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UnitedHealth Group (UNH) earnings Q4 2025
UnitedHealth Group Inc. signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
UnitedHealth Group on Tuesday posted a modest fourth-quarter earnings beat, but issued soft revenue guidance, as the parent company of the nation’s largest private insurer works to turn itself around amid higher-than-expected medical costs.
Here’s what the company reported for the fourth quarter compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: $2.11 adjusted vs. $2.10 expected
- Revenue: $113.2 billion vs. $113.82 billion expected
The results come two days after UnitedHealth CEO Stephen Hemsley and other chief executives of Minnesota’s largest businesses banded together to sign an open letter calling for an “immediate deescalation of tensions” in the state after federal immigration agents fatally shot U.S. citizen Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse.
The company posted fourth-quarter net income of $10 million, or 1 cent per share, compared with $5.54 billion, or $5.98 per share, in the year-ago period. Excluding items like business divestitures, restructuring and costs related to a massive cyberattack on its business unit Change Healthcare, UnitedHealth earned $2.11 per share.
Revenue climbed from $100.81 billion in the prior-year quarter.
UnitedHealth is banking on a new leadership team to carry out a turnaround plan. The strategy involves shrinking membership, raising prices, cutting benefits and increasing transparency to restore profitability — along with the company’s reputation — after a series of hurdles over the last two years.
UnitedHealth expects 2026 revenue to exceed $439 billion, a 2% year-over-year decline that reflects “right-sizing across the enterprise,” the company said in a release. That comes far below the $454.6 billion in sales that analysts were expecting for the year.
“It’s the first time in a decade that UnitedHealth Group has had declining revenue,” CFO Wayne DeVeydt said in an interview, referring to the sales guidance.
He pointed to three factors driving the expected decline, including the company’s divestitures in the fourth quarter and others set for later this year, such as its operations in the U.K. and South America. He also pointed to a “fairly sizable” overall U.S. membership decline of more than 3 million in 2026.
“I would say that in the fourth quarter, we righted the ship in the sense that we removed through the friction, obviously, South America, European operations,” he said. “We are focusing on American domestic businesses and we have essentially strengthened the balance sheet and repositioned the company for the historical growth that investors have seen.”
The third factor is that 2026 is the final year of the transition to Medicare’s new coding system – known as V28 – which has reduced payments to insurers by changing how patient diagnoses are weighted, DeVeydt said. That will translate to a $6 billion revenue hit, $2 billion of which will impact the company’s insurer, UnitedHealthcare, with the rest affecting its Optum health-care unit, he noted.
On Monday, shares of UnitedHealth and other health insurers plunged after the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services proposed nearly flat payment rates for insurers in Medicare Advantage, the privately run insurance program that now covers more than half of all Medicare beneficiaries.
That closely watched government payment rate determines how much insurers can charge for monthly premiums and plan benefits they offer — and ultimately helps to shape their profits.
Medical costs from Medicare Advantage patients have spiked over the last two years as more older adults return to hospitals to undergo procedures they had delayed during the pandemic, such as joint and hip replacements. In the fourth quarter, those medical costs were “still elevated and high but not growing beyond expectations,” DeVeydt said.
For 2026, UnitedHealth expects its insurance segment’s medical benefit ratio — a measure of total medical expenses paid relative to premiums collected — to come in at 88.8%, plus or minus 50 basis points. That would be an improvement from the 89.1% ratio reported for 2025. A lower ratio typically indicates that the company collected more in premiums than it paid out in benefits, resulting in higher profitability.
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As temperatures continue to rise, JM Financial has listed stocks under its coverage with an upside potential of up to 30%. Despite a relatively mild start to the summer, largely due to frequent rainfall from western disturbances, the recent shift in weather patterns has led to a steady rise in temperatures, boosting expectations of higher power demand.
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50 Most Listened Songs on Spotify in 2026 So Far
Here is a full list of the 50 most listened songs on Spotify in 2026 so far (as of mid-April 2026). This combines all-time most-streamed catalog giants with the strongest-performing 2025-2026 releases and current global chart momentum.

AFP
All-Time Most Streamed Songs (Lifetime Leaders Still Dominating Daily Plays)
- Blinding Lights — The Weeknd
- Shape of You — Ed Sheeran
- Sweater Weather — The Neighbourhood
- Starboy (feat. Daft Punk) — The Weeknd
- As It Was — Harry Styles
- Someone You Loved — Lewis Capaldi
- Sunflower — Post Malone & Swae Lee
- Die With A Smile — Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
- BIRDS OF A FEATHER — Billie Eilish
- APT. — ROSÉ & Bruno Mars
Top New & Surging Songs of 2026 (Strongest 2026 Releases by Streams & Chart Momentum)
- End of Beginning — Djo
- The Fate of Ophelia — Taylor Swift
- Golden — HUNTR/X
- Man I Need — Olivia Dean
- back to friends — sombr
- WHERE IS MY HUSBAND! — (viral 2026 breakout)
- So Easy (To Fall In Love) — Olivia Dean
- Ordinary — Alex Warren
- Eternity — Alex Warren & Gigi Perez
- Homewrecker — sombr
- I Just Might — Bruno Mars
- Risk It All — Bruno Mars
- Stateside (feat. Zara Larsson) — PinkPantheress
- Babydoll — Dominic Fike
- The Romantic — Bruno Mars
- Fancy Some More? — (2026 hit)
- The Life of a Showgirl — (viral entry)
- Sports car — Tate McRae
- Opalite — Miley Cyrus
- Handlebars (feat. Dua Lipa) — (2026 collaboration)
- SWIM — BTS
- Beauty And A Beat (feat. Nicki Minaj) — Justin Bieber
- American Girls — Harry Styles
- Lush Life — (catalog resurgence)
- Every Breath You Take — The Police (catalog surge)
- Mystical Magical — Benson Boone
- DAISIES — (2026 rising track)
- Sapphire — (new 2026 entry)
- Azizam — Ed Sheeran
- Little Things — Ella Mai
- YUKON — Justin Bieber
- Take My Hand — Nola
- The Dead Dance — Lady Gaga
- Manchild — Sabrina Carpenter
- Aperture — (2026 release)
- CHANEL — (viral 2026 track)
- Let Down — (March 2026 standout)
- Gnarly — (March 2026 hit)
- party addict — (viral short-form hit)
- Nope your too late i already died — (meme-driven track)
- The Boy Who Played the Harp — (storytelling viral song)
- You’ll Be Alright, Kid (Chapter 1) — (2025-2026 crossover)
- HIT ME HARD AND SOFT — Billie Eilish (ongoing catalog strength)
- The Life of a Showgirl — (repeated strong performer)
- Fancy Some More? — (recent daily chart riser)
- Homewrecker — sombr (consistent 2026 playlist staple)
- Eternity — Alex Warren & Gigi Perez (emotional ballad surge)
- Ordinary — Alex Warren (steady climber)
- back to friends — sombr (indie breakout)
These tracks reflect a mix of evergreen catalog giants that still rack up millions of daily streams and fresh 2026 hitsdriven by TikTok virality, playlist placement, and strong artist campaigns. Bruno Mars, Taylor Swift, Olivia Dean, Alex Warren, and sombr appear frequently across current “HITS 2026” and “Global Top 50 | 2026 Hits” playlists.
Catalog songs like “Blinding Lights” and “Shape of You” continue to lead all-time totals (over 5 billion and 4.8 billion streams respectively), while 2026-specific standouts such as “End of Beginning,” “The Fate of Ophelia,” and Bruno Mars’ new singles dominate early-year and daily charts.
Business
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Live Nation and Ticketmaster ruled an illegal monopoly as US jury sides with States
The world’s largest live entertainment company has been dealt a bruising blow after a Manhattan federal jury ruled that Live Nation and its Ticketmaster subsidiary operated an unlawful monopoly over major concert venues in the United States, a verdict that is likely to reverberate through the global ticketing industry and intensify scrutiny of the firm’s dominance in markets including the United Kingdom.
After four days of deliberation, jurors sided with more than 30 US states that had pressed ahead with the civil action, concluding that the concert colossus had smothered competition across the live events business. The jury calculated that Ticketmaster had overcharged buyers by $1.72 per ticket, with the presiding judge still to determine the final quantum of damages.
For an industry that has long drawn the ire of fans, independent promoters and smaller venue operators, the ruling lands as something of a vindication. Counsel for the states, Jeffrey Kessler, described Live Nation in closing submissions as a “monopolistic bully” that had systematically pushed up prices for consumers. He told the court that Ticketmaster controls 86 per cent of the concert market and 73 per cent of the wider live events market once sport is included, numbers that underscore just how comprehensively the business has come to dominate the sector since Ticketmaster and Live Nation merged in 2010.
Live Nation, which generates more than $22bn in annual revenues, was unrepentant. Its lawyer, David Marriott, argued in his summation that the company’s scale was a consequence of operational excellence rather than anti-competitive conduct, telling jurors that “success is not against the antitrust laws in the United States”. The company has confirmed it intends to appeal, stating that it remains confident the “ultimate outcome” will not materially depart from a parallel settlement already reached with the US Department of Justice.
That settlement, announced only days into the trial after the Trump administration took over the federal case, obliges Live Nation to create a $280m fund for participating states, caps service fees at certain amphitheatres and opens a limited pathway for rival platforms such as SeatGeek and AXS to compete at some venues. Crucially, however, it stops short of forcing a structural break-up of Live Nation and Ticketmaster, a remedy that many industry observers and smaller ticketing challengers had been hoping for.
A handful of states signed up to the settlement, but the majority pressed on to trial, arguing that Washington had extracted insufficient concessions from the concert giant. Their gamble has now paid off. The verdict revives debate over whether a clean separation of Ticketmaster from Live Nation’s promotions and venue-operating arms remains the only effective remedy for a market that independent promoters have long claimed is tilted decisively against them.
The trial itself provided a rare look behind the curtain of an opaque business. Chief executive Michael Rapino took the stand and was questioned on a catalogue of controversies, including the 2022 Taylor Swift ticketing fiasco that drew political fury on both sides of the Atlantic. Rapino attributed that episode to a cyberattack. Less easily explained were internal messages from Live Nation executive Benjamin Baker, which surfaced during the proceedings, describing some prices as “outrageous”, branding customers “so stupid” and boasting that the firm was “robbing them blind”. Baker testified that the remarks had been “very immature and unacceptable”.
Regulatory pressure on Ticketmaster is building on multiple fronts. Last May the Federal Trade Commission introduced rules requiring upfront disclosure of concert ticket fees. Ticketmaster responded by scrapping its end-of-transaction processing fee, only for a Guardian investigation to reveal that the company had simultaneously increased other charges to plug the revenue hole. In an email to the Findlay Toyota Center in Arizona, the firm reportedly stated that it “must adjust fees to offset the revenue loss”. Former regulators have suggested the practice may breach the FTC’s ban on misleading charges, while senators including Connecticut Democrat Richard Blumenthal have accused the company of running “bait-and-switch” tactics and manipulating the market.
The saga has deep roots. Grunge pioneers Pearl Jam famously lodged an antitrust complaint against Ticketmaster with the Department of Justice back in the 1990s, only for regulators to walk away. Three decades on, the mood music has shifted. For independent UK promoters, smaller venues and the growing cohort of challenger ticketing platforms eyeing cross-Atlantic expansion, the verdict in Manhattan is the clearest signal yet that the ground beneath the live entertainment industry’s dominant player is finally beginning to shift.
Business
UK Video Games Industry Risks Talent Exodus Without Tax Reform
Britain’s video games industry is at risk of haemorrhaging talent and intellectual property to more nimble overseas rivals unless Whitehall moves swiftly to sharpen its tax and investment incentives, a leading advisory firm has warned.
With France, Ireland and Australia aggressively courting studios through increasingly generous reliefs, the UK’s reputation as a global gaming powerhouse, home to franchises from Grand Theft Auto to Tomb Raider, could begin to slip, according to audit, tax and business advisory firm Blick Rothenberg.
Speaking during London Games Festival week, Mandy Girder, a partner at the firm, said the sector urgently needed the Government to “level up” its support if Britain was to keep its seat at the top table of global games development.
“Without decisive action from the Government, the UK risks losing both talent and intellectual property to other countries,” she said. “France, Australia and Ireland are offering increasingly generous and accessible incentive regimes designed to attract investment.”
The London Games Festival, now a fixture in the industry calendar, has put a spotlight on British creativity, but Girder cautioned that creativity alone would not keep the UK ahead of the pack.
“The festival highlights the UK’s undeniable creative strength, but creativity alone will not secure long-term global leadership,” she said. “The Government must step up tax relief and investment in the industry.”
While the UK’s Video Games Expenditure Credit and broader creative industry reliefs have underpinned growth in recent years, Girder warned that the regime was increasingly seen by studios as cumbersome when set beside rivals abroad.
“Headline rates are competitive, but the system is often viewed as more complex and, in some cases, less flexible or accessible than the incentive regimes in countries such as Ireland and Australia,” she said.
Recent tightening of eligibility rules is already beginning to bite. Under the revised framework, at least 10 per cent of development costs must now be incurred in the UK rather than across the wider European Economic Area, a change intended to bolster domestic employment but which has tripped up projects structured around continental teams.
“Whilst intended to encourage the use of UK-based talent, this has been restrictive on the number of successful claims for projects already under way and structured around European teams,” Girder said. “It has led to a decline in the availability of these tax credits.”
She is calling for a simpler, more generous regime, backed by targeted incentives explicitly designed to draw inward investment.
“Simplifying and enhancing the UK’s tax framework, alongside introducing targeted incentives to attract inward investment, would significantly strengthen the UK’s global positioning,” she said.
Access to finance is another persistent headache, particularly for studios trying to move beyond the start-up phase. While seed capital is relatively easy to come by, scale-up funding, the kind that allows mid-sized studios to expand internationally and retain their IP, remains elusive.
“Early-stage funding is relatively accessible, but mid-sized studios often face barriers when seeking the scale-up capital needed to expand internationally and retain valuable intellectual property,” Girder said. “This funding gap risks limiting the UK’s ability to fully capitalise on its creative strengths.”
The Government’s newly launched Creative Industries Sector Plan, which opens £28.5 million in funding for the next generation of games developers, is a step in the right direction, Girder conceded.
“The UK has long been recognised as a creative powerhouse, home to world-class studios and exceptional talent behind globally successful titles such as Grand Theft Auto and Tomb Raider,” she said. “The sector plan is a positive step forward.”
But she questioned whether the intervention goes far enough to tackle the structural weaknesses in the industry’s funding pipeline.
“The question remains whether this level of support is sufficient to address the structural funding challenges facing the sector,” she said. “A more comprehensive approach, combining competitive tax relief, grants and alternative financing options, will be essential to unlock sustained growth.”
Her message to ministers was blunt. “Now is the time for industry and Government to work together to simplify incentives, unlock scale-up funding, and ensure the UK remains a destination of choice for global games investment.
“The London Games Festival turns the spotlight on the UK’s role as a leading force in the global video games market, and on the steps the Government needs to take to secure its future competitiveness.”
Business
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Bangkok’s Songkran 2026 Attracts Nearly 5 Million Amid Safety and Waste Challenges
Nearly 5 million people celebrated Songkran in Bangkok this year — a 93.4% increase from 2025 — with Siam Square, Iconsiam, and Silom Road being the top venues, while motorcycle accidents accounted for 85% of the 20 road fatalities.
Key Details
- Attendance surged to 4,958,965 across 94 venues, up from 2,564,663 in 2025.
- Siam Square led with 1.5 million visitors, followed by Iconsiam (1.47 million) and Silom Road (652,974).
- 20 people died in 18 road accidents; 17 fatalities involved motorcyclists, 9 of whom weren’t wearing helmets.
- Thung Khru and Prawet districts recorded the most deaths (3 and 2, respectively).
- Waste generation hit 336 tonnes, up from 250.5 tonnes last year, with Khao San Road producing the most (102.46 tonnes).
Despite the festive atmosphere, the data underscores persistent road safety risks and environmental strain during Thailand’s largest annual celebration.
The 93.4% surge in Bangkok Songkran attendance this year — reaching nearly 5 million people — reflects broader national trends of increased domestic and international tourism, improved event coordination, and the festival’s growing global appeal as a cultural and economic driver.
Enhanced planning, clearer zoning, and stronger inter-agency cooperation in Bangkok also contributed to the record turnout. Additionally, flagship events like the Maha Songkran World Water Festival at Benjakitti Park drew over 108,000 visitors, including more than 52,000 foreign tourists, signaling strong international interest.
The Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) expects the Songkran 2026 festival to generate more than 30.35 billion baht in tourism revenue, marking a 6% increase from the previous year.
Governor Thapanee Kiatphaibool stated that this growth is driven by approximately 500,000 foreign visitors contributing 8.1 billion baht and 5.96 million domestic trips adding 22.25 billion baht. While the TAT remains confident in these figures, the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (UTCC) lowered its overall festival spending forecast to 120–125 billion baht due to rising diesel prices and economic caution. Despite these varied projections, major hotspots like Siam Square, Iconsiam, and Silom Road saw millions of participants, reflecting a vibrant atmosphere across the country.
What was the total waste collected during Bangkok’s Songkran 2026?
Bangkok’s Songkran 2026 celebrations resulted in a total of 336 tonnes of waste collected at major celebration sites between April 11 and 15. This figure marks a significant increase from the 250.5 tonnes recorded during the same period in 2025.
According to the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA), Khao San Road was the primary contributor to this total, producing 102.46 tonnes of waste. Other high-volume areas included Silom Road, which generated 86.17 tonnes, and ICONSIAM, which produced 58.7 tonnes. On the first day of major water-splashing activities alone, the city collected 86.32 tonnes, of which approximately 82% was general waste, while the remainder consisted of recyclable and food waste.
To address environmental concerns, the city implemented a recycling initiative for plastic water guns, encouraging revellers to donate unwanted items at nine locations, including Siam Square and CentralWorld. These collected weapons are intended to be processed into naphtha for the production of plastic pellets, which can then be molded into new products like chairs and containers.
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