Business
StubHub to refund $10M to consumers over FTC hidden fees accusation
OutKick founder Clay Travis joins ‘Varney & Co.’ to comment on sports streaming and a report of Justice Department’s probing the NFL over streaming deals.
StubHub will refund $10 million to consumers and revamp how it displays ticket prices after the Federal Trade Commission accused the company of deceptively advertising live-event tickets without fully disclosing mandatory fees upfront.
“The Commission’s Fees Rule makes it very clear that the total price of live-event tickets must be disclosed up-front to enable consumers to make fully informed purchasing decisions,” FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection Director Christopher Mufarrige wrote in a statement. “Price transparency is essential to a free and competitive marketplace. Today’s settlement underscores the Commission’s commitment to ensuring that consumers pay the price they are promised.”
The company had advertised ticket prices on its website during a three-day stretch last May “without clearly and conspicuously disclosing up-front how much consumers actually would pay, including all mandatory fees,” the FTC wrote in a complaint and proposed settlement filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
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The window of a StubHub office in midtown Manhattan.
A StubHub spokesperson said the company disagreed with the FTC’s view of the case but is refunding a portion of affected buyers’ fees to address the agency’s concerns.
“This settlement covers a limited number of transactions, spanning just three days in May 2025, where some listings on our site may have displayed ticket prices exclusive of fees,” the spokesperson said.
The agency began enforcing its “Fees Rule” in May of 2025, requiring businesses to clearly disclose the total price of live-event tickets.
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The FTC said it had sent a warning letter to the ticketing platform after the rule was formed.
Through this settlement, the company will provide monetary relief to eligible consumers and the order also requires StubHub to disclose the total price more prominently on its platform.
The agency has increased its enforcement efforts following the Trump administration’s executive order on ticketing in March of last year, which directs the FTC to “take appropriate action … to ensure price transparency at all stages of the ticket-purchase process, including the secondary ticketing market.”
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“My administration is committed to making as accessible as possible the arts and entertainment that enrich Americans’ lives,” Trump’s order said. “The rent-seeking behaviors surrounding the ticketing industry are contrary to this goal. They are detrimental to consumers and capitalize on market distortions that must not be allowed to persist.”
The FTC highlighted sales of high-demand NFL tickets around May 14, 2025, when the league schedule was announced, as an example of the alleged violations.
The settlement would require StubHub to fund a $10 million consumer redress program for eligible buyers who purchased tickets for U.S. live events between May 12 and May 14, 2025. Within 90 days of the order, the company must provide refunds to two groups: consumers whose total ticket price was not disclosed on the initial pricing display, and all other consumers who bought tickets during that period.

Andrew Ferguson became the FTC chair under President Donald Trump’s administration, putting into action a long-sought attack on junk fees and a lack of transparency from the previous administration of former President Joe Biden. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Getty / Getty Images)
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Beyond the monetary relief, the proposed order would bar StubHub from misrepresenting the total price of goods or services, the nature or amount of fees, the final payment amount, and other material facts, including refund and cancellation terms.
The commission voted 2-0 to authorize the complaint and stipulated final order. The case was filed in federal court in the Southern District of New York. The settlement will take effect if approved by a district court judge.
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The proposed issue of the Indore-based firm, owner of the ‘Pushp Masale‘ brand, is expected to be a mix of fresh issue and offer for sale, according to multiple sources. ICICI Securities and IIFL Capital Services are said to be the book-running lead managers for the issue.
Emails sent to the company and the bankers went unanswered.
Pushp’s closest listed peer is Orkla India, the Norwegian-owned parent of MTR Masala, which launched its ₹1,667 crore IPO in October 2025.
Shares of Orkla India with a market capitalisation of ₹8671 crore are down nearly 10% since listing in November, 2025.
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Political turmoil haunts emerging market investors
With just weeks to go until key presidential votes, markets in Colombia and Peru are selling off as traders recalculate odds of left-wing candidates prevailing. Bolivian bonds have tumbled as street protests against the government threaten supplies of food and medicine to the nation’s capital. In Turkey, markets tanked after a court removed the leader of the country’s main opposition party.
The episodes are a fresh reminder of underlying risks that still plague the asset class, which has delivered strong returns for investors in the past year – even as tensions in the Middle East rattled global markets.
“Political risk manifests itself when the macro is under pressure, and in an environment where all the prices are going up, especially in oil-importing economies and poor countries the issues flare up, they come to the fore more vividly,” said Francesc Balcells, chief investment officer at FIM Partners, whose firm oversees $5 billion.
The political jitters are not contained to Latin America. In Malaysia too, markets were briefly roiled after Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim raised the prospect of a snap election as friction with the ruling coalition deepened.
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Business
Bernie Sanders warns AI controlled by billionaires will replace workers
Sen. Bernie Sanders said artificial intelligence and robotics should benefit workers — not billionaires — while warning that AI bots could worsen loneliness and replace human relationships among young people. (Credit: @SenatorSanders via YouTube)
Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., warned Sunday that artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics could replace American workers and even damage children’s social development if the technology is controlled by billionaires prioritizing profits over people.
Speaking at a “Fight Oligarchy” rally in Maine, the Vermont independent argued that AI could deepen economic inequality and worsen an ongoing mental health crisis among young people.
“Kids are lonelier and lonelier,” Sanders said. “I do not want the next generation to have as their friends AI bots. I want them to have other kids, other human beings as their friends.”
Sanders said artificial intelligence and robotics are poised to become “the most transformative economic revolution in the history of this country” and warned that the technology could eliminate jobs across multiple industries.
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Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks during a “Fight Oligarchy” rally in Orono, Maine, where he warned that artificial intelligence and robotics could replace workers and deepen economic inequality. (Fox News / Fox News)
“What is the function of AI and robotics?” Sanders asked the crowd. “It is to replace human labor.”
The senator pointed to automation in manufacturing and the future expansion of driverless vehicles as examples of looming disruptions to the workforce.
“Truck drivers and cab drivers, Uber drivers, Lyft drivers, etc. will be losing their jobs in the not too immediate future,” Sanders said.
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Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks during a “Fight Oligarchy” rally in Orono, Maine, where he warned that artificial intelligence and robotics could replace workers and deepen economic inequality. (Fox News / Fox News)
While Sanders acknowledged AI could provide benefits, including reducing the workweek while maintaining wages, he argued the technology must be regulated to ensure it benefits workers rather than wealthy tech executives.
“What we have got to do is make sure that AI and robotics work for all of the people, not just the billionaires who are developing that technology,” he said.
Sanders also warned about the potential societal impacts of artificial intelligence, including misinformation and growing social isolation among children.
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Meta is reportedly considering layoffs that could affect up to 20% of its workforce as the company invests heavily in artificial intelligence infrastructure. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
“If AI undermines our democracy by putting stuff on screens in which you cannot tell truth from fiction, that’s a bad thing,” Sanders said.
The senator specifically criticized Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, claiming corporate leaders are prioritizing profits over workers as AI rapidly expands.
“These guys are in it for the money,” Sanders said. “They want more wealth and more power, and they do not care what happens to workers.”
The remarks came during Sanders’ latest stop on his nationwide “Fight Oligarchy” tour, which has focused heavily on wealth inequality, corporate power and opposition to President Donald Trump.
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During the speech, Sanders also accused billionaires and superPACs of trying to “own and control the United States Congress” and called the U.S. political system increasingly dominated by wealthy interests.
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