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CFO Brew // Morning Brew // Update
Veteran pharma CFO focuses on commercialization and scale.

Hello there. The PCAOB is seeking public comment to help inform updates to its 2026–2030 strategic plan. Given the audit overseer’s total revamp and salary slashing by SEC Chair Paul Atkins, we wonder if the former board members will care to contribute.

In this issue:

Dose of finance

Perish the thought!

That’s a wrap

Alex Zank, Sissy Yan

CFOVILLE

A portrait of Sam Backenroth, CFO of Aspargo Labs, a biotechnology company

Sam Backenroth

Sam Backenroth is concocting a recipe for Aspargo Labs’ finance function.

Backenroth joined the company, which develops liquid oral suspensions for medicines that treat conditions like erectile dysfunction, in January. Aspargo Labs has big growth plans, both for its products and geographic markets.

Backenroth has lots of experience leading public pharmaceutical companies. He’ll be tasked with “building out the financial and operational side” at Aspargo, he said.

CFO Brew recently spoke with Backenroth about that, as well as the company’s growth plans and where he fits into those efforts as finance chief.

Keep reading.AZ

Presented by BILL

ACCOUNTING

Fed reserve Michelle Bowman

Photo By Mike Kline (Notkalvin)/Getty Images

There’s a strong possibility the Federal Reserve, under new leadership, will focus on reducing the reserves on its balance sheet.

In a speech he gave on Thursday at the Economic Club of Miami, Federal Reserve Board Governor Stephen Miran said the Fed should revert back to its pre-2008 financial crisis policy of holding “scarce reserves,” and laid out a roadmap for doing so.

The central bank “should aim for as small a footprint in markets as possible to minimize government-induced distortions,” Miran said. He added that a smaller balance sheet keeps “the Fed out of the credit allocation game across sectors” and preserves “dry powder for a scenario in which policymakers must again confront the zero lower bound on interest rates.”

Miran, also a member of the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, laid out a guide that he said would allow a “$1 trillion to $2 trillion of balance sheet reduction.” He also said that skeptics “simply lack imagination.”

Keep reading.AZ

MARKETS

Stock Market wraps up worst quarter in 4 years

Brittany Holloway-Brown

Anyone whose New Year’s resolution was to enjoy some strong investment returns is probably pretty disappointed: The stock market just had an absolutely terrible quarter.

Back in December, investors were optimistic: Strong economic growth, expected rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, and easing trade tensions painted a near-perfect backdrop for stocks.

Then January hit. AI disruption fears rattled markets, dragging down software and spilling into sectors like wealth management, data, and cybersecurity. Investors rotated into defensives in the so-called “HALO trade,” fleeing to steady, cash-generating companies and taking the wind out of AI’s sails.

But the real turning point came in late February, with the outbreak of the Iran war and surging oil prices, reigniting fears of stagflation. That, in turn, pushed markets to rethink the Fed’s path toward fewer cuts and tighter policy, raising borrowing costs and weighing on stocks.

Keep reading on Brew Markets.SY

Sponsored By S&P Global Market Intelligence

MARKET FORCES

market forces chart

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top finance reads.

Stat. -0.1%. Business inventories dipped unexpectedly, albeit slightly, in January from December. Economists polled by Reuters expected the inverse: a 0.1% increase. Inventories haven’t had a month over month increase since last October. (Reuters)

Quote. “We also recognize that the environment around us has become increasingly dynamic, and we could experience unplanned volatility due to the disruption in the Middle East, rising oil prices and other factors that could impact either input costs or consumer behavior. We are focused on what we can control.”—Matt Friend, Nike CFO (CNBC)

Read. Heirs of Marcel Bich (founder of the Bic pen company) have filed a lawsuit against a Chilean businessman, seeking the return of an Italian Renaissance painting by Fra Angelico. They allege the 15th century work was stolen by a family employee around 2006. (Bloomberg)

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