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🌟 WATCH THIS EPISODE ON YOUTUBE 🌟
The Day COVID Split Australia’s Wealth - and the numbers are honestly jaw-dropping. We unpack the sharp divide between those who bought property BC (Before COVID) and AC (After COVID), why some younger homeowners saw their wealth jump 63% in five years, and why others are still feeling the interest-rate squeeze. It’s a timely reminder that timing helps… but overstretching isn’t the answer. Plus, Soph is officially back in New Zealand and we’re reunited in the studio (finally!), just in time to cover the Netflix vs Paramount bidding war over Warner Bros (hello $2.8B breakup fee), Pepsi quietly notching its 54th consecutive dividend raise, Nike’s Converse headache, and Google raising $32B through a 100-year AI bond. There’s lots we covered this week so let’s get into it…
WTF does that mean? A guide to all the jargony bits:
Dividend – A share of a company’s profits paid to shareholders.
Dividend King – A company that’s raised its dividend for 50+ years straight. Elite behaviour.
Breakup Fee – A penalty paid if a takeover deal collapses.
Shareholder – Someone who owns part of a company (aka shares).
Market Share – How much of a market a company controls.
Defensive Stock – A steady company that holds up when the economy wobbles.
Net Worth – What you own minus what you owe.
Interest Rates – The cost of borrowing money.
Tariffs – Taxes on imported goods. Higher tariffs = higher costs.
Bond – A loan you give to a company or government in exchange for interest.
100-Year Bond – A loan that won’t be repaid for 100 years. Yes, actually.
Dilution – When new shares are issued, reducing the value of existing ones.
Liquidity – How quickly you can turn an investment into cash.
Credits:
Hosts: Victoria Harris & Sophie Hallwright
Producer & Editor: Emily Rigby
Social & Digital Manager: Lucy Munro
Leave us a message on The Curve Hotline 💌☎️
For more from The Curve:
Website
Instagram
YouTube
TikTok
Newsletter
(00:00:00) Coming up in this episode…(00:01:29) New NZ studio reveal!(00:11:29) The Warner Bros saga continues(00:19:58) Pepsi’s 54-year dividend streak(00:25:26) BC vs AC property gap in Australia(00:35:09) Nike and Converse struggles(00:40:28) Google’s 100-year AI bond(00:48:21) Community investing question(00:54:58) Thanks for listening to The Curve Weekly!(00:55:37) Financial disclaimer
Disclaimer: Raising The Curve has been prepared solely for informational and educational purposes. Any information provided and serviced described in this website are intended to be of general nature and provide general information only. The opinions expressed by The Curve do not constitute investment advice.
By The Curve Platform4.5
88 ratings
🌟 WATCH THIS EPISODE ON YOUTUBE 🌟
The Day COVID Split Australia’s Wealth - and the numbers are honestly jaw-dropping. We unpack the sharp divide between those who bought property BC (Before COVID) and AC (After COVID), why some younger homeowners saw their wealth jump 63% in five years, and why others are still feeling the interest-rate squeeze. It’s a timely reminder that timing helps… but overstretching isn’t the answer. Plus, Soph is officially back in New Zealand and we’re reunited in the studio (finally!), just in time to cover the Netflix vs Paramount bidding war over Warner Bros (hello $2.8B breakup fee), Pepsi quietly notching its 54th consecutive dividend raise, Nike’s Converse headache, and Google raising $32B through a 100-year AI bond. There’s lots we covered this week so let’s get into it…
WTF does that mean? A guide to all the jargony bits:
Dividend – A share of a company’s profits paid to shareholders.
Dividend King – A company that’s raised its dividend for 50+ years straight. Elite behaviour.
Breakup Fee – A penalty paid if a takeover deal collapses.
Shareholder – Someone who owns part of a company (aka shares).
Market Share – How much of a market a company controls.
Defensive Stock – A steady company that holds up when the economy wobbles.
Net Worth – What you own minus what you owe.
Interest Rates – The cost of borrowing money.
Tariffs – Taxes on imported goods. Higher tariffs = higher costs.
Bond – A loan you give to a company or government in exchange for interest.
100-Year Bond – A loan that won’t be repaid for 100 years. Yes, actually.
Dilution – When new shares are issued, reducing the value of existing ones.
Liquidity – How quickly you can turn an investment into cash.
Credits:
Hosts: Victoria Harris & Sophie Hallwright
Producer & Editor: Emily Rigby
Social & Digital Manager: Lucy Munro
Leave us a message on The Curve Hotline 💌☎️
For more from The Curve:
Website
Instagram
YouTube
TikTok
Newsletter
(00:00:00) Coming up in this episode…(00:01:29) New NZ studio reveal!(00:11:29) The Warner Bros saga continues(00:19:58) Pepsi’s 54-year dividend streak(00:25:26) BC vs AC property gap in Australia(00:35:09) Nike and Converse struggles(00:40:28) Google’s 100-year AI bond(00:48:21) Community investing question(00:54:58) Thanks for listening to The Curve Weekly!(00:55:37) Financial disclaimer
Disclaimer: Raising The Curve has been prepared solely for informational and educational purposes. Any information provided and serviced described in this website are intended to be of general nature and provide general information only. The opinions expressed by The Curve do not constitute investment advice.

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