Business
Andrew fixed palace visit for firm with £1.4m deal with ex-wife
Billy Kenber,politics investigations correspondent and
Phil Kemp,political reporter
Getty ImagesAndrew Mountbatten Windsor arranged a private tour of Buckingham Palace while the late Queen was in residence, for businessmen from a cryptocurrency mining firm which agreed to pay his ex-wife up to £1.4m, the BBC can reveal.
Jay Bloom and his colleague Michael Evers were driven through the palace gates in the former prince’s own car after being collected from their five-star Knightsbridge hotel for the visit in June 2019.
Their company, Pegasus Group Holdings, which Mr Bloom co-founded, employed Sarah Ferguson as a “brand ambassador” for a crypto-mining scheme which would lose investors millions when it failed less than a year later.
Mr Bloom, an entrepreneur who had previously set up a failed Mafia-themed museum in Las Vegas, and Mr Evers, a former actor, were met by a greeter and escorted inside the palace.
Mr Evers told the BBC they then met the Queen, although Mr Bloom disputed this.
Both Mr Evers and Mr Bloom were invited by the then-prince to his Pitch@Palace event – a Dragons’ Den-style business pitching competition – at nearby St James’s Palace later that day, and they dined that evening with Andrew, Ms Ferguson and their daughter Princess Beatrice.
Ms Ferguson was working with Pegasus Group Holdings at the time of the palace visit, while she was Duchess of York, to promote plans to use thousands of solar power generators to mine Bitcoin at a remote site in the Arizona desert.
But the project ultimately failed with only 615 of the planned 16,000 generators acquired and just $33,779 (about £25,000) in cryptocurrency mined.
In April 2021, some investors took legal action, claiming millions of dollars of investor funds were unaccounted for. A tribunal awarded the investors $4.1m, but Mr Bloom is seeking permission to appeal.
The revelations add to growing questions about how Andrew and his former wife have funded their lifestyle, as well as long-standing concerns about their business connections and that the then-prince may have used his royal titles and connections for private gain.
On Thursday evening, Buckingham Palace announced that it was starting the formal process of stripping Andrew of his royal titles and that he would be losing his Windsor mansion, following intense criticism of his links with the billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
Andrew and Ms Ferguson did not respond to a detailed list of questions about their involvement with Mr Bloom and the crypto-mining venture.
FacebookSarah Ferguson was paid more than £200,000 for her work for the company and a leaked contract reveals she was in line for a separate bonus worth £1.2m.
She also received a stake in the business, which proposed using solar generators to reduce the cost of the energy-intensive computer calculations needed to generate or “mine” the digital currency Bitcoin.
Her contract stipulated that she required first-class travel, five-star hotels and the services of a professional hairdresser and make-up artist for the maximum of four “networking events” she would attend on the company’s behalf.
It said she did not “hold herself out as an expert on the solar industry” and therefore accepted no responsibility for “industry-related information or commercial assessments” used as the basis for her statements promoting the company.
A royal friendship
Sarah Ferguson first met the Las Vegas businessman Jay Bloom in May 2018 when she was at a convention in the city to promote one of her children’s books.
The pair struck up a friendship and business relationship.
Pegasus documents would subsequently describe her role as to “engage with the company’s clients, investors and strategic relationships” as well as involvement with the company’s planned “philanthropic activities”.
For Mr Bloom, it was an introduction to royal circles which would lead to visits to Buckingham Palace and St James’s Palace, a tour of Ms Ferguson and Andrew’s home, the Royal Lodge in Windsor, and dinners with her and her family in at least four different countries.
Eight years before the duchess signed up to be a brand ambassador for Pegasus, Mr Bloom had hit the Las Vegas headlines, accused of missing payments and deceiving investors in connection with a “mob experience” exhibition in the city. Mr Bloom denied wrongdoing, fought investors’ lawsuits and vowed to repay them.

He now had a new company, Pegasus, and ambitions to build a hotel and casino in Greece.
It was there in July 2018, while considering investing in the company, that Michael Evers, a former actor and reality TV star who had made money from cryptocurrency investments, first met Ms Ferguson.
The hotel and casino did not get built, but Mr Bloom had soon pivoted Pegasus to a new idea, one that was inspired by seeing a mobile solar power generator in use at the Las Vegas motor speedway in early 2019, according to filings in the later legal action brought by investors.
Mr Bloom and his co-founders hit upon a plan to use vast banks of these units to power a crypto-mining operation. The endeavour, the company estimated, would generate millions of dollars a month.
In March 2019, Ms Ferguson had dinner with Mr Bloom in Los Angeles. They had lunch at the Beverly Hills Hotel a few days later as she helped him try to close a deal for Pegasus. One of her daughters stopped by during the meal.
Mr Evers was now working for Pegasus as well as being an investor. He said he and Mr Bloom were regularly in London over the following months as they explored taking Pegasus public on the AIM market – part of the London Stock Exchange for growing companies.
FacebookHe said he got to know Ms Ferguson and her family and “through all that, I met Prince Andrew [and] Princess Beatrice and a lot of their family” who he described as “really great people, really friendly”.
“We were there once a month for a week to two weeks at a time and every time the relationships just kind of grew stronger and stronger and they started offering tours of different places, I guess like behind the scenes or I don’t know what you’d call it,” Mr Evers said. “And just wanting to introduce us to more and more people.”
As well as a tour of the Royal Lodge, Andrew and his ex-wife arranged for the pair to visit Buckingham Palace on a day in June 2019 when it was closed to the public.
They were picked up from their Knightsbridge hotel by an official driver in a dark blue Range Rover used by Andrew and driven through the palace gates in the early afternoon.
Once inside they were taken through to the inner courtyard, where a female greeter was waiting to meet them. A video taken by the men from inside the car captured their arrival.
A former Royal Household employee, who reviewed the footage, told BBC News that it was clear that palace security staff on the gate were expecting the vehicle.
“The ramp was dropped before they came out to speak to the driver,” they said. “That was the reception we’d expect if we were carrying a member of the Royal Family.”
What happened once they went inside is disputed by the two men.
Mr Evers said they had been told in advance that there would be an opportunity to meet the Queen. But once there, he said staff told him he was not allowed to take photos.
“They didn’t want anyone knowing that we were meeting Elizabeth. And it was very, very brief, she was not doing super well, so it was more just like a hello and in passing. No touching or anything,” he said.
He said it wasn’t a formal meeting, “it was just like a quick, ‘hello, goodbye'”.
The Queen was in residence that day, with her published schedule including her regular weekly audience with the prime minister. The Palace was unable to confirm or deny whether the introduction with the two men took place.
Responding to questions by email, Mr Bloom initially said he had decided just to visit the palace as a tourist. He subsequently said the only person he met at the palace was a “staffer”.
Getty ImagesWhen challenged and presented with evidence from his own social media, which included footage of him being driven into the palace, and comments about spending time with Andrew, and there being “pictures I can post, the pictures I can’t, and then the stuff I couldn’t take pictures of… lol”, Mr Bloom said he had misremembered.
He then admitted that he “was in fact shown to Andrews [sic] office and did thank him for the car and for him and Sarah arranging the tour”.
He denied ever having met or been in the same room as the late Queen.
Mr Bloom made a second visit to Buckingham Palace in July 2019, photos show. On social media he made an apparently joking reference to “meeting HRH”.
Helicopters and guns in the desert
Two months later, Ms Ferguson was one of two celebrity guests – alongside the motivational speaker Tony Robbins, who says he has coached figures such as Serena Williams and Hugh Jackman – at a “ground breaking” for Pegasus’s energy project launch in the Arizona desert.
They were flown in, with Mr Bloom, Mr Evers and others, in two black-and-gold helicopters and posed with gold-coloured spades and construction hats at the remote site of what Pegasus promised would become a multi-billion-dollar off-grid data centre.
With armed guards with AR-15 rifles and pistols standing nearby, Mr Bloom introduced Ms Ferguson at a press conference as a “personal friend”.
In the short speech that followed, Ms Ferguson praised the company, saying she was “so proud to be here” and touted the potential philanthropic uses of the technology in Africa.
InstagramThat October, a month before Andrew’s fateful BBC Newsnight interview where he disastrously attempted to explain his connections to Mr Epstein, Ms Ferguson signed a contract agreeing to provide specific services for Pegasus.
For reasons that remain unexplained, the contract itself was with Alphabet Capital, a British company whose owner, Adrian Gleave, ran a number of caravan and holiday parks.
A High Court ruling in London in 2024 has previously revealed that Ms Ferguson received more than £200,000 for her work for Pegasus from Alphabet Capital.
Andrew has also received money from Alphabet, including £60,500 traced to Mr Gleave and his businesses, according to court documents previously reported by the BBC.
Neither Andrew nor Mr Gleave have explained why this money was paid.
Mr Bloom said he has never heard of Alphabet or Mr Gleave and there was no connection with Pegasus.
Lawsuits and recriminations
A year after investing millions of dollars in the crypto solar scheme, some of its main investors became concerned about progress and began legal proceedings.
In 2023, judges from the Commercial Arbitration Tribunal in the US found in the investors’ favour awarding them millions of dollars.
Jay Bloom has since mounted a number of legal challenges over the award in the Nevada courts.
Mr Bloom told BBC News that Pegasus emphatically disputed “any allegations of misconduct” and said they were “addressing the clearly flawed arbitral findings through established legal processes”.
Andrew and Ms Ferguson did not respond to the BBC’s questions, including whether Ms Ferguson planned to repay money received for her Pegasus work to the company’s investors.
Mr Evers said he regretted being involved with Pegasus. He said Mr Bloom was “working very, very hard to get all the investors paid back” but that he was frustrated to still be owed money himself several years later.
- If you have any information on stories you would like to share with the BBC Politics Investigations team, please get in touch at politicsinvestigations@bbc.co.uk
Business
India-US trade deal: 25% penal tariffs linked to Russian oil gone? Here’s what we know – The Times of India
US President Donald Trump has reportedly agreed to remove the 25% tariff America imposed on India for its crude oil imports from Russia. A New Delhi–based source quoted in a Bloomberg report said that the US has agreed to withdraw the 25% penal tariff for India’s Russian oil procurement. In the meantime, India and the US have announced a trade deal, with the Trump administration lowering the tariffs on Indian exports to 18%. Trump took to social media platform Truth Social to announce the trade deal, which was later confirmed by PM Narendra Modi confirming it via X (Twitter). However, India is yet to confirm the details of the trade deal shared by Trump in his post.
Also Read | India-US trade deal announced by US President Donald Trump; check detailsUS Ambassador to India Sergio Gor also told a TV channel that the final figure of tariff on India will be 18%, indicating that the 25% penal tariff linked to Russian crude has also been removed.He also said that the 18% tariff rate is effective immediately, and that India would buy $500 billion worth of US energy, coal, technology and agricultural products.Russia has been the largest supplier of crude for India since the start of the former’s war with Ukraine. The share in India’s oil import basket has gone up to almost 40%. But recently, after US sanctions on Russian oil firms, Indian refiners had been forced to reduce Russian crude oil purchases.
India-US Trade Deal: What PM Modi, Trump said
PM Modi posted on X, “Wonderful to speak with my dear friend President Trump today. Delighted that Made in India products will now have a reduced tariff of 18%. Big thanks to President Trump on behalf of the 1.4 billion people of India for this wonderful announcement. When two large economies and the world’s largest democracies work together, it benefits our people and unlocks immense opportunities for mutually beneficial cooperation. President Trump’s leadership is vital for global peace, stability, and prosperity. India fully supports his efforts for peace. I look forward to working closely with him to take our partnership to unprecedented heights.”Before Trump had posted on social media, “It was an Honor to speak with Prime Minister Modi, of India, this morning. He is one of my greatest friends and, a Powerful and Respected Leader of his Country. We spoke about many things, including Trade, and ending the War with Russia and Ukraine. He agreed to stop buying Russian Oil, and to buy much more from the United States and, potentially, Venezuela. This will help END THE WAR in Ukraine, which is taking place right now, with thousands of people dying each and every week! Out of friendship and respect for Prime Minister Modi and, as per his request, effective immediately, we agreed to a Trade Deal between the United States and India, whereby the United States will charge a reduced Reciprocal Tariff, lowering it from 25% to 18%. They will likewise move forward to reduce their Tariffs and Non Tariff Barriers against the United States, to ZERO. The Prime Minister also committed to “BUY AMERICAN,” at a much higher level, in addition to over $500 BILLION DOLLARS of U.S. Energy, Technology, Agricultural, Coal, and many other products. Our amazing relationship with India will be even stronger going forward. Prime Minister Modi and I are two people that GET THINGS DONE, something that cannot be said for most. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”
Business
Disney supercharged its parks. The booming division still has room to run
People walk in front of Cinderella’s Castle at the Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World on May 31, 2024, in Orlando, Florida.
Gary Hershorn | Corbis News | Getty Images
All is well in the Magic Kingdom — and all of Disney’s other theme parks, too.
The company’s experiences division, which includes its parks, cruise ships, hotels and consumer products, posted record revenue for the fiscal first quarter, topping $10 billion for the first time in Disney’s more than 100-year history. It also reported operating income of $3.3 billion, a 6% bump from the same period a year ago.
Growth in this segment has supercharged in the wake of the Covid pandemic. It often accounts for the lion’s share of the company’s profits. For the period ended Dec. 27, experiences represented 38% of Disney’s total revenue, yet generated a whopping 71% of its operating income.
Company executives expect those good times to continue, forecasting high-single-digit growth in operating income for the segment for fiscal 2026.
“When you look at the footprint of the business today, it’s never been more broad or more diverse,” Bob Iger, CEO of Disney, said during Monday’s earnings call. “And the projects that we have underway are going to make it even more so.”
The strong parks performance comes against the backdrop of a CEO succession competition that could see Chairman of Disney Experiences Josh D’Amaro step in for Iger. The Disney board is meeting this week and is expected to vote on its next CEO, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity about internal matters.
Industry insiders and Disney sources expect D’Amaro to be appointed Iger’s successor, though the decision ultimately lies with the Disney board and won’t be final until directors vote.
“The board has not yet selected the next CEO of The Walt Disney Company and once that decision is made, we will announce it,” a Disney spokesperson said in a statement, declining to comment on the timing of the next board meeting.
Parks expansion
Much of the experiences division’s success comes from major investments to expand the footprint of Disney theme parks, refurbish existing rides and themed areas of its parks, add cruise ships to its fleet and grow its digital gaming presence. This new evolution of the segment is being fueled by Disney’s library of franchises and iconic intellectual property.
Disney has long pulled from its portfolio of content. Disneyland opened its doors more than 70 years ago with rides based on “Alice in Wonderland,” “The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad,” “Peter Pan” and “Snow White.”
While those classic attractions remain, the company’s more recent developments have been fueled by Iger’s strategic acquisitions of four major film studios — Pixar in 2006, Marvel in 2009, Lucasfilm in 2012 and 20th Century Fox in 2019. This brought coveted franchises under the House of Mouse roof, including Star Wars, Toy Story, the Avengers and Avatar.
“As we added IP to our stable … we gained access to intellectual property that had real value in terms of parks and resorts, and enabled us to lean into more capital spending because of the confidence level we had in improving returns,” Iger said.
Having the film and television rights to these properties allows the company more control over production and how that translates into rides, experiences and merchandise.
And that work continues as part of a 10-year, $60 billion investment effort that launched in 2023.
“We have expansion projects underway at every one of our theme parks,” Iger said.
He touted the upcoming opening of the World of Frozen in Disneyland Paris and the launch of a new cruise ship, the Disney Adventure, which will make berth in Asia.
On the horizon is also a new villains land coming to Magic Kingdom as well of the reshaping of “Rivers of America,” “Tom Sawyer Island” and the “Liberty Square Riverboat” into an area called “Piston Peak” — a second Cars-themed land modeled after America’s natural parks. At Hollywood Studios there will be a new “Monsters Inc.” land while the Muppets will take over the Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster attraction. Animal Kingdom will host an “Encanto” ride and a new Indiana Jones ride.
At Disneyland, Avengers Campus, the Marvel-themed area, will get two new attractions, guests will get a glimpse at the Land of the Dead from “Coco” and Disney will build a new Avatar area inspired by the scenery in “Avatar: Fire and Ash.”
Internationally, Disney has struck a deal to bring a new park and resort to Yas Island in the United Arab Emirates.
International headwinds
The company’s commitment to bringing beloved IP into its parks is paying off, according to Iger, particularly outside the U.S.
“The percentage of people that go to Shanghai Disneyland just to go to Zootopia Land is very, very high,” he said Monday.
Revenue from international theme parks and experiences grew 7% during the fiscal first quarter, to $1.75 billion.
Of course, the company is still facing headwinds from the decline of international visitors to its domestic parks.
It’s a trend that many theme park destinations in America are contending with, as overall tourism to the United States fell 6% in 2025. Industry analysts point to higher travel costs and fees, ongoing trade frictions and geopolitical unease for the drop in demand for travel stateside.
Despite this, domestic theme park and experiences revenue grew 7% during the quarter, to $6.91 billion.
New offerings at Disney’s international parks, the launch of a cruise ship that services Asia and the new Abu Dhabi park are all ways that Disney can tap into that foreign market and engage with consumers that are not making the trek to the company’s domestic destinations.
— CNBC’s Julia Boorstin and Alex Sherman contributed to this report.
Business
Disney signals its next CEO will take over a company with strong momentum
Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Iger looks on prior to the game between the Philadelphia Eagles and the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field on November 10, 2025 in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
Michael Reaves | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images
Disney is ready for its next CEO.
On Monday, the company’s leadership outlined its recent successes during its quarterly earnings report. CEO Bob Iger made the case that when his soon-to-be-named successor picks up the baton, Disney will be primed to seize the momentum.
“I’m incredibly proud of all that we’ve accomplished over the past three years to set Disney on the path to continued growth. I’m inspired and energized by the opportunities ahead for this wonderful company,” Iger told investors on Monday.
Iger reclaimed the CEO role in late 2022 after a failed succession plan involving former parks boss Bob Chapek. Disney picked Chapek to succeed Iger in 2020 only to fire him 2½ years later and undo many of the changes he’d implemented.
Now, Disney is counting on a smoother handover the second time around, cushioned by a path to growth.
The Disney board is meeting this week and is expected to vote on its next CEO, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity about internal matters. The company previously said it would announce a replacement for Iger in the first quarter of this year.
“I think what is noteworthy is that when I came back three years ago, I had a tremendous amount that needed fixing,” Iger said on Monday’s call. “But anyone who runs a company also knows that it can’t just be about fixing. It has to be preparing a company for its future … but taking steps to create opportunities for growth.”
On Monday, Disney topped Wall Street expectations for both revenue and earnings for its fiscal first quarter.
The company’s experiences division, which includes theme parks, resorts and cruises, notched more than $10 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time. Chairman of Disney Experiences Josh D’Amaro is among the front-runners to be named as the next CEO.
Industry insiders and Disney sources expect D’Amaro to be appointed Iger’s successor, though the decision ultimately lies with the Disney board and won’t be final until directors vote.
“The board has not yet selected the next CEO of The Walt Disney Company and once that decision is made, we will announce it,” a Disney spokesperson said in a statement, declining to comment on the timing of the next board meeting.
Iger said Monday he was “very, very bullish” on the parks business and its ability to grow. Disney is now planning to develop a theme park and resort in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, has been launching more cruise ships, and is in the midst of a previously announced investment of $60 billion into its theme parks over the next decade.
Meanwhile, Disney’s entertainment segment — the unit that houses its TV networks, streaming and theatrical releases, and arguably needed the biggest turnaround in recent years — saw revenue rise 7% in the period. Disney stopped breaking out streaming subscriber growth this quarter, but offered guidance that showed Disney is confident it will continue to grow and offset traditional TV declines.
While theme parks, resorts and cruises have been the profit driver for Disney, its TV, streaming and film business is often in focus. Following underwhelming years at the box office, Disney dominated in 2025, and on Monday its leadership touted its slate ahead.
“Looking back just a few years when our movie business was suffering from Covid and the streaming business was obviously not in an acceptable place, it’s clear that the future of both of those businesses, or let’s call it our entertainment business, is also bright and it’s going to grow,” Iger said on the company’s earnings call.
Disney’s co-chairman of Entertainment, Dana Walden, is also among the Iger lieutenants vying for the CEO seat, CNBC previously reported.
Former Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman has been running the process to select a successor. Given the focus on theme parks in recent years, speculation has recently swung in D’Amaro’s favor.
“In a world that changes as much as it does … trying to preserve the status quo was a mistake,” Iger said Monday addressing Disney’s last leadership transition.
“And I’m certain that my successor will not do that,” he said. “They’ll be handed, I think, a good hand in terms of the strength of the company, a number of opportunities to grow and also the expectation that in a world that changes, you also have to continue to change and evolve as well.”
— CNBC’s Julia Boorstin contributed to this report.
Correction: This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Morgan Stanley.
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