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Trump offers oil executives ‘unprecedented security’ in exchange for investing in Venezuela | Latest updates on Donald Trump

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United States President Donald Trump has called on oil executives to rush back into Venezuela as the White House looks to quickly secure $100bn in investments to revive the country’s ability to fully tap into its expansive reserves of petroleum.

Trump, as he opened the meeting with oil industry executives on Friday, sought to assure them that they need not be sceptical of quickly investing in and, in some cases, returning to the South American country with a history of state asset seizures as well as ongoing US sanctions and the current political uncertainty.

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“You have total safety,” Trump told the executives. “You’re dealing with us directly and not dealing with Venezuela at all. We don’t want you to deal with Venezuela.”

Trump added: “Our giant oil companies will be spending at least $100bn of their money, not the government’s money. They don’t need government money. But they need government protection.”

Trump welcomed the oil executives to the White House after US forces earlier on Friday seized their fifth tanker over the past month that has been linked to Venezuelan oil. The action reflected the determination of the US to fully control the exporting, refining and production of Venezuelan petroleum, a sign of the Trump administration’s plans for ongoing involvement in the sector as it seeks commitments from private companies.

“At least 100 Billion Dollars will be invested by BIG OIL, all of whom I will be meeting with today at The White House,” Trump said on Friday in a predawn social media post.

The White House said it invited oil executives from 17 companies, including Chevron, which still operates in Venezuela, as well as ExxonMobil and ConocoPhillips, which both had oil projects in the country that were lost as part of a 2007 nationalisation of private businesses under former President Nicolas Maduro’s predecessor, Hugo Chavez.

“If we look at the commercial constructs and frameworks in place today in Venezuela, today it’s un-investable,” said Darren Woods, ExxonMobil CEO. “And so significant changes have to be made to those commercial frameworks, the legal system, there has to be durable investment protections and there has to be change to the hydrocarbon laws in the country.”

Benjamin Radd, a senior fellow at the UCLA Burkle Center for International Relations, told Al Jazeera that he had “noted the hesitation and less-than-full-throated enthusiasm for re-entering the Venezuelan market”, citing Woods, who told the gathering that the company had its assets there seized twice already.

“The bottom line is that until Trump can outline and provide assurances of a plan towards political stability, it will continue to be a risky endeavour for these oil companies to re-engage Venezuela. And what is there is a regime change in Iran in the days or weeks or months to come, and all of a sudden that re-emerges as a place where Western oil companies can do business? Even though the reserves don’t equal what Venezuela has, the risk is far less, and the infrastructure is more sound,” Radd said.

Other companies invited included Halliburton, Valero, Marathon, Shell, Singapore-based Trafigura, Italy-based Eni and Spain-based Repsol, as well as a vast swath of domestic and international companies with interests ranging from construction to the commodity markets.

Wait and see

Large US oil companies have so far largely refrained from affirming investments in Venezuela, as contracts and guarantees need to be in place. Trump has suggested that the US would help to backstop any investments.

Venezuela’s oil production has slumped below one million barrels per day (bpd). Part of Trump’s challenge to turn that around will be to convince oil companies that his administration has a stable relationship with Venezuela’s interim President Delcy Rodriguez, as well as protections for companies entering the market.

While Rodriguez has publicly denounced Trump and the abduction and ouster of Maduro, the US president has said that to date, Venezuela’s interim leader has been cooperating behind the scenes with his administration.

Most companies are in a wait-and-see mode as they await terms from the Venezuelans, stability and wait to find out how much the US government will actually help, said Rachel Ziemba, an adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security.

Those like Chevron that are already in there are in a better position to increase investments as they “already have sunk costs”, Ziemba pointed out.

Ziemba said she expects a partial ramp-up in the first half of this year as the volumes that were going to China – Venezuelan oil’s largest buyer – are redirected and sold via the US. “But long-term investments will be slow,” she said as companies wait to find out about US commitments and Venezuelan terms.

Tyson Slocum, director of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen’s energy programme, criticised the gathering and called the US military’s removal of Maduro “violent imperialism”. Slocum added that Trump’s goal appears to be to “hand billionaires control over Venezuela’s oil”.

So far, the US government has not said how the revenue from the sale of Venezuelan oil will be shared and what percentage of the sales would be given to Caracas.

Ziemba said she was worried that “if funds do not go to Venezuela for basic goods, among other local needs, there will be instability that will deepen the country’s economic crisis“.

In the news conference on Friday, Trump said the US had a formula for distributing payments. UCLA’s Radd said that “if the US can or will guarantee security and stability, it makes sense for it to expect a return on investment in that sense. But then this makes it sound more like a mafia-style ‘racket’ than a government-led operation”, he told Al Jazeera.

Meanwhile, the US and Venezuelan governments said on Friday they were exploring the possibility of restoring diplomatic relations between the two countries, and a delegation from the Trump administration arrived in the South American nation on Friday.

Trade Rumors Focus on One Key Wizards Player in Potential Trae Young Trade – Basketball Insiders

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Hawks and Wizards in Ongoing Discussions

Trade chatter around Trae Young has shifted into high gear as the 2026 NBA trade deadline approaches. Sources say the Atlanta Hawks and Washington Wizards have discussed a possible deal centered on Young’s move to Washington. These conversations are reportedly amicable and involve key pieces like CJ McCollum and potentially Corey Kispert as part of a return package for Atlanta.

The Wizards have legitimate interest, according to NBA insiders. They see Young as a player whose scoring and playmaking could lift their offense and help them build around a young core. Meanwhile, the Hawks appear willing to listen but have not yet agreed to terms. Atlanta might want additional player assets or draft capital along with McCollum to move forward.

Trae Young Trade Rumors Zero In on One Key Wizards Player

Why CJ McCollum Is Central to Trade Talks

At the heart of many trade scenarios is CJ McCollum, who now plays for the Wizards on an expiring contract. League sources suggest McCollum’s salary would help match Young’s contract in a swap, creating a workable framework for both teams.

McCollum brings veteran scoring, playmaking, and hard-nosed defense. That blend could help Atlanta maintain offensive balance and floor spacing after a Young departure. The Hawks would also gain more financial flexibility if McCollum’s contract clears soon, setting up the franchise for future maneuvers.

While McCollum remains the linchpin of this reported framework, the Wizards might sweeten offers with shooters like Kispert to balance the roster and match salary. The Hawks appear to value young players who can grow with their core rather than just expiring pieces.

Hawks Rumors Trae Young Trade Rejected By Kings Due To Contract, Style of Play

Young’s Perspective and Performance

Young has not publicly demanded a trade, but insiders say he is “open-minded to a new uniform” and increasingly aware of the Hawks’ direction. His contracting situation — including a $49 million player option for 2026-27 — complicates trade value and decision making.

This season hasn’t been smooth for the four-time All-Star. He has missed time due to injury and dealt with dips in shooting efficiency and assists compared to earlier seasons. Still, his career track record and elite playmaking make him intriguing to teams that need a lead guard.

What Happens Next

For now, the Wizards are widely seen as the most active suitor in talks involving Young. Washington’s interest and connection through executive Travis Schlenk — who once helped draft Young — give these rumors traction.

Atlanta will likely push for solid value in return, while Young considers what direction best suits his career. With the deadline looming, both teams could accelerate talks and finalize a deal in the weeks ahead.

The Stealthiest, Lightest Pickup Camper: The 90-Second Tent

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Depending on how you look at it, the all-new Camp Tonneau Tent could be called an integrated, fast-pitch truck tent, an ultralight, affordable pop-up pickup camper, or a tonneau cover that doubles as a truck-back shelter. Or, you could rightfully consider it all three. Weighing less than most rooftop tents and taking up far less space than a camper, the simple, no-frills solution is always at the ready for a camping trip but stows completely out of the way for unencumbered everyday commuting and cargo hauling. It sets up into a hybrid hard/soft-walled shelter in about a minute and a half.

The creator of Camp Tonneau Tents (CTT), Derek Milligan is far from the first to have the idea of a simple pickup tonneau cover that lifts and expands into a tent camper. Beyond the similar wedge-shaped homebuilt projects scattered around the likes of YouTube, Reddit and Pinterest, we know of past commercial builds based on the same general concept. Looking around the current marketplace, we also see a couple of tonneau covers that lift into cab-height caps (i.e. camper shells).

The Camp Tonneau Tent is a security cover that protects cargo in your pickup bed and a lightweight pop-up truck shelter for two

Camp Tonneau Tents

Heck, even Elon Musk once sketched out a very similar idea designed for the unique dimensions of the Cybertruck.

Milligan’s design essentially rolls a wedge-style body similar to those common on pickup camping toppers like those from Go Fast Camper or Catapult AV into a hinged, lift-up tonneau. It’s essentially a pop-up pickup topper that uses the truck bed as the entire living area, rather than squeezing in a sleeping platform over top it.

By dropping its roof down to tonneau height, CTT saves on materials and weight while offering a product it plans to retail at less than half the price of those taller alcove-style toppers. The design is also meant to improve aerodynamic performance, covering over the pickup box for smoother airflow, unlike toppers and RTTs that add drag by sticking out above the truck cab.

By folding the tent flat, the CTT keeps the truck bed wide open for carrying camping gear, luggage, mattresses, and everyday cargo
By folding the tent flat, the CTT keeps the truck bed wide open for carrying camping gear, luggage, mattresses, and everyday cargo

Camp Tonneau Tents

The Tonneau Tent itself is rather simple, storing a pair of fold-out sidewalls, extension tent fabric and frame poles inside the hinged hard cover. This keeps the bed free for using as a pickup truck during work hours, weekend projects, and when hauling coolers, duffels and gear to the campground.

When it’s time to pull off the road and spend the night, the Tonneau Tent sets up in a claimed 90 seconds. The cover itself lifts up into wedge form with the help of struts, and the tent fabric with integrated poles then pulls out and up, standing in place atop the open tailgate. The hard sidewalls swing out and secure inside tracks mounted atop the bed rails. As Milligan points out in a prototype demo, the tracks feature drainage holes on the outside to keep the water moving outward instead of pooling and potentially leaking inside.

The rails that secure atop the pickup bed sidewalls serve to hold the tonneau tent's hard walls in place
The rails that secure atop the pickup bed sidewalls serve to hold the tonneau tent’s hard walls in place

Camp Tonneau Tents

The inclusion of an outer extension tent ensures there’s plenty of room to sleep inside the pickup bed, even if it’s a 5-foot (1.5-m) short bed. It also takes advantage of the highest roof point to provide enough space to bring a pair of chairs up onto the truck bed and sit inside the tent, enjoying a shaded lounge area. The fabric extension tent walls zip to the hard walls over the truck bed, and the doors open and swing to the sides as needed.

If the Tonneau Tent looks a little rough in CTT’s materials, that’s because it’s still in the prototype stages. Milligan has validated that the design works as planned and is now moving to make a few alterations and finalize materials and specs. Plans call for the addition of features like an HVAC port, extended door awning, load-bearing tonneau construction with available crossbars, refined hardware for faster, smoother setup, and improved sealing. CTT wants to keep total weight between 80 and 100 lb (36 and 45 kg), about the same as a lightweight two-person rooftop wedge tent.

A better look at the large skylight panel that offers views of the stars
A better look at the large skylight panel that offers views of the stars

Camp Tonneau Tents

That’s a pretty significant list of to-dos that need doing and estimates that need finalizing, and some of the specs may ultimately get cut or altered before CTT is ready for production. Because of that, we wouldn’t be inclined to jump on a Kickstarter for a product at this early of a stage, but plenty of folks seem to disagree. CTT’s campaign has already glided past its US$30,000 goal after launching just a few days ago.

As far as pricing goes, CTT will need to walk a fine line. It’s ultimately offering the equivalent of a deconstructed rooftop tent that doubles as a tonneau cover. At the lowest $1,899 Kickstarter super-early bird base pledge, it fits right toward the middle of the two-person wedge RTT market – cheaper than premium-priced products like the iKamper BDV Duo or Mars Aeroblade but more expensive than lower-priced alternatives, including the Topoak Galaxy 2.0 and Naturnest Polaris 2.

If you add in a few hundred dollars on top of those RTT prices for the tonneau cover, the $1,899 for the CTT combo seems a solid deal, comparable to what you might spend on a two-person RTT and separate tonneau cover, minus the cost of a roof rack or pickup bed rack. And that’s how CTT bills it: cheaper, lighter, simpler and lower profile than buying an individual pickup bed rack, rooftop tent and tonneau cover, more comfortable than sleeping below your average truck shell.

Use a folding mattress as a sofa ...
Use a folding mattress as a sofa …

Camp Tonneau Tents

But then again, we’re still looking at a super-early-bird Kickstarter pledge, not the estimated $3,149 to $3,599 retail price, which varies depending on truck/bed size. That might still end up cheaper than buying the roof tent, pickup bed rack and tonneau cover all separately, but now you’ll want to really look more closely at convenience vs. price across a variety of product options.

Is the Tonneau Tent that much more convenient than carrying a basic $100 to $600 pickup truck tent and installing a standard tonneau? Is moving your cargo out and sleeping in the truck bed between wheel wells really worth the couple hundred bucks you might save versus buying a truck rack + RTT setup? Could you just mount the tent to the cab roof and cut the price of the rack out entirely? Could you skip on the tonneau cover? Would a new or used truck shell, with or without a tailgate tent extension, make more sense?

Finishing up set up involves pushing the tailgate tent's roof upward, which drops the orange hard walls down to bed rail level
Finishing up set up involves pushing the tailgate tent’s roof upward, which drops the orange hard walls down to bed rail level

Camp Tonneau Tents

As always, there’s no right answer for everyone. Plus, CTT does advertise a few additional advantages like the ability to sit inside the Tonneau Tent on a camping chair, which you wouldn’t have in a standard RTT, and the lack of a ladder for easier access in and out, particularly good for camping with a young child or dog. The low profile means it’ll be less cumbersome when you’re not camping. Compared to a ground tent, you’re up off the ground on a more level surface, surrounded on three sides by hard walls.

With that in mind, we wish Milligan and Co luck in getting this solution to market and maybe knocking retail price down with volume production. There’s still a ways to go, though, as the company’s plans call for a delivery start a year from now in January 2027, which will sadly fast-forward right past the three most comfortable seasons for camping in the back of a truck.

Source: Kickstarter

Venezuelans Struggle to Afford Food as Inflation Skyrockets to 682%, Resulting in Multiple Jobs

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At the White House, President Donald Trump vows American intervention in Venezuela will pour billions of dollars into the country’s infrastructure, revive its once-thriving oil industry and eventually deliver a new age of prosperity to the Latin American nation.

Here at a sprawling street market in the capital, though, utility worker Ana Calderón simply wishes she could afford the ingredients to make a pot of soup.

“Food is incredibly expensive,” says Calderón, noting rapidly rising prices that have celery selling for twice as much as just a few weeks ago and a kilogram (2 pounds) of meat going for more than $10, or 25 times the country’s monthly minimum wage. “Everything is so expensive.”

Venezuelans digesting news of the United States’ brazen capture of former President Nicolás Maduro are hearing grandiose promises of future economic prowess even as they live through the crippling economic realities of today.

“They know that the outlook has significantly changed but they don’t see it yet on the ground. What they’re seeing is repression. They’re seeing a lot of confusion,” says Luisa Palacios, a Venezuelan-born economist and former oil executive who is a research scholar at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University. “People are hopeful and expecting that things are going to change but that doesn’t mean that things are going to change right now.”

Whatever hope exists over the possibility of U.S. involvement improving Venezuela’s economy is paired with the crushing daily truths most here live. People typically work two, three or more jobs just to survive, and still cupboards and refrigerators are nearly bare. Children go to bed early to avoid the pang of hunger; parents choose between filling a prescription and buying groceries. An estimated eight in 10 people live in poverty.

It has led millions to flee the country for elsewhere.

Those who remain are concentrated in Venezuela’s cities, including its capital, Caracas, where the street market in the Catia neighborhood once was so busy that shoppers bumped into one another and dodged oncoming traffic. But as prices have climbed in recent days, locals have increasingly stayed away from the market stalls, reducing the chaos to a relative hush.

Neila Roa, carrying her 5-month-old baby, sells packs of cigarettes to passersby, having to monitor daily fluctuations in currency to adjust the price.

“Inflation and more inflation and devaluation,” Roa says. “It’s out of control.”

Roa could not believe the news of Maduro’s capture. Now, she wonders what will come of it. She thinks it would take “a miracle” to fix Venezuela’s economy.

“What we don’t know is whether the change is for better or for worse,” she says. “We’re in a state of uncertainty. We have to see how good it can be, and how much it can contribute to our lives.”

Trump has said the U.S. will distribute some of the proceeds from the sale of Venezuelan oil back to its population. But that commitment so far largely appears to be focused on America’s interests in extracting more oil from Venezuela, selling more U.S.-made goods to the country and repairing the electricity grid.

The White House is hosting a meeting Friday with U.S. oil company executives to discuss Venezuela, which the Trump administration has been pressuring to open its vast-but-struggling oil industry more widely to American investment and know-how. In an interview with The New York Times, Trump acknowledged that reviving the country’s oil industry would take years.

“The oil will take a while,” he said.

Venezuela has the world’s largest proven oil reserves. The country’s economy depends on them.

Maduro’s predecessor, the fiery Hugo Chávez, elected in 1998, expanded social services, including housing and education, thanks to the country’s oil bonanza, which generated revenues estimated at some $981 billion between 1999 and 2011 as crude prices soared. But corruption, a decline in oil production and economic policies led to a crisis that became evident in 2012.

Chávez appointed Maduro as his successor before dying of cancer in 2013. The country’s political, social and economic crisis, entangled with plummeting oil production and prices, marked the entirety of Maduro’s presidency. Millions were pushed into poverty. The middle class virtually disappeared. And more than 7.7 million people left their homeland.

Albert Williams, an economist at Nova Southeastern University, says returning the energy sector to its heyday would have a dramatic spillover effect in a country in which oil is the dominant industry, sparking the opening of restaurants, stores and other businesses. What’s unknown, he says, is whether such a revitalization happens, how long it would take and how a government built by Maduro will adjust to the change in power.

“That’s the billion-dollar question,” Williams says. “But if you improve the oil industry, you improve the country.”

The International Monetary Fund estimates Venezuela’s inflation rate is a staggering 682%, the highest of any country for which it has data. That has sent the cost of food beyond what many can afford.

Many public sector workers survive on roughly $160 per month, while the average private sector employee earned about $237 last year. Venezuela’s monthly minimum wage of 130 bolivars, or $0.40, has not increased since 2022, putting it well below the United Nations’ measure of extreme poverty of $2.15 a day.

The currency crisis led Maduro to declare an “economic emergency” in April.

Usha Haley, a Wichita State University economist who studies emerging markets, says for those hurting the most, there is no immediate sign of change.

“Short-term, most Venezuelans will probably not feel any economic relief,” she says. “A single oil sale will not fix the country’s rampant inflation and currency collapse. Jobs, prices, and exchange rates will probably not shift quickly.”

In a country that has seen as much strife as Venezuela has in recent years, locals are accustomed to doing what they have to in order to get through the day, so much so that many utter the same expression

“Resolver,” they say in Spanish, or “figure it out,” shorthand for the jury-rigged nature of life here, in which every transaction, from boarding a bus to buying a child’s medicine, involves a delicate calculation.

Here at the market, the smell of fish, fresh onions and car exhaust combine. Calderon, making her way through, faces freshly skyrocketing prices, saying “the difference is huge,” as the country’s official currency has rapidly declined against its unofficial one, the U.S. dollar.

Unable to afford all the ingredients for her soup, she left with a bunch of celery but no meat.

Trump requests $100 billion for Venezuela oil, however Exxon CEO claims the country is not a viable investment option.

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US President Donald Trump has asked for at least $100bn (£75bn) in oil industry spending for Venezuela, but received a lukewarm response at the White House as one executive warned the South American country was currently “un-investable”.

Bosses of the biggest US oil firms who attended the meeting acknowledged that Venezuela, sitting on vast energy reserves, represented an enticing opportunity.

But they said significant changes would be needed to make Venezuela an attractive investment. No major financial commitments were immediately forthcoming.

Trump has said he will unleash the South American nation’s oil after US forces seized its leader Nicolas Maduro in a 3 January raid on its capital.

“One of the things the United States gets out of this will be even lower energy prices,” Trump said in Friday’s meeting in the White House.

But the oil bosses present expressed caution.

Exxon’s chief executive Darren Woods said: “We have had our assets seized there twice and so you can imagine to re-enter a third time would require some pretty significant changes from what we’ve historically seen and what is currently the state.”

“Today it’s uninvestable.”

Venezuela has had a complicated relationship with international oil firms since oil was discovered in its territory more than 100 years ago.

Chevron is the last remaining major American oil firm still operating in the country.

A handful of companies from other countries, including Spain’s Repsol and Italy’s Eni, both of which were represented at the White House meeting, are also active.

Trump said his administration would decide which firms would be allowed to operate.

“You’re dealing with us directly. You’re not dealing with Venezuela at all. We don’t want you to deal with Venezuela,” he said.

The White House has said it is working to “selectively” roll back US sanctions that have restricted sales of Venezuelan oil.

Officials say they have been coordinating with interim authorities in the country, which is currently led by Maduro’s former second-in-command, Vice-President Delcy Rodríguez.

But they have also made clear they intend to exert control over the sales, as a way to maintain leverage over Rodríguez’s government.

The US this week has seized several oil tankers carrying sanctioned crude. American officials have said they are working to set up a sales process, which would deposit money raised into US-controlled accounts.

“We are open for business,” Trump said.

Venezuela’s oil production has been hit in recent decades by disinvestment and mismanagement – as well as US sanctions. At roughly one million barrels per day, the country accounts for less than 1% of global supply.

Chevron, which accounts for about a fifth of the country’s output, said it expected to bolster its production, building on its current presence, while Exxon said it was working to send in a technical team to assess the situation in the coming weeks.

Repsol, which currently boasts output of about 45,000 barrels per day, said it saw a path to triple its production in Venezuela over the next few years under the right conditions.

Executives at other firms also said Trump’s promises of change would encourage investment and they were hoping to seize the moment.

“We are ready to go to Venezuela,” said Bill Armstrong, who leads an independent oil and gas driller. “In real estate terms, it is prime real estate.”

But analysts say meaningfully increasing production would take significant effort.

“They are being as polite as humanly possible, and being as supportive as they can, without committing actual dollars,” said David Goldwyn, president of the energy consultancy Goldwyn Global Strategies and former US state department special envoy for international energy affairs.

Exxon and Shell are “not going to invest single-digit billions of dollars, much less tens of billions of dollars”, without physical security, legal certainty and a competitive fiscal framework, Goldwyn said.

“It’s not really welcome from an industry point of view,” he said. “The conditions are just not right.”

While smaller companies might be more eager to jump in and help boost Venezuela’s oil production over the next year, he said those investments would likely hover in the $50m range – far from the “fantastical” $100bn figure that Trump has floated.

Rystad Energy estimates it would take $8bn to $9bn in new investments per year for production to triple by 2040.

Trump’s suggested $100bn of investment into Venezuela could have a major impact – if it were to materialise, said the firm’s chief economist, Claudio Galimberti.

He said companies would only be likely to invest on that scale with subsidies – and political stability.

“It’s going to be difficult to see big commitments before we have a fully stabilised political situation and that is anybody’s guess when that happens,” he said.

Additional reporting by Danielle Kaye

MBW’s Weekly Round-Up: Salt-N-Pepa’s UMG Case Dismissed, UK Music Streaming Subscription Revenues See 3.2% Growth

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Welcome to Music Business Worldwide’s Weekly Round-up – where we make sure you caught the five biggest stories to hit our headlines over the past seven days. MBW’s Round-up is exclusively supported by BMI, a global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music.


This week, a US federal judge dismissed Salt-N-Pepa’s lawsuit against Universal Music Group over master recording ownership.

Meanwhile, UMG Chairman and CEO Sir Lucian Grainge issued his 2026 memo, warning against “irresponsible business models” in AI music that devalue artists.

Elsewhere, HYBE America appointed Ethiopia Habtemariam as its new President of Music.

Also this week, ERA reported that UK music streaming subscription revenues grew by 3.2% YoY in 2025, matching the country’s inflation rate.

Here are some of the biggest headlines from the past few days…


1. SALT-N-PEPA LAWSUIT AGAINST UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP OVER OWNERSHIP OF MASTER RECORDINGS DISMISSED

A US federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by Grammy-winning rap duo Salt-N-Pepa against Universal Music Group, ruling that the artists never owned the copyrights to their sound recordings and therefore cannot reclaim them.

Judge Denise Cote of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York issued an opinion and order on Thursday (January 8) granting UMG’s motion to dismiss both claims in the case, which you can read in full here.

Cheryl James and Sandra Denton, professionally known as Salt-N-Pepa, filed the lawsuit in May 2025 seeking to regain their copyrights and physical master recordings. The duo attempted to exercise their termination rights under Section 203 of the Copyright Act, which allows artists to reclaim copyright ownership 35 years after an initial transfer… (MBW)


2. SIR LUCIAN GRAINGE TALKS AI MUSIC, SUPERFANS IN 2026 MEMO, TAKING SWIPE AT FIRMS ‘VALIDATING BUSINESS MODELS THAT FAIL TO RESPECT ARTISTS’ WORK’

Universal Music Group Chairman and CEO Sir Lucian Grainge has issued a stark warning about “irresponsible business models” in AI music, declaring that UMG will not tolerate deals that “devalue artists” and “promote the exponential growth of AI slop on streaming platforms.”

The comments appear in Grainge’s annual New Year memo to UMG staff, sent on Thursday (January 8) and obtained by MBW, in which he celebrates a successful 2025 for the world’s biggest music rights company and its artists, while outlining strategic priorities for 2026.

“Validating business models that fail to respect artists’ work and creativity, and promote the exponential growth of AI slop on streaming platforms, is a grave disservice to artists, songwriters and all of us who work in music,” writes Grainge.

“Let me be clear: UMG will not stand by and watch irresponsible business models take hold, models that devalue artists, fail to provide adequate compensation for their work, stifle their creativity and ultimately, diminish their ability to reach fans.”… (MBW)


3. ETHIOPIA HABTEMARIAM APPOINTED PRESIDENT OF MUSIC AT HYBE AMERICA

HYBE America has appointed veteran music exec Ethiopia Habtemariam as its new President of Music.

Habtemariam, known most recently for having headed up Universal Music Group’s Motown Records, will help advance HYBE America’s long-term growth strategy, spearhead A&R and artist development across the company’s label ecosystem, and identify new creative and commercial opportunities, HYBE America said in a statement on Thursday (January 8).

Habtemariam will be based in Los Angeles and in Atlanta, her hometown and an epicenter of global hip-hop into which the South Korea-headquartered HYBE tapped via its 2023 acquisition of label Quality Control (MBW)


4. UK MUSIC STREAMING SUBSCRIPTION REVENUES GREW BY 3.2% YOY IN 2025. SO DID INFLATION.

The amount of money spent on music subscriptions by UK consumers grew modestly last year, up 3.2% YoY. That’s according to new preliminary stats from the UK’s Entertainment Retailers’ Association (ERA), whose members include Spotify, Amazon, YouTube, and SoundCloud.

According to ERA’s data, some GBP £2.045 billion (USD $2.69bn) was spent on music streaming subscriptions in 2025, up from GBP £1.982 billion in 2024. In monetary terms, that represented a YoY increase of GBP £63.0 million… (MBW)


5. UMG’S LATEST MAJOR AI PARTNERSHIP ARRIVES VIA TECH GIANT NVIDIA, WITH PROMISE OF ‘ANTIDOTE TO GENERIC AI SLOP’

Universal Music Group has struck its latest major AI partnership. The world’s largest music rights company announced on Tuesday (January 6) a strategic collaboration with AI computing giant NVIDIA, the world’s most valuable company by market capitalization, currently valued at approximately $4.56 trillion.

According to a press release, the partnership will see NVIDIA and UMG “undertake collaborative research and development to promote shared objectives of advancing human music creation and rightsholder compensation.”

The release added that the collaboration will combine NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure with what the companies describe as “the world’s leading music catalog comprising millions of culture-defining tracks” to pioneer what they call “responsible AI for music discovery, creation, and engagement.”… (MBW)


Partner message: MBW’s Weekly Round-up is supported by BMI, the global leader in performing rights management, dedicated to supporting songwriters, composers and publishers and championing the value of music. Find out more about BMI hereMusic Business Worldwide

Russia Confirms Missile Strike on Ukraine with Nuclear Capabilities

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new video loaded: Russia Says It Struck Ukraine With Nuclear-Capable Missile

The Russian Defense Ministry said on Friday that it had struck western Ukraine with a nuclear-capable intermediate-range ballistic missile, an ominous warning by President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia as U.S.-led negotiations to end the war have gained steam.

By Jake Lucas and Daniel Fetherston

January 9, 2026

Challenging the Client

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Client Challenge



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Residents of Minnesota grieve the loss of woman killed by ICE

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People paid tribute to 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, who was killed in her car by ICE agents in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Rosenblatt maintains Meta stock price target at $1,117 amidst nuclear power deals.

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Meta stock price target maintained at $1,117 by Rosenblatt on nuclear power deals