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Lionsgate, Media Capital Technologies Sign ‘Significant’ Multi-Year Slate Financing Deal (EXCLUSIVE)

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Lionsgate, Media Capital Technologies Sign ‘Significant’ Multi-Year Slate Financing Deal (EXCLUSIVE)

Lionsgate, the studio behind “The Hunger Games” and “Saw” franchises, and Media Capital Technologies (MCT), a specialty finance company, have signed a slate co-financing agreement. As part of the pact, MCT will make what is being described as “a significant investment” in Lionsgate’s film slate. The deal is for a multi-year period. Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed.

“We’re delighted to have the opportunity to make a long-term investment in Lionsgate’s diversified slate of commercially exciting films, spanning a broad range of genres, budgets and distribution models,” said MCT CEO Michael Lambert and chairman Christopher Woodrow. “We’re pleased with the results our partnership has already achieved and look forward to continued collaboration on a deep slate of titles distinguished by their strong box office appeal, driven by world-class talent and assembled by a management team with a great track record.” 

“This agreement is an affirmation of the depth and quality of films at every level of our slate,” said Lionsgate Motion Picture Group Chair Adam Fogelson. “We’re pleased that our partners at MCT share our excitement in a line-up of great properties driven by world-class filmmakers and exceptional talent, positioned to drive strong returns for our creative and financial partners alike.” 

Lionsgate has fielded a number of big box office attractions, including last year’s “John Wick: Chapter 4” and “The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes.” Its upcoming slate includes “Highlander,” which will star Henry Cavill and is directed by Chad Stahelski; “Now You See Me 3,” which features many returning cast members from the first two films and which will be directed by Ruben Fleischer; the next chapter in the “Saw” franchise; “The Crow,” starring Bill Skarsgard and directed by Rupert Sanders; and Aziz Ansari’s “Good Fortune,” starring Keanu Reeves, Seth Rogen and Ansari.

The financing agreement has already encompassed several recent titles, including “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare,” “Ordinary Angels” and “Saw X.” 

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MCT is a specialty finance company focused on strategic investments in premium content. The company provides capital to media and entertainment businesses, including motion picture studios, independent production entities and intellectual property rights-holders. It was founded in 2019 and is based in Los Angeles. A range of institutional investors, including MassMutual, support the company and its investment activities. 

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Finance

Why Chime Financial Stock Was Music to Investor Ears in December | The Motley Fool

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Why Chime Financial Stock Was Music to Investor Ears in December | The Motley Fool

The company appears to be effectively serving its often-overlooked customer base.

The holiday month brought fintech Chime Financial (CHYM 3.13%) one of the best gifts a stock can receive — a substantial bump higher in price. Across December, Chime’s shares rose by more than 19%, lifted by a set of factors that included a recommendation upgrade from a prominent bank and a positive research note by an analyst who’s now tracking the company.

Good as gold

The bullish tone was set by that upgrade, which was made before market open on Dec. 1 by Goldman Sachs pundit Will Nance. According to his new evaluation, Chime stock is now a buy, up from Nance’s previous tag of neutral. The new price target is $27 per share.

Image source: Getty Images.

According to reports, the analyst’s move is based on the company’s new Chime Card, an innovative credit product that represents an evolution of the secured credit card (i.e., plastic that must be backed by a user’s actual funds).

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In Nance’s estimation, as a next-generation credit product, the Chime Card should earn more “take” (i.e., fees derived from use) and thus higher revenue and profitability for the company than many anticipate. The prognosticator wrote that “attach” rates — i.e., Chime customer uptake — could also be notably above current expectations.

On Dec. 11, a new Chime bull emerged. This is B. Riley analyst Hal Goetsch, who initiated coverage of the company’s stock with a buy recommendation. This was accompanied by a price target of $35 per share, which is well higher than even Nance’s very optimistic assessment.

Goetsch waxed bullish about Chime’s high growth potential, according to reports. He opined that the company is doing well servicing its target segment of customers traditionally shunned by established banks due to poor credit histories, among other perceived flaws. It has also cleverly partnered with lenders and other financial services providers to offer attractive products such as the Chime Card.

Chime Financial Stock Quote

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(-3.13%) $-0.87

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$26.95

Executive shifts

Finally, Chime promoted no less than three of its executives to new positions. It announced in the middle of the month that former chief operating officer Mark Troughton had been named president, and Janelle Sallenave replaced him as chief operating officer (from chief experience officer). Vineet Mehra, meanwhile, became chief growth officer; previously, he was chief marketing officer.

All three appointments, announced in the middle of the month, were effective immediately.

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As the year came to a close, it was apparent that the company had executives who were eager to keep contributing to its success. That, combined with those bullish analyst notes and the somewhat under-the-radar success story that the Chime Card appears to be, makes this fintech’s stock well worth watching. This is one of the more innovative young businesses in the financial sector at present.

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Mis-Sold Car Finance Explained: What UK Drivers Should Know

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Mis-Sold Car Finance Explained: What UK Drivers Should Know
Car finance is now one of the most popular ways in which drivers purchase their vehicles in the UK. RICHMOND PARK, BOURNEMOUTH / ACCESS Newswire / January 5, 2026 / In particular, Personal Contract Purchase (PCP) and Hire Purchase (HP) agreements …
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Solaris Names Steffen Jentsch to Lead Embedded Finance Platform | PYMNTS.com

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Solaris Names Steffen Jentsch to Lead Embedded Finance Platform | PYMNTS.com

Carsten Höltkemeyer, the firm’s CEO, stepped down at the end of 2025, the company said in its announcement last week. Steffen Jentsch, chief information officer and chief process officer for FinTech flatexDEGIRO AG, will take his place.

“Jentsch brings a proven track record in scaling digital financial platforms, along with deep expertise in regulatory transformation and digital banking solutions,” the announcement said.

Höltkemeyer is set to stay on in an advisory role. The announcement adds that Ansgar Finken, chief risk officer and head of its finance and technology area, is also stepping down, but will remain on in an advisory capacity.

Finken will be succeeded by Matthias Heinrich, former chief risk officer and member of flatexDEGIRO Bank AG’s executive board.

“I’m truly excited to join Solaris and lead the next chapter — one defined by durable growth built on regulatory strength and commercial execution,” Jentsch said.

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“Digital B2B2C platforms thrive when cutting-edge technology, cloud-native infrastructure, and strong compliance frameworks work seamlessly together. Solaris has been a first mover in embedded finance and has helped shape the market across Europe.”

The release notes that the leadership change follows SBI’s acquisition of a majority stake in Solaris as part of the 140 million euro ($164 million) Series G funding round last February.

The news follows a year in which embedded finance “moved from consumer convenience to business as usual,” as PYMNTS wrote last week.

During 2025, embedded payments, lending and B2B finance all demonstrated clear signs of maturity — especially when tied to specific verticals and workflows instead of being deployed as generic platforms. The most successful implementations were almost invisible, woven directly into the systems where users already worked, the report added.

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“The embedded finance revolution that transformed consumer payments is now reshaping B2 commerce — with far greater stakes,” Sandy Weil, chief revenue officer at Galileo, said in an interview with PYMNTS.

“In 2025, businesses are embedding working capital, virtual cards and automated workflows directly into their platforms, turning financial operations into growth engines.”

It was a year in which “buy, don’t build” became the overriding philosophy, the report added. Research by PYMNTS Intelligence in conjunction with Galileo and WEX spotlighted the way institutions prioritized speed and specialization over ownership, “outsourcing embedded capabilities rather than developing them internally.”

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