logo
OptiNose: Q1 Earnings Snapshot

OptiNose: Q1 Earnings Snapshot

YARDLEY, Pa. (AP) — YARDLEY, Pa. (AP) — OptiNose Inc. (OPTN) on Wednesday reported a loss of $22.4 million in its first quarter.
On a per-share basis, the Yardley, Pennsylvania-based company said it had a loss of $1.92. Losses, adjusted for non-recurring costs, came to $1.01 per share.
The specialty pharmaceutical company posted revenue of $18.5 million in the period.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hilltop Holdings Inc. Announces Dual Listing on NYSE Texas
Hilltop Holdings Inc. Announces Dual Listing on NYSE Texas

Business Wire

time26 minutes ago

  • Business Wire

Hilltop Holdings Inc. Announces Dual Listing on NYSE Texas

DALLAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Hilltop Holdings Inc. (NYSE: HTH) ('Hilltop'), a Dallas-based financial holding company, today announced a dual listing of its common stock on NYSE Texas, the new fully electronic equities exchange headquartered in Dallas, Texas. 'Hilltop and all of its businesses, PlainsCapital Bank, HilltopSecurities and PrimeLending, have significant roots and operations in Texas. In addition to being headquartered in Dallas, Hilltop and its businesses employee over 2,450 professionals across every major market in the state. We have been listed on the NYSE since 2004 and are excited to become part of NYSE Texas' said Jeremy B. Ford, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Hilltop. 'We are honored to have Hilltop join NYSE Texas,' said Chris Taylor, Chief Development Officer, NYSE Group. 'Hilltop is a leader in the financial services industry in Dallas and the greater Texas area, making them a natural fit to our community of Founding Members.' About Hilltop Hilltop Holdings is a Dallas-based financial holding company. Its primary line of business is to provide business and consumer banking services from offices located throughout Texas through PlainsCapital Bank. PlainsCapital Bank's wholly owned subsidiary, PrimeLending, provides residential mortgage lending throughout the United States. Hilltop Holdings' broker-dealer subsidiaries, Hilltop Securities Inc. and Momentum Independent Network Inc., provide a full complement of securities brokerage, institutional and investment banking services in addition to clearing services and retail financial advisory. At June 30, 2025, Hilltop employed approximately 3,700 people and operated 309 locations in 47 states. Hilltop Holdings' common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol 'HTH.' Find more information at and

Meet 16 VC firms investing in innovative creator economy startups like Substack, Whatnot, and Agentio
Meet 16 VC firms investing in innovative creator economy startups like Substack, Whatnot, and Agentio

Business Insider

time28 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

Meet 16 VC firms investing in innovative creator economy startups like Substack, Whatnot, and Agentio

Ishan Sinha doesn't think the creator economy is a fad. "It's such a critical part of the internet," Sinha, a partner at Point72 Ventures, told Business Insider. Still, the initial hype and attention on the creator industry have faded, he said. According to a March Goldman Sachs report, funding of creator economy companies peaked in 2021, slowed between 2022 and 2023, and "reaccelerated" in 2024. An estimated $1.5 billion was invested in creator economy startups in 2024, per Goldman Sachs' analysis of PitchBook data. Overall, Goldman Sachs projects the creator economy will be a $480 billion industry by 2027. The creator economy has matured into a marketing layer that spans across industries, said Maya Bakhai, founder and general partner of Spice Capital. "Every single company needs to have an attention strategy," she said. So far in 2025, there's already been a handful of flashy fundraising rounds from creator startups. Investors are betting on startups that leverage creators to boost other industries like e-commerce or publishing. Starting the year off, Whatnot, a live shopping app, raised a $265 million Series E funding round at a valuation of $4.9 billion. Later in January, ShopMy, a social shopping and affiliate marketing company, announced a $77.5 million Series B. And last month, Substack, a newsletter platform that's fueled a wave of creators, announced its $100 million Series C. AI continues to be a hot subject. Investors are particularly interested in AI-powered creative tools because they are positioned to help creators with what they do best: make content. Menlo Ventures invested in Flora, an AI tool for digital creatives, for example. Sasha Kaletsky, managing partner at Creator Ventures, told BI that the firm is excited by startups that "empower the long tail of creators to be able to create the content that their audience loves faster, cheaper, better." The firm recently backed tools like Creatify, which generates ads using AI. Some investors also see the creator economy as fitting into their focus on business-to-business (B2B) technology, or view creators as an intersection between consumers and businesses, which has fanned the flame for another VC buzzword: prosumer. Haley Bryant, a principal at Hustle Fund, said she categorizes creators as small to medium businesses. The firm recently invested in Punchup Live, a ticketing marketplace for comedy creators. Business Insider is highlighting 16 VC firms and their partners who are backing creator economy companies — and creators themselves. This list, our sixth annual, was compiled by BI's reporting and is focused on firms that have made recent investments in creator economy companies. AlleyCorp thinks influencers will be important in an AI-first consumer tech landscape Investors: Marshall Porter, general partner; Susannah Shipton, partner AlleyCorp is a New York-based VC firm focused on pre-seed, seed, and Series A startups in various categories, including consumer tech, enterprise software, AI, and robotics. The company said it incubated MongoDB, Zola, and Business Insider when the companies were startups. Porter and Shipton both work on consumer tech investments, among other categories. Shipton, whose portfolio includes social-commerce app ShopMy and influencer-marketing platform Agentio, believes creators will continue to be influential in a world where AI agents drive consumer purchases. "Agents will learn how to parse influencer taste just like we do, and they will be swayed by influencer content in both obvious and subtle ways we can't predict yet," she wrote in a July blog post. Bain Capital Ventures has backed companies like Whop and ShopMy Investors: Scott Friend, partner; Aaref Hilaly, partner; Merritt Hummer, partner Bain Capital Ventures is the venture division of Bain Capital. The company has been funding startups at various stages of investment for over 20 years, ranging from seed rounds to growth-stage ones. BCV partner Hummer said she looks to invest in companies that are the "critical infrastructure for the creator economy," similar to how Shopify became the backbone of many e-commerce businesses. BCV partner Friend said he looks for creator startups that provide tools for both creators and their business partners, like brands, while partner Hilaly said he's drawn to creator companies that are using AI to help automate tasks and develop new business models for the industry. Fund size: BCV's latest funds total $1.9 billion, with more than $10 billion in assets under management, according to the firm. Bond Capital recently invested in Substack's $100 million Series C Investors: Mood Rowghani, general partner; Rob Scales, principal Bond Capital is a global VC firm that invests in startups from early to growth stages. Rowghani focuses on emerging technology companies and has led the firm's investments into creator economy startups like Whatnot and Substack. Rowghani also serves on the boards of Substack, Partiful, Carbon Robotics, and inDrive. Scales, who joined the firm in 2022, co-leads Bond's investments in software, AI, fintech, and consumer internet categories. A spokesperson for Bond told Business Insider its investors are looking for: Full-stack platforms that empower creators to scale their businesses. Content platforms that "align incentives between creators and their fans," as well as products that prioritize "quality and depth of engagement over optimizing for dopamine hits." Founders who understand creators' needs. Fund size: $2.4 billion, according to the firm. Craft has backed marketplace model businesses like live-shopping platform Palmstreet Investors: Bryan Rosenblatt, partner; Sean Whitney, principal; Jeff Fluhr, venture partner Craft specializes in business-to-business technology investing, and comprises a team of former founders. As an early Figma team member, for instance, Whitney is interested in design tools that empower creatives, and invested in Cartwheel to redefine how 3D animation is produced. Fluhr, the cofounder of StubHub, is keen on marketplace model businesses, he said, and wants to seize on how social media is changing shopping habits. Both peer-to-peer clothing rental app Pickle and live plant shopping platform Palmstreet caught his eye because they showed growing transaction volumes, loyal customers, community, and social buzz. Fund size: Craft has over $3.3 billion in assets under management and "invests across early-stage venture and growth stage companies," the firm said. "Our two latest funds are our fourth venture fund, $712 million, and our second growth fund, $608 million." Creator Ventures is a consumer-focused fund that's 'mega bullish' on creative tools Investors: Sasha Kaletsky, managing partner; Caspar Lee, general partner Kaletsky cofounded Creator Ventures in 2022 with Lee, a longtime YouTuber and entrepreneur. The two have been investing in startups together since 2019, while Kaletsky worked in private equity. The firm announced its most recent fund, Fund II, in April. "We do consumer internet," Kaletsky said, listing apps, marketplaces, AI, and business-to-business (B2B) software that relates to the consumer. "When we think about the creator economy, usually that's in our consumer adjacent B2B, or you can call it prosumer, bucket," he said. Kaletsky said the firm is "mega bullish" on creative tools right now. FirstMark is a New York-based firm and early investor in platforms like Pinterest and Discord Investors: Derek Chu, principal; Rick Heitzmann, cofounder and partner; Kathryn Weinmann, principal Heitzmann cofounded FirstMark Capital in 2008 and has backed major social media platforms, including Pinterest and Discord, that have shaped the creator economy. The consumer-focused firm is based in New York. Chu joined FirstMark in 2023 and previously worked at Airbnb and Menlo Ventures. He led FirstMark's investment in peer-to-peer rental platform Pickle and Posh, an events platform. "We're really looking for marketplaces and AI products that empower creators," Chu said. Weinmann joined FirstMark in 2024 and was previously at Norwest Venture Partners. Fund size: $3.5 billion assets under management, according to the firm. FirstMark announced a $1.1 billion fund in 2022. Investors: Haley Bryant, principal; Shiyan Koh, cofounder and general partner Hustle Fund was founded in 2017 by Koh, Eric Bahn, and Elizabeth Yin. Koh looks for tools that help creators enhance their relationships with their audiences, make content, and use first-party data. Bryant, who joined the firm in 2022, previously was the COO of Animalz, a content marketing agency. Bryant said she's "excited about products serving a specific wedge of creators, or focused on a market that's growing as a result of the rise of the creator economy." Hustle Fund primarily invests in pre-seed startups. Fund size: $46 million (Fund III), according to the company. Recent investments: Paris-based firm Intuition thinks anyone can be a creator Investor: Hugo Amsellem, cofounder Amsellem, an investor based in Paris, cofounded Intuition, a consumer-focused VC firm, in 2024. Prior to launching the fund, he was an angel investor in several creator economy startups and previously worked at Jellysmack, a creator economy startup. "The frontier between a consumer and a creator is now becoming very blurry," Amsellem said. "Right now, when you're building for consumers, you are building for people that are creating — some are creating at scale, some are not creating at scale — but anyone is actually a creator." Intuition writes $150,000 checks into pre-seed startups, per the firm's website. Menlo Ventures' Amy Wu Martin is backing startups that help creators build and monetize their audiences Investor: Amy Wu Martin, partner Martin leads Menlo's consumer technology and gaming investments. She focuses particularly on founders building emerging technology across AI, blockchain, and augmented reality. Before joining Menlo in 2023, she was a partner at Lightspeed Venture Partners and a founding partner at FTX Ventures. When it comes to the creator economy, Martin has led Menlo's investments in categories like gaming and commerce, such as ShopMy. She has also led Menlo's investment in several consumer and creator-related AI companies, including Alta, an AI-powered virtual try-on startup; Flora, a creative tools platform; and Higgsfield, a video AI startup. Fund size: $7 billion assets under management, according to the firm. In 2024, Menlo launched its $100 million Anthology Fund in partnership with Anthropic. Night's background in talent management helps it spot opportunities in media and entertainment Investors: Ezra Cooperstein, general partner; Reed Duchscher, general partner; Ben Mathews, general partner Night is a talent management firm with a venture studio that invests in and incubates startups and creator-led brands like MrBeast's Feastables. The company looks for startups that are leveraging creators to build new businesses and acquire customers. As a venture studio, it offers its companies a mix of funding and sweat equity, helping upstarts get their businesses off the ground. Cooperstein is the president of Night. Duchscher also runs Night's talent management firm. Mathews was previously at Bessemer Venture Partners. The company incubated creator-oriented startups like Outtake, an AI tool to protect creators and brands from deepfakes, and Troveo, a startup that enables creators to license their content to AI companies for training purposes. Fund size: The company doesn't have a set fund, but invests between $500,000 and $2 million in startups and creator-led brands. Patron has deep ties to the gaming industry and is backing startups across community, commerce, and media Investors: Amber Atherton, partner; Brian Cho, general partner; Jason Yeh, general partner Patron was founded in 2021 by Cho and Yeh, both former Riot Games executives. The firm invests in seed-stage consumer startups across several categories. Prior to launching Patron, Cho was an investor at A16z and led Riot's business and corporate development arms. He focuses on consumer startups across gaming, fitness, and health. Yeh started his career at FirstMark Capital and left to join Riot Games. He focuses on media, entertainment, and commerce. Atherton joined the firm full-time in 2023 and was previously the founder of Zyper, a community platform that was acquired by Discord. She primarily focuses on startups building tools for community and commerce. Patron recently backed SweatPals, which offers tools for fitness creators to monetize their communities with tools like memberships or events. Fund size: $100 million fund that closed at the end of 2024, according to the firm. Point72 Ventures sees creators as a 'critical part' of the internet Investor: Ishan Sinha, partner Sinha invests in early and growth-stage companies across consumer tech. He was previously an investor at Human Capital and an analyst at Goldman Sachs. When making investments in the creator economy, Sinha typically looks for startups solving problems for both creators and consumers, as well as teams with strong go-to-market backgrounds. The firm has previously backed creator economy companies such as Range Media Partners, a talent management company. For Point72, the creator economy umbrella is broad. "It's anything sort of related to the internet economy and people living and breathing and creating an income for themselves on the internet," Sinha said. Recent investments: Precursor Ventures is a pre-seed and seed stage firm that closed a new fund in April Investor: Charles Hudson, founder and managing partner In 2015, Hudson founded Precursor Ventures, an early-stage, generalist fund. Precursor announced that it closed its fifth fund at $66 million in April. At the time, Hudson said in a LinkedIn post that the firm had "a strong affinity for first-time founders whose potential has not been correctly understood by those looking for more traditional quality signals." He told BI that he is eyeing three categories in the creator economy space: Creator tools that help with business infrastructure, like revenue management or taxes. Scalable AI tools for tailored fan experiences. Community monetization "platforms for exclusive access and micro-communities." Fund size: $66 million, according to the firm. Recent investments: Bindery Books, a platform for book content creators Weights, an AI creative tool Slow Ventures looks for creators with 'deep authority' in a particular niche Investor: Sam Lessin, general partner; Megan Lightcap, partner; Billy Parks, venture partner Slow Ventures is an early-stage VC firm that operates a $60 million fund for investing in content creators. The company finds influencers who have authority in a particular content niche and invests between $1 million and $3 million for a roughly 10% stake in their overall businesses. That means the firm can get a return on a creator's media assets, like YouTube and brand deals, and also spin-off businesses they may launch, such as a food creator launching a cookbook. Slow is particularly drawn to creators who are looking to move beyond social media, Lightcap told Business Insider in February. "They look at the media not as the end, but as the means to an end, and think of their content and community, really, as this strategic asset on which they can launch other types of companies," she said. Fund size: $60 million, according to the company. Recent investments: The company writes checks ranging from $1 million to $3 million directly to creators, including woodworking creator Jonathan Katz-Moses. Spice Capital sees creators as the next generation of small businesses Investor: Maya Bakhai, founder and general partner Spice Capital launched in 2021 and now has over 50 portfolio companies across AI, the blockchain, and consumer, Bakhai said. It invests in founders who are capitalizing on new behaviors and cultural shifts. Prior to launching Spice, Bakhai worked at Kevin Durant's VC firm Thirty Five Ventures and amassed capital as an angel investor through profits from her bet on Crocs. "Everyone is a creator, whether your viral video became a meme, whether you are publishing your résumé on LinkedIn, writing as an independent journalist, or a startup looking for distribution edge," she said. "Everyone is competing in the same attention economy where the best narratives earn spotlight and a premium in valuation." Fund size: Fund II is a $25 million fund specializing in pre-seed, Bakhai said. Recent investments: Beehiiv, a newsletter platform Dirt, a newsletter company with five brands across entertainment, books, design, tennis, and news Hype, an app for trading memecoins MUBI, a streaming service, production company, and distributor for curated films Upside Ventures uses social media marketing to help boost its portfolio companies Investors: Jamie Elliott, general partner; Sam Uwins, general partner Upside Ventures is a London-based VC firm that focuses on seed-stage investments in consumer startups. The firm has roots in the creator economy. Uwins, a general partner, works with YouTube creators The Sidemen. He's helped them develop businesses like the vodka product XIX and a fried-chicken restaurant chain called Sides. Upside said its ties to media properties like YouTube help it boost brand visibility for its portfolio companies. Fund size: $25 million, according to the company. Recent investments: Ceartas, a content detection tool for creators that tracks down stolen content, fake profiles, and deepfakes ChatBCC, a group chat platform for creators

Countries deadlocked on plastic production and chemicals as talks on a global treaty draw to a close
Countries deadlocked on plastic production and chemicals as talks on a global treaty draw to a close

Associated Press

time28 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Countries deadlocked on plastic production and chemicals as talks on a global treaty draw to a close

GENEVA (AP) — Negotiations on a global treaty to end plastic pollution are drawing to a close Thursday, as nations remain deadlocked over whether to tackle the exponential growth of plastic production. A draft of the treaty released Wednesday wouldn't limit plastic production or address chemicals used in plastic products. Instead, it's centered on proposals where there's broad agreement — such as reducing the number of problematic plastic products that often enter the environment and are difficult to recycle, promoting the redesign of plastic products so they can be recycled and reused, and improving waste management. It asks nations to make commitments to ending plastic pollution, rather than imposing global, legally-binding rules. A new draft is expected Thursday afternoon, and the talks — involving representatives from 184 countries and more than 600 organizations — are likely to conclude Friday. Andreas Bjelland Eriksen, Norway's minister for climate and the environment, said the current text is unacceptable and the country's representatives won't leave Geneva with 'just any treaty.' Norway is helping to lead a coalition of countries called the High Ambition Coalition that want a comprehensive approach to ending plastic pollution, including reducing production. 'We are going to be flexible, but at the same time ambitious in our positions, and work with every single hour that we have left to bring this to a conclusion, a positive conclusion, because the world needs a plastics treaty now.' Eriksen said he'll stay 'cautiously optimistic' until the bitter end. Every year, the world makes more than 400 million tons of new plastic, and that could grow by about 70% by 2040 without policy changes. About 100 countries want to limit production as well as tackle cleanup and recycling. Many have said it's essential to address toxic chemicals. Powerful oil and gas-producing nations and the plastics industry oppose production limits. They want a treaty focused on better waste management and reuse. They have raised different concerns with the draft text, saying it doesn't have the scope they want to set the parameters of the treaty or precise definitions. Camila Zepeda, from Mexico's Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, said it doesn't seem feasible at this stage to get a limit on production. But, she said, they want to see something more in the treaty on sustainable production and consumption than the brief mention in the current preamble. Mexico and Switzerland are also leading a push for an article to address problematic plastic products, including chemicals and single-use plastics. 'We are on the final stretch, but we remain hopeful and we remain committed to making sure that we're putting back in the text some provisions that will allow us to to strengthen it, to deliver, and to have an impact,' she said. 'That's what we want at the end.' It's the sixth time nations are meeting and the 10th day of negotiations. Talks last year in South Korea were supposed to be the final round, but they adjourned in December at an impasse over cutting production and agreed to meet again. Some in attendance wondered whether the outcome in Geneva will be the same. Sivendra Michael, Fiji's permanent secretary for environment and climate change, emphatically rejected the idea of another meeting. It is costly, unfair, and tedious to travel so far to continuously restate positions, he said Thursday. He said he firmly believed this meeting should conclude with a formal treaty that will be acceptable to all. However, Hiwot Hailu, chief of staff for the Environmental Protection Authority of Ethiopia, said Ethiopia supports meeting again if nations can't reach agreement on important articles for financing the accord and addressing the full lifecycle of plastics, including production, design and disposal. It would be better to not have a treaty, rather than a weak one, Hailu said. Jessika Roswall, the European commissioner for the environment, said the treaty must cover the full lifecycle of plastics and be able to evolve over time with science. 'A weak, static agreement serves no one,' she said in a statement. 'The next few hours will show whether we can rise to the moment.' ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store