Auteur Sujet: neoq Millennials Want Financial Freedom; Boomers Want To Quit  (Lu 7 fois)

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neoq Millennials Want Financial Freedom; Boomers Want To Quit
« le: Juillet 10, 2025, 12:36:14 pm »
Avtw How QVC, HSN Reinvented Retail With Mobile
 New York-based curated me stanley cup nswear resale platform Grailed has just raised $60 million in new funding with a Series B round led by GOAT Group, an established player in resale. Also participating in  stanley cup nz the funding round were Thrive Capital, Index Ventures and Groupe Art茅mis.Grailed intends to use the funding to improve upon its authentication services and boost its existing payment processing system, among other reported goals. The resale marketplace counts over 3.7 million users on its platform, as reported by the Associated Press. We wouldnt be where we are today without our amazing and vibrant community of enthusiastic buyers and sellers,  Grailed CEO Arun Gupta said in a statement.  In GOAT Group, we saw an incredibly like-minded partner who is just as passionate and forward-thinking about the global fashion community as we are. With GOATs investment, we are excited to deliver powerful new features across the platform and to double-down on our bold innovations in authentication at an even faster pace. The secondhand market for luxury items is growing markedly faster than the brands in this space, with the former outpacing the latter by 4 to 1 per some projections. Accessibility, however, is still a hurdle for online resalers.Related: Re stanley website bag CEO Eyes $50B of Luxury Inventory That Is Sitting in ClosetsIn June 2018, Grailed closed a Series A round of $15 million. That funding was led by Index Ventures, with participation from Thrive Capital and Simon Ventures, an SP 100 company Ajby North Korea Linked To Bangladesh Heist
 Ralph de la Vega, president and CEO of ATTs mobile and business solutions group, kept things straight to the point while discussing the companys lack of success in the mobile stanley mug  payment sector in an interview with Forbes Tuesday  June 2 . In the end, we thought were probably better off not investing more money in this space,  de la Vega said.Considering that Softcard, the smartphone wallet created by ATT in conjunction with Verizon and T-Mobile, faced numerous roadblocks before officially shutting down in March, de la Vegas stateme stanley website nt comes as no surprise.Initially the carriers sought to  energize  the mobile payments business by e stanley cup nsuring the adoption of NFC technology, Forbes reported. But years of delays and challenges, coupled聽with the realization that Apple Pay quickly made the move to embrace NFC technology, saw the carriers jumping ship聽on Softcard. It seems like a more natural fit for the OS manufacturer doing those kinds of things. We decided to focus on another part of the business and not continue on the mobile payments area,  de la Vega said.Although ATTs future role in payments remains unclear, de la Vega was very vocal about Googles recent wireless market expansion聽with Google Fi. The search engine giants new venture into the heavily competitive wireless carrier environment will enable customers to pay only for the data they use on a monthly basis. It isnt obvious to us whether this is a noble attempt to have the market do something different or whethe