features in Creative Cloud applications and aims to provide commercially safe AI generation for creators and enterprises. Recent partnerships underscore this push: In February 2026, Adobe expanded its collaboration with WPP to integrate Firefly Foundry—enabling custom, brand-safe generative models—into WPP’s marketing operations. The partnership focuses on agentic AI capabilities to scale content creation while maintaining brand integrity.

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Earlier collaborations, including with Cognizant for enterprise content and Runway for AI video tools, highlight Adobe’s strategy to embed AI deeply across workflows. The company also made Photoshop, Express, and Acrobat available within ChatGPT integrations in late 2025, broadening accessibility.

Yet Wall Street remains divided. Analyst downgrades have compounded the pressure. Jefferies lowered its price target on Adobe from $400 to $290 in February 2026, maintaining a Hold rating. Other firms, including Piper Sandler, shifted to Neutral stances amid concerns over decelerating ARR growth trends and potential disruption. Consensus among 26 analysts pegs the average 12-month price target at around $393, implying significant upside from current levels, though ratings lean toward Hold overall.

Some observers argue the sell-off has created a value opportunity. Adobe trades at a historically low multiple—around 12.4 times forward earnings in recent commentary—despite generating substantial cash flow and maintaining a market capitalization near $103 billion. Proponents highlight the company’s entrenched user base among professionals, sticky subscription revenue, and ongoing AI monetization potential. Firefly adoption in Creative Cloud Pro and Acrobat AI Assistant has shown traction, they note, and enterprise demand for responsible AI remains robust.

Critics counter that the competitive landscape has shifted fundamentally. Free or low-cost AI tools threaten to erode pricing power, while rivals innovate more nimbly. One analysis described Adobe as potentially a “value trap,” where cheap valuation masks structural challenges rather than signaling undervaluation.

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The next major catalyst arrives March 12, 2026, when Adobe reports first-quarter fiscal 2026 results. Investors will scrutinize updates on ARR momentum, Firefly usage metrics, and any revisions to full-year guidance. Positive surprises on AI-driven growth could spark a rebound; further signs of slowdown might extend the downturn.

Adobe’s 2026 outlook also includes broader industry reports. The company’s Digital Trends 2026 report, released in early 2026, emphasized generative and agentic AI’s role in customer experience, though it noted foundational gaps like fragmented data and uneven executive-practitioner alignment. Separately, the 2026 Creative Trends forecast highlighted innovation balanced with authenticity, positioning Adobe’s tools as central to responsible content creation.

For now, Adobe navigates a pivotal moment. Its legacy as a creative software leader remains intact, bolstered by decades of innovation and a vast ecosystem. But in an era of rapid AI advancement, proving that its integrated, ethical approach can sustain premium pricing and growth will determine whether the current weakness proves temporary or signals deeper shifts.

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