| How to start cutting healthcare costs. |
 Presented By |  |
Hello again! If a financial model built wholly or partially by AI causes a financial loss or is otherwise flawed, whom would you blame? A survey by the Financial Modeling Institute found that only 25% of respondents would blame “the person who builds or oversees a model.” A fifth chose the person who commissioned the model and used its outputs, and another fifth said the organization. We foresee a problem here. In this issue: ⚕️ Action item 📈 Up vs. down 🦴 Dog days —Natasha Piñon, Layla Ilchi |
|
HEALTH BENEFITS Mounting budget pressures  Michael Silvano Photography | You’ve got to start somewhere. And when it comes to healthcare spend, you really do need to do something. The average cost of health benefits is expected to climb 6.7% in 2026, placing cost growth at a 15-year high, according to a national survey of employer-sponsored health plans from Mercer, a global professional services firm. “The current elevated cost trend, which began in 2023 following a decade of growth averaging only about 3% annually, is putting mounting pressure on benefit budgets and, in some organizations, beginning to affect broader business operations,” the report noted. And—trust—that’s been stressing CFOs out: A third of finance chiefs Mercer polled in February 2026 ranked healthcare costs as one of their top three opex concerns. Compare that with the 19% who ranked health benefit costs as a top three concern in 2024, and you get a sense of the growing problem. Maybe, just maybe, you’re one of those stressed-out CFOs. Well, you’ve come to the right article. Incremental. The first step is simply taking a step, according to Marybeth Gray, SVP of health and welfare consulting at MarshMcLennan Agency. A multiyear cost management plan helps with more disruptive changes.—NP |
|
|
Sponsored By FloQast Big ROI increase with big independent proof  | Every finance leader is being asked to do more with less and to show proof that AI investments pay off. FloQast’s AI Readiness Blueprint webinar will hand you the receipts. On July 14, a Forrester TEI consultant will join FloQast experts to walk through Forrester’s independently commissioned Total Economic Impact study. The findings: 275% ROI and payback in under six months for organizations using FloQast. You’ll hear the methodology behind Forrester’s TEI framework so you can build your own AI business case for leadership. Real customers will share how they’re going from 12-day close cycles to five. And you’ll learn how FloQast’s AI tools are upskilling accountants. For some, FloQast feels like the first tool that cuts through the hype. And this could change the way accounting departments are structured. Register for the AI Readiness Blueprint webinar today. |
|
|
INTEREST RATES Fed split  Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images | Kevin Warsh wanted a fight. Well, at the very least, he wanted a gentle disagreement, perhaps of the “Dad technically won the Scrabble game, not little brother Billy” variety. Previously, the Federal Reserve chair had expressed hope for “a good family fight” when it comes to rate policy, saying in a June 17 press conference that the result of that “fight” should ultimately “make the discussion we have internally better, stronger, more of a dialectic, so that we can finally deliver on that price stability objective.” It wasn’t his first time using the phrase: Warsh also used the same “family fight” analogy at his Senate confirmation hearing, per CNBC. So, did that desired family fight end in an overturned Scrabble board and tears, or reconciliatory hugs? It’s a bit hard to say. (Also, not exactly the vibe of the Federal Open Market Committee.) In any case, the minutes of the June 16–17 FOMC meeting released on July 8 showed there was some gentle disagreement: Fed officials were split on where the fed funds rate would be by year’s end. Though the committee unanimously agreed to keep interest rates steady in the range of 3.5% to 3.75%, which was the first vote since June 2025 that lacked opposition, there was less unanimity when it came to their outlooks. Fed communications may become shorter and simpler.—NP |
|
|
REVENUE GROWTH The living ain’t easy  Getty Images | The summer months can impact any organization’s GTM strategy, with holidays and vacations stalling deals and slowing momentum. According to ZoomInfo, the summer activity lull could cost companies up to $400,000 in new business. So is there a way for sales teams to push through and avoid the seasonal blip? “It’s not so much [that] deals slow down—activity kind of slows down and there’s a lag,” Trindl Reeves, chief revenue officer at insurance brokerage and consulting firm Marsh McLennan Agency, said. “What we do today is going to help us in Q1, so it’s important that the activity, as far as new business appointments and those kinds of things, are happening now.” CROs and sales leaders have taken note of this trend and factored it into their yearly planning. Slow and steady. Some CROs are taking advantage of the slower period and refocusing attention on things they might not normally have the time to do. According to Bill Warshauer, CRO of rewards and incentives platform Tillo, this time can give CROs a chance to reevaluate priorities and make sure their team is on track to hit goals. Focus on filling the future pipeline, Revenue Brew reports.—LI |
|
|
market forces .jpg) Francis Scialabba | Today’s top finance reads. Stat. $9.6 billion. The reported price the Khosla family is paying to acquire the NFL’s defending Super Bowl champions, the Seattle Seahawks. The late Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft, bought the team in 1997 for $194 million. (CNBC) Quote. “This merger will snuff out competition, drive up prices, diminish content quality, and produce fewer movies and shows each year.”—California Attorney General Rob Bonta, announcing a 12-state lawsuit to stop the Paramount-Warner Bros. merger (The Hollywood Reporter) Read. Zurich and Geneva led the list of 69 cities with the highest disposable incomes, beating out San Francisco, according to Deutsche Bank Research Institute’s survey, “Mapping the World’s Prices.” (Bloomberg) Numbers tell the truth: Join Forrester and FloQast on July 14 for a deep dive into the Total Economic Impact study showing $1.2 million in preparer savings and 12-day closes down to five. Register now.* *A message from our sponsor. |
|
|
Jobs  | Skip the noise and cut to the jobs that matter. CollabWORK curates openings from top employers and shares them directly in trusted spaces like CFO Brew—click here to see the full list for readers like you. |
|
|
Written by Natasha Piñon and Layla Ilchi Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here. Get smarter in just 5 minutes Take The Brew to work Interested in podcasts? | ADVERTISE//CAREERS//SHOP//FAQ
Update your email preferences or unsubscribe here. View our privacy policy here.
Copyright © 2026 Morning Brew Inc. All rights reserved. 22 W 19th St, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10011 |
|
|