
Wall Street Weekly: May 29–June 5, 2026
SpaceX locked its $135/share offer price — the largest equity offering in history at a $75B target raise — with roadshow underway and trading debut set for June 12. On the same day, Alphabet announced an $80B equity raise (Berkshire Hathaway anchoring at $10B) and Anthropic confidentially filed its IPO S-1 while structuring a $36B GPU debt facility backstopped by Broadcom. Berkshire separately agreed to acquire homebuilder Taylor Morrison for $8.5B all-cash; the UP/NS $71.5B rail merger entered formal STB abeyance. The CFTC repealed its 28-year no-deny settlement policy. Full coverage: IPOs, M&A, mega financings, regulatory enforcement, and personnel for May 29–June 5.

SpaceX locked its $135 offering price and launched its roadshow this week; Alphabet announced an $80 billion equity raise the same day Anthropic filed a confidential IPO prospectus while arranging a $36 billion GPU debt package backstopped by Broadcom. The CFTC formally repealed its 28-year no-deny settlement policy — the second major regulator to do so in three weeks. Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy Taylor Morrison Home for $8.5 billion in cash. The full structural rundown for May 29–June 5, 2026, follows.
IPOs
Four standard equity offerings priced this week and seven SPACs priced an additional $1.165 billion. The most consequential development is the SpaceX IPO moving from filed to priced — the largest equity offering in history — with roadshow underway and first-day trading scheduled for June 12.
| Company | Ticker | Exchange | Offer price | Raise | First-day return | Sector |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INNIO | INIO | Nasdaq | $27 (at range top) | $2.73B | +23.3% | Power generation / data center |
| Quantinuum | QNT | Nasdaq | $60 | $1.68B | +0.6% (close); –6.2% by Jun 5 | Quantum computing |
| Liftoff Mobile | LFTO | Nasdaq | $23 (above $20–$22 range) | $437M base; $502.6M final (after greenshoe) | +23.7% (Jun 4); –5.5% by Jun 5 close | Mobile advertising / AI |
| Applied Aerospace | AADX | Nasdaq | — | $650M | –12.3% by Jun 5 | Aerospace defense |
| Sunshine Silver | SSMR | — | — | $270M | +3.7% by Jun 5 | Silver mining |
SpaceX (SPCX) — $75B offering priced, roadshow live
SpaceX filed its S-1/A final amendment on June 3, confirming a fixed price of $135.00 per share — no range, a structure used in fewer than a dozen large modern IPOs. 1 The offering covers 555.6 million shares, implying a target raise of $75 billion and a market capitalization of roughly $1.75–1.77 trillion at pricing. 2 A full exercise of the greenshoe option would add $11.2 billion, lifting total proceeds to approximately $85.7 billion.
Institutional roadshow began June 8; pricing is scheduled for June 11 and Nasdaq first-day trading (ticker: SPCX) for June 12. Retail investors are allocated up to 30% of the offering — an unusually high share for an offering of this scale — and SpaceX will host a special event for 1,500 retail investors on June 11. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are lead managers. 2
S&P Global announced on June 4 that it will not grant SpaceX an exception to the four standard S&P 500 eligibility requirements (four consecutive quarters of GAAP profitability, minimum 12-month listing seasoning, at least 10% investable float, and a positive investable weight factor). 2 SpaceX reported a net loss of $4.94 billion in full-year 2025 and $4.28 billion in Q1 2026 alone; only about 4.2% of shares outstanding will trade from day one. S&P's stated rationale: "Exceptions to the financial viability, seasoning, and investable weight factor requirements should not be granted solely based on market capitalization." The Nasdaq-100, which operates under different rules, may be able to include SPCX within 15 trading days of listing. Elon Musk holds approximately 42% of SpaceX and has committed not to sell shares within one year of the IPO. 2
Valuation opinions are sharply split. Wedbush's Dan Ives called it "the largest IPO in stock market history," framing space and AI as two generational growth vectors. Morningstar analyst Nicolas Owens put SpaceX's fair value at $780 billion and called the $1.75 trillion IPO price "overvalued in almost all recent scenarios," adding that the xAI investment is "a material value-destruction threat" consuming an estimated $10 billion annually. ARK Invest targets a $2.5 trillion valuation by 2030. The gap between those estimates is not a rounding difference — it reflects genuine disagreement on Starlink's competitive durability and xAI's trajectory.
INNIO (INIO) vs. Quantinuum (QNT) — same day, opposite outcomes
Both priced June 3 and debuted June 4, giving the market an unplanned stress test between AI infrastructure power and quantum computing.
INNIO, an Austrian maker of gas- and renewable-gas-powered electricity generation equipment, sold 90 million shares (20% above its 75 million initial target) at $27, the top of its $24–$27 range, raising $2.73 billion at a $20.25 billion market cap. 3 It closed its first day up 23.3%. Q1 revenue was $668.6 million (profitable), and its 2025 data-center equipment orders reached $2.28 billion — up from just $27 million in 2023. 3 J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and Goldman Sachs led. Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets, called INNIO "a less obvious but potentially lucrative way to invest in the infrastructure needed to keep the lights on." 3
Quantinuum, a quantum computing company spun out of Honeywell and Cambridge Quantum, raised $1.68 billion at $60 per share (155.6× oversubscribed in terms of deal size vs. Q1 revenue of $5.2 million), listing at a $15.56 billion market cap. 4 It briefly traded up 18.9% intraday but closed its first day up only 0.6% and fell to $56.26 by June 5 (–6.2% from IPO price). 4 The demand gap between INNIO and Quantinuum is visible in the after-market: one company earns revenue at scale, the other is a bet on technology that may be a decade from commercial deployment.
Liftoff Mobile (LFTO) — software sector reopens
Liftoff Mobile, a Blackstone-backed AI-driven mobile advertising platform, priced 19 million shares at $23 on June 3 — above its $20–$22 range — raising $437 million. 5 After a full greenshoe exercise (2.85 million additional shares), total proceeds reached $502.6 million. Lead bookrunners: Goldman Sachs, Jefferies, and Morgan Stanley. The stock gained 23.7% on its June 4 debut, closing at $28.45. 6 By June 5 it had given back some ground, closing at $26.88 (+16.9% from IPO price). 5
Proceeds will repay $357.3 million of a 2032-maturity senior secured term loan. Liftoff had previously attempted an IPO in February 2026 at a $762 million raise target; that filing was withdrawn when software stocks sold off on AI disruption fears. The successful pricing at $23 — above the revised range — indicates that concerns about AI cannibalizing performance-marketing tech have eased among institutional buyers, at least temporarily.

SPAC market — 7 deals, $1.165B
Seven blank-check vehicles priced in the window, led by KEYSTONE ACQUISITION CORP (KEYY) at $250 million and FutureCorp Space Acquisition 1 (FTRA) at $200 million (Cantor Fitzgerald underwriting). 7 The remaining five deals ranged from $125 million to $175 million each. Year-to-date, 104 SPACs have priced and raised $18.2 billion; the pace of the past 60 days (42 deals) suggests sustained demand from SPAC sponsors, with the blank-check issuance rate roughly double the comparable 2025 period. 7
M&A
Five new transactions were signed and two pending deals hit material milestones during the window. Combined announced value on new deals was approximately $16.4 billion. The Union Pacific / Norfolk Southern $71.5 billion merger application entered a formal abeyance that may define the merger's viability more than any preceding procedural step.
| Acquirer | Target | EV | Structure | Status | Advisors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berkshire Hathaway | Taylor Morrison Home (TMHC) | $8.5B | All-cash, $72.50/share | Signed May 31; close H2 2026 | Goldman Sachs, Moelis & Co (TMHC); Simpson Thacher (TMHC legal) |
| CVC Capital Partners | IFF Food Ingredients (seller: IFF) | ~$4.3B | Asset sale | Signed May 29; terms undisclosed | Lazard (IFF) |
| Servier | Edgewise Therapeutics — MD unit | $2.6B | Upfront + milestones | Signed June 1; close Q3 2026 | Not captured |
| U.S. Bancorp | BTIG, LLC | $1B | $725M upfront (cash + USB stock) + $275M earnout | Closed June 1 | — |
| AvalonBay / EQR | Merger of equals | $69B combined EV | All-stock (2.793 EQR : 1 AVB) | Integration planning; close H2 2026 | — |
Berkshire Hathaway / Taylor Morrison — $8.5B, all-cash
Berkshire Hathaway signed a definitive agreement on May 31 to acquire Taylor Morrison Home Corporation (NYSE: TMHC), one of the largest U.S. homebuilders, for $72.50 per share in cash — a 23.93% premium to TMHC's last close — at a total enterprise value of $8.5 billion. 8 The implied multiple is 10.13× TMHC's non-GAAP earnings. CEO Sheryl Palmer and the existing management team will remain in place. Close is expected in the second half of 2026. Goldman Sachs and Moelis & Co advised Taylor Morrison; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett handled legal. 8 The deal adds a homebuilder to Berkshire's existing real estate and industrial portfolio; no Berkshire adviser was disclosed, consistent with its typical direct-approach acquisition style.
UP/NS $71.5B rail merger — STB enters abeyance
The Surface Transportation Board (STB) accepted Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern's revised merger application on May 28 as complete but simultaneously placed all review proceedings — including the environmental impact study — in formal abeyance pending supplemental information the applicants must submit by July 27, 2026. 9 No procedural schedule will be set until after that submission, meaning the regulatory clock has effectively stopped.
Opposition has widened since the STB's decision: more than 20 parties — including CN, CSX, six state attorneys general, two rail unions representing the majority of Union Pacific's workforce, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen, and a shipper coalition — have now filed with the board. 9 CN stated that the applicants' proposed remedies "remain narrow, temporary and insufficient to offset the merger's competitive harms." CSX launched a public website arguing that the current six-railroad structure — "two western, two eastern, two Canadian" — would be replaced by a single transcontinental carrier. 9

The proposed combination would operate approximately 40% of all U.S. freight-rail traffic — the largest railroad consolidation in the STB's history. President Trump mentioned the possibility of a government stake in the merger in a May 26 interview; that suggestion drew written criticism from at least one commenter who called it "wholly inconsistent with the Board's statutory obligation." A $2.5 billion breakup fee is owed by Union Pacific to Norfolk Southern if the STB ultimately denies the application.
IFF / CVC — $4.3B food ingredients divestiture
International Flavors & Fragrances (NYSE: IFF) signed an agreement on May 29 to sell its Food Ingredients business to CVC Capital Partners funds for approximately $4.3 billion. 10 This is IFF's 13th non-core divestiture, generating nearly $10 billion in cumulative gross proceeds as the company focuses on flavors, fragrances, and health and biosciences. Lazard was IFF's financial adviser. Detailed consideration structure and close timeline were not disclosed in available sources.
Servier / Edgewise — $2.6B rare disease bolt-on
French pharmaceutical company Servier agreed on June 1 to acquire Edgewise Therapeutics' muscular dystrophy business for $2.6 billion, including lead clinical asset sevasemten and a broader neuromuscular disease portfolio. 11 The deal is structured as upfront payment plus development and commercial milestones; close is expected in Q3 2026 pending regulatory clearance. The transaction fits the pattern that dominated biopharma this year: targeted bolt-ons in the $1–$5 billion range aimed at building pipeline ahead of patent cliffs, rather than scale mergers. Through early June, biopharma M&A reached $106 billion across 201 deals in 2026 — on pace for the strongest year since 2019 — with the average deal size rising to $527.3 million from $365 million in 2025. 12 Rajesh Kumar, head of life sciences and healthcare equity research at HSBC, put it concisely: "Pharma companies [are] really buying stuff like it's going out of fashion." 12
U.S. Bancorp completes $1B BTIG acquisition
U.S. Bancorp (NYSE: USB), the fifth-largest U.S. commercial bank, closed its acquisition of BTIG, LLC on June 1, 2026. 13 Total deal value is $1 billion: $725 million upfront ($362.5 million cash plus 6.6 million USB common shares) and up to $275 million in additional cash tied to performance targets over three years. BTIG, founded in 2005 and ranked among the top 10 U.S. brokers by high-touch equity volume, will operate as a separate broker-dealer within USB. Anton LeRoy remains CEO, reporting to USB Vice Chair Stephen Philipson. 14 The acquisition gives USB institutional equity sales and trading, equity capital markets, and M&A advisory capabilities it previously lacked.
AvalonBay / Equity Residential — integration planning begins
AvalonBay Communities (NYSE: AVB) and Equity Residential (NYSE: EQR) filed a joint employee communication via SEC Form 425 on June 5, confirming the start of formal integration planning. 15 The merger of equals, announced earlier, will create the largest publicly traded apartment real estate investment trust (REIT) with a combined enterprise value of $69 billion. Exchange ratio: 2.793 EQR shares per AVB share. Executive leadership for the combined company will be named the week of June 8; town halls are planned in Arlington and Chicago. Close remains expected in H2 2026. 15
Deals in motion
Fertitta/Caesars ($17.6B): CZR traded at $29.05 on June 1 against the $31 all-cash offer price — a 6.7% arbitrage spread that implies residual regulatory or financing skepticism. 16 The go-shop period runs through July 11; no competing bids have emerged and no DEFM14A proxy has been filed as of June 5.
Paramount Skydance / WBD ($110B hostile bid): Paramount Skydance filed its EU merger notification on June 2 (Case M.12278); the European Commission set a provisional Phase I decision deadline of July 7, 2026. 16 WBD trades at approximately $27 against the $31 all-cash offer, a 13% spread indicating that regulatory and state-level legal risks are meaningfully priced. Multiple U.S. states have signaled litigation, and WBD's board has said it intends to recommend shareholders reject the offer.
Mega financings
The week's financing activity was concentrated in a single structural theme: the cost of AI compute infrastructure and who will fund it. Alphabet and Anthropic both moved aggressively on June 1; Meta's potential follow-on was reported on June 5. Together, these three companies are signaling that AI capex has outgrown internal cash generation for even the largest technology firms.
Alphabet — $80B equity raise, Berkshire Hathaway anchor

Alphabet (Nasdaq: GOOGL) announced on June 1 a three-part, $80 billion equity capital raise: a $10 billion private placement to Berkshire Hathaway; a $30 billion underwritten offering (including $15 billion of mandatory convertible preferred depositary shares); and a $40 billion at-the-market (ATM) program expected to launch in Q3. 17 Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley are joint bookrunners for the underwritten portions; Goldman also acted as placement agent for the Berkshire private placement. Berkshire, which had begun building its Alphabet position in Q3 2025 (with approximately $20 billion already held), thus increases its stake materially. 17
The company's stated rationale: "The company is experiencing strong demand for its AI solutions and services from enterprises and consumers, at levels that are exceeding the company's available supply." 17 Alphabet revised its 2026 capital expenditure guidance to $180–190 billion (up from $175–185 billion) and has already issued more than $55 billion in debt since late 2025 for similar purposes. The combined four largest hyperscalers — Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon — are now projected to spend more than $700 billion in capex in 2026.
Anthropic — IPO filing + $36B GPU debt package
Anthropic, maker of the Claude large language model series, filed a confidential draft S-1 registration statement with the SEC on June 1. 18 The company has raised $65 billion cumulatively and carries a current valuation of $965 billion — above OpenAI's $852 billion — on a 2026 annualized revenue run rate of approximately $47 billion (up from $10 billion for full-year 2025). 19 No pricing timeline was committed; the SEC review must complete and Anthropic must deliver a final prospectus at least 15 days before any roadshow.
Concurrent with the IPO filing, Bloomberg reported on June 2 that Anthropic is structuring a $36 billion debt facility to purchase Google-designed TPU chips. 20 The structure: chips purchased by a special-purpose vehicle, which then leases them back to Anthropic's data center operations. Broadcom has committed to backstop approximately $25 billion of the $36 billion, with the Broadcom-supported tranche expected to price around 5.75% yield. The remaining ~$11 billion — unsupported by Broadcom's credit — is expected to price between 8% and 9%. Apollo Global Management and Blackstone are lead arrangers, syndicating to investors. As of June 2, the deal had not yet closed. 20
The Broadcom backstop structure is the distinctive element here: it isolates Anthropic's startup credit risk from the majority of the facility by replacing it with Broadcom's investment-grade credit profile, reducing the blended cost below what Anthropic could achieve independently. Whether investors will ultimately price the unsupported $11 billion tranche at 8–9% or demand more will be a meaningful data point for future AI infrastructure financings.
Meta — equity raise under consideration
The Financial Times reported on June 5 that Meta Platforms is exploring a stock issuance of "tens of billions of dollars" to fund Mark Zuckerberg's AI infrastructure build-out. 21 Meta has not hired banks and may decide against an issuance. A Meta spokesperson told CNBC: "We've been clear that huge opportunities lie ahead in AI, and we'll continue focusing on raising capital in the most flexible ways to support that." 21 The FT original report is behind a paywall and could not be independently verified.
Meta's stock fell more than 5% on June 5 — from approximately $593 to near $560. The investor reaction is structurally different from the response to Alphabet's raise: Alphabet's stock has gained more than 115% over the past 12 months on the strength of Google Cloud, which gives the AI capex a visible revenue flywheel. Meta's stock is down approximately 13% over the same period. A comparable equity issuance would face a higher hurdle with investors unless Meta can articulate an equivalent revenue bridge from AI compute spending to monetizable products. 21
Meta's 2026 capex guidance is already $125–145 billion.
WBD $13B term loan refinancing
Warner Bros. Discovery's (Nasdaq: WBD) subsidiary Discovery Global Holdings priced a $13 billion plus €1.72 billion seven-year term loan B on June 4, fully repaying the $15 billion bridge loan it arranged last week. 22 Pricing: Term SOFR + 250 basis points / EURIBOR + 250 basis points. JPMorgan Chase serves as U.S. administrative agent and collateral agent. The book was reportedly oversubscribed by more than $30 billion. The refinancing converts the bridge into permanent term debt, removing the near-term maturity risk but leaving the combined Paramount Skydance / WBD entity carrying significant leverage pending the still-uncertain acquisition close.
Grant Nachman, chief investment officer at Shorecliff Asset Management, observed: "Elements of M&A acquisition financing, a media-sector LBO, and a liability management exercise all wrapped into one." 22
Other issuances
SAP SE (Xetra: SAP) priced approximately €3.5 billion in investment-grade Eurobonds on May 30, its largest-ever single bond issuance, to fund acquisitions and AI-enhanced cloud infrastructure investment. 23 SAP's contracted cloud revenue backlog stands above €22 billion. Specific tranches, maturities, and lead managers were not confirmed in captured sources.
Emerging-market primary market: The week of June 1–5 saw approximately $16.2 billion in EM primary issuance, including Saudi Arabia's $3.5 billion green sovereign ("Green Palm") bonds, CEMEX at $1.5 billion, and Bahrain's $1 billion sovereign bond — the country's first publicly marketed Gulf Cooperation Council bond since a prior extended absence. 24
Regulatory enforcement and rulemaking
Five agencies produced twelve distinct actions in the window. The structural headline is the CFTC's repeal of its no-deny settlement policy — the second major financial regulator to do so within three weeks.
CFTC rescinds no-deny settlement policy — retroactive effect

The CFTC on June 3 formally rescinded Appendix A to Part 10 of its rules — a policy in place since 1998 that required settlement defendants to refrain from publicly denying the Commission's allegations as a condition of settlement. 25 The rescission has retroactive effect: the CFTC will no longer enforce no-deny clauses in existing consent orders, though it retains discretion to require defendants to admit specific facts or liability.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig stated: "For nearly three decades, the Commission has refused to settle cases unless the defendant promised not to publicly deny the Commission's allegations. I am pleased that we are rescinding the no-deny policy consistent with regulators throughout the government." 25 The SEC made an identical change on May 18, two weeks prior. For firms currently under active CFTC investigation, the practical implication is that settlement no longer requires a public silence clause — defendants can settle and simultaneously contest the characterization of their conduct, potentially lowering the reputational cost of resolution and increasing settlement rates.
SEC proposes full rescission of climate disclosure rules
The SEC proposed on May 29 to rescind in their entirety the climate-related disclosure rules it adopted in March 2024 (Release No. 33-11421, File S7-2026-19). 26 Those rules — which had never taken effect due to an April 2024 stay by the Eighth Circuit — would have required GHG emissions disclosures, climate risk management reporting, and financial-statement treatment of severe weather impacts. The Federal Register published the proposal on June 3; the 60-day comment period runs through August 3, 2026. 26 The Institutional Investors' Committee on Climate Risk (ICCR) has already published opposition comments. This is a proposed rule, not final action; a final rescission requires a separate Commission vote after the comment period closes.
CFTC and DOJ charge Google employee with Polymarket insider trading
On May 27 (one day before the window open, but the first public disclosures appeared within the window), the CFTC filed a civil complaint and the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York filed a parallel criminal complaint against Michele Spagnuolo, a Google software engineer based in Switzerland. 27 Spagnuolo allegedly accessed Google's nonpublic 2025 "Year in Search" data and traded 23 event contracts on Polymarket under the handle "AlphaRaccoon," generating approximately $1.2 million in profits with near-perfect accuracy. 27 This is among the first parallel civil/criminal insider trading enforcement actions targeting a prediction market platform. CFTC Chairman Selig noted that "the Commission will not tolerate fraud, manipulation, or insider trading, regardless of the technology or platform that is used." 27
DOJ: Matrix/HealthFair pay $56.5M in Medicare Advantage FCA settlement
The Department of Justice announced on June 3 that Matrix Medical Network ($36.5 million), HealthFair ($5 million), and HealthFair founder Shahriah "James" Ekbatani ($15 million) agreed to pay a combined $56.5 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations. 28 The case, covering 2014–2019, alleged that the companies submitted invalid risk-adjustment diagnostic codes to Medicare Advantage — codes for conditions including HIV/AIDS, metastatic cancer, and myasthenia gravis that were either unsupported by documentation or diagnosed only from patient self-report, without confirmation from other treating providers. DOJ Civil Division AAG Brett Shumate stated: "When healthcare companies report risk-adjusting diagnoses that are invalid, they siphon money from the Medicare Advantage program." 28 Two whistleblowers received a combined $10.9 million: Matrix former employee Nancy Cahill ($7.3 million) and HealthFair former Chief Medical Officer Robert Oristaglio, Jr. ($3.6 million).
SEC charges Texas man with $12.3M fake AI trading bot fraud
The SEC filed a civil complaint on May 28 in the Southern District of Texas against Nathan Fuller, a Cypress, Texas resident, alleging that he raised approximately $12.3 million from roughly 150 investors between October 2022 and mid-2024. 29 Fuller, operating through Privvy Investments, LLC, claimed to deploy a proprietary AI trading bot executing high-frequency crypto arbitrage and promised 40–50% returns within 30–45 days. In practice, he diverted at least $6.2 million to personal expenses and used approximately $5.5 million to make Ponzi payments to earlier investors. 29
DOJ Scam Center "Disruption Week" — 1.4M accounts shut
The DOJ's Scam Center Strike Force announced on June 3 the results of its first coordinated "Disruption Week," jointly executed with Apple, Coinbase, Google, Meta, Microsoft, SpaceX, and TRM Labs, plus international law enforcement from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Thailand, and the U.K. 30 More than 1.4 million fraudulent social media and email accounts were shut down, $3.8 million in cryptocurrency was frozen, and seven individuals were arrested in Thailand. The targets were Southeast Asian criminal organizations — primarily in Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar — running "pig butchering" (fake romance/investment scam) operations. FBI IC3 data shows crypto investment fraud losses rising from $3.96 billion in 2023 to $5.8 billion in 2024 to $7.2 billion in 2025. 30
Other enforcement actions
Former FBI agent Jeffrey Royer pleaded guilty on June 2 to one count of wire fraud in federal court in Detroit, admitting that he solicited investors under the pretense of forex and commodity futures trading, diverted their funds to personal expenses, and provided fabricated account statements showing fictitious gains. 31 He agreed to pay $576,818.83 in restitution. Sentencing is scheduled September 3, 2026; maximum exposure is 20 years. This is Royer's second federal conviction — his first, in 2012, involved using his FBI position to pass confidential information to short sellers in exchange for cash and a job offer.
CFTC whistleblower award: The CFTC on June 1 announced awards exceeding $8 million to five whistleblowers whose information led to a successful fraud enforcement action and recovery of investor funds. 32 Since its first award in 2014, the CFTC has paid more than $430 million in whistleblower awards from a Customer Protection Fund built from collected fines, in connection with enforcement actions that have recovered more than $3.7 billion.
Oglethorpe/psychiatric hospital FCA: Tampa-based Oglethorpe Inc. and three senior executives (founder Robert Cohen, CEO John Picciano, COO James O'Shea) agreed to pay $32 million to resolve False Claims Act allegations that they knowingly retained Medicare overpayments — overpayments their own consultants had already identified — at three Ohio psychiatric facilities. 33 Beginning July 2026, the defendants will be excluded for 10 years from all federal healthcare programs. (This settlement was announced May 27, one day before the window open.)
Personnel
Few bulge-bracket moves in this window; the fintech sector accounts for the most notable changes.
Revolut: Co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Vlad Yatsenko — the first employee hired by CEO Nik Storonsky and later granted the co-founder title to help recruit engineers — will step down as CTO effective July 1, 2026, transitioning to non-executive director. 34 Donato Lucia, Head of Technology since April 2025, will take over in a role retitled Vice President of Technology (no longer CTO). Yatsenko said: "I feel content with this decision, as Revolut has grown from a young, ambitious startup into a mature, highly impactful global company." 34 Revolut is simultaneously pursuing a U.S. banking license.
Nubank (NYSE: NU): The São Paulo-based digital bank appointed Rob Livingston, who spent 12 years as CFO of Visa (NYSE: V), as its CFO, effective July 13, 2026. 34 He replaces Guilherme Lago.
Adyen (AMS: ADYEN): CFO Ethan Tandowsky will depart on August 31, 2026. No successor was announced. 34
ThinkEquity: The New York boutique investment bank appointed Christopher Brothers — 33 years in institutional equity and private placements with a focus on healthcare and life sciences — as Senior Managing Director and Head of Private Placements, effective June 4. 35 Brothers, who spent 16 years at Maxim Group, joins with a four-person senior team as part of ThinkEquity's Florida expansion.
Middlefield Group (Toronto): Appointed Alexandre Cousineau as Head of Fixed Income, effective June 8. Cousineau's prior employment was not disclosed in available sources.
Cover image: AI-generated illustration.
参考来源
- 1SpaceX plans to raise $75 billion in IPO at $135 per share
- 2SpaceX IPO: SPCX stock price, date, valuation explained
- 3The IPO of this power generator for data centers quietly outshines Quantinuum
- 4Recently priced IPOs
- 5Liftoff announces closing of initial public offering and full exercise of underwriters' option
- 6Liftoff (LFTO) skyrockets 23.7% — here's why
- 7SPAC IPO tracker
- 8Berkshire Hathaway to acquire Taylor Morrison Home Corp for $8.5 billion
- 9Everybody's got opinions: UP-NS merger critics respond to STB decision
- 10Lazard transactions
- 11Servier expands rare disease push with $2.6B Edgewise deal
- 12Gilead, Merck, Eli Lilly lead $106B biopharma takeover wave in 2026
- 13U.S. Bancorp completes acquisition of BTIG
- 14U.S. Bancorp finalises $1 billion BTIG acquisition
- 15Equity Residential and AvalonBay begin integration planning (Form 425)
- 16Fertitta conquers Caesars — merger arbitrage Mondays
- 17Alphabet to raise $80 billion from stock sales to fund AI buildout
- 18Anthropic confidentially submits draft S-1 to the SEC
- 19Anthropic confidentially files IPO prospectus with SEC
- 20Broadcom backing lowers debt costs on $36 billion Anthropic deal
- 21Meta's stock sinks on report company could raise tens of billions for AI
- 22Warner Bros. Discovery unit secures $13 billion in new term loans
- 23SAP bond deal and cloud backlog highlight growth
- 24Gramercy EM Weekly, May 30, 2026
- 25CFTC rescinds policy regarding denials of settlements in enforcement actions
- 26SEC proposes rescission of climate-related disclosure rules
- 27CFTC charges Google employee with insider trading in search result-related event contracts
- 28Matrix, HealthFair, and founder agree to pay $56.5M to resolve False Claims Act allegations
- 29SEC charges Texas resident in alleged multi-million dollar crypto asset fraud
- 30Scam Center Strike Force announces Disruption Week results
- 31Former FBI agent Jeffrey Royer pleads guilty to forex investment fraud
- 32CFTC grants five whistleblower awards totaling over $8 million
- 33Oglethorpe Inc. and top executives agree to pay $32M to resolve False Claims Act allegations
- 34Fintech's summer-break C-suite churn has begun
- 35ThinkEquity appoints Christopher Brothers as Senior Managing Director and Head of Private Placements
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