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Stagwell (STGW) Acquires Experiential Marketing and Creative Agency JetFuel

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NEW YORK, May 6, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Stagwell (NASDAQ: STGW), the challenger network built to transform marketing, today announced the acquisition of JetFuel, an experiential marketing services agency that accelerates brand awareness through experiences, content and conversations. JetFuel will become a subsidiary of Stagwell’s integrated experiential agency TEAM.

Launched in 2016 and headquartered in New York City, JetFuel has progressively grown both its client base and capabilities to become a top independent agency renowned for its expertise in live brand experiences, retail and shopper marketing, digital content and sponsorship activations. JetFuel maintains the mentality of a start-up and the heritage of a traditional agency, working to ignite change, transform brands, disrupt the status quo, spark innovation, and inspire advocacy. JetFuel is best known for delivering live brand experiences for clients including Walmart, Unilever, Kimberly Clark and Feastables.

“JetFuel’s award-winning experiential capabilities strengthen our commitment to delivering best-in-class experiences for our clients’ customers,” said Stagwell Chairman and CEO Mark Penn. “This acquisition underscores our strategy to keep Stagwell just the right size to produce game-changing work for clients.”

The addition of JetFuel follows Stagwell’s acquisitions of Gold Rabbit Sports and ADK GLOBAL earlier this year, and a total of 11 acquisitions throughout 2024.

“Joining forces with Stagwell marks the beginning of an extraordinary new chapter for JetFuel. Together, we share a bold ambition to reinvent what live brand experiences can be — pushing boundaries, inspiring deeper connections, and setting new standards for innovation. With access to Stagwell’s high level insights and data resources, as well as integration with their world class creative thinking, we’ll be able to design experiences that are not just more effective and efficient, but truly transformative for our clients and their audiences,” shared Abe Sorcher, CEO of JetFuel.

“We’re excited to bring JetFuel into the network and continue to build out the experiential discipline at Stagwell, as clients continue to recognize the value of authentic live connections in a digital-first world,” added Dan Gregory, CEO of TEAM. “Investing in this key offering and having a diverse roster of agencies who can deliver results-driven campaigns is a game changer.”

Kidron Capital Securities acted as the financial advisor to JetFuel for this transaction.

About Stagwell
Stagwell is the challenger holding company built to transform marketing. We deliver scaled creative performance for the world’s most ambitious brands, connecting culture-moving creativity with leading-edge technology to harmonize the art and science of marketing. Led by entrepreneurs, our specialists in 45+ countries are unified under a single purpose: to drive effectiveness and improve business results for our clients. Join us at www.stagwellglobal.com.

About TEAM
TEAM is an agency dedicated to making impactful brand experiences. We bring big ideas to life in ways that are not just seen and heard but truly felt. Every year, we design and deliver over 100,000 brand activations and events across the globe. Our brand playbooks merge commercial success with creative brilliance, creating meaningful connections and nurturing community spirit. Whether building brands from scratch or revitalizing existing ones, we infuse them with vitality, authenticity, and tangible platforms for interaction. By prioritizing scaled experiences at the core of brand strategy, we empower brands to build deeper relationships, share compelling stories, and engage with audiences authentically. Visit www.weareteam.com to learn more.

About JetFuel
JetFuel is a brand accelerant built with the hustle mentality of a start-up and the heritage of a traditional agency. At JetFuel, we’re not just making noise – we’re igniting change. We believe in the boundless power of creativity to transform brands, disrupt the status quo, spark innovation, and inspire advocacy. We create live experiences & breakthrough content that paves the way, and for people to share through discovery. We live for, sweat for, and celebrate these moments. It’s these moments that define JetFuel. JetFuelStudio.com    

Contact 
Kara Gelber
PR@stagwellglobal.com

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SOURCE Stagwell Inc.

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Construmat Showcases the Transformation of Construction Towards Sustainability

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BARCELONA, Spain, May 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — From May 20 to 22, Construmat returns as Spain’s leading trade fair for the construction industry, expanding in number of companies, international presence and scale. It will showcase technologies, systems, and materials aimed at advancing more sustainable and efficient construction models. The Fira de Barcelona event will also offer ideas and experiences to reduce the sector’s environmental impact, increase digitalization, attract talent, and address the housing shortage crisis.

 

 

In its 24th edition, Construmat will gather over 350 exhibitors from 22 countries in Barcelona, expecting to exceed 22,000 visitors. The fair has grown by 24% in participating companies and 15% in occupied space compared to last year.

With a commercial offering focused on sustainability and efficiency improvement, Construmat presents the latest in machinery and tools, industrialized construction, walls, structures, façades and roofs, insulation, waterproofing, urban planning and outdoor spaces, design and interior design, flooring and cladding, BIM and ICT for projects and construction, kitchens, bathrooms, lighting, energy management and capture, installations, enclosures, carpentry, locksmithing, and solar protection, among others.

This year, the fair has increased its international presence, with 35% of the commercial exhibition coming from outside Spain. Companies and group pavilions from France, Germany, Portugal, China, Poland, Belgium, Austria, Morocco, Italy, the UK, the Netherlands, Egypt, Andorra, Lithuania, Hungary, and Japan will participate.

Turkey will be the guest country, with over 20 exhibitors—mainly manufacturers of construction materials and machinery. Turkey will also feature prominently in the fair’s activity program, sharing success stories and participating in business meetings with a strong commercial and institutional delegation.

Disruptive Startups

The commercial area will also host 40 startups offering technological solutions to optimize processes, reduce costs, and improve efficiency in the construction sector. Innovations include nanocoatings to enhance material functionality and durability, sensors for real-time concrete strength monitoring, and systems for infrastructure analysis using drones and 3D technology. This area will also feature talks, pitching sessions, and networking opportunities for startups to present their projects to potential investors, buyers, and partners.

Congress, sessions, and workshops

The fair will offer 120 activities, including the standout Sustainable Building Congress. Over 100 national and international speakers will address topics such as affordable social housing, building health and biohabitability, and practical applications of AI in architecture, construction, and public works. Keynote speakers include architects David Adjaye, Peris + Toral, Stephen Bates, and Mohammed Adib.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2686553/lab_construmat.jpg
Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/659718/5317003/Fira_Barcelona_Logo.jpg

 

 

View original content:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/construmat-showcases-the-transformation-of-construction-towards-sustainability-302454436.html

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Americans trust online checkout but lack confidence in consumer protection, according to new global index from Checkout.com

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Checkout.com launches inaugural Digital Economy Trust Index, which ranks countries based on consumer perception of security, transparency and user experienceU.S. consumers express full trust in online checkout security, but show low confidence in blockchain and consumer protectionsThe Index reveals first of a kind correlation between consumer trust in the digital economy and national growth in GDP

LONDON, May 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Today Checkout.com, a leading global digital payments company, launches the inaugural Digital Economy Trust Index, which measures consumer confidence in digital platforms and ranks 16 countries based on security, transparency and user experience in the digital economy. The ranking reveals a strong direct correlation between consumer trust in the digital economy and individual country GDP growth rates between 2014 and 2024, demonstrating the critical importance of digital trust to economic growth in the modern era.

China tops the Index ranking with a trust rating of 8.6 out of 10, followed by the United Arab Emirates (UAE), The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), and Egypt. Surprisingly, considering the high rates of digitisation and e-commerce adoption in the region, Japan comes in last with an overall trust rating of just 2.6.

The Digital Economy Trust Index is intended to provide a comprehensive view of how individuals interact with, trust, and adopt digital systems. This helps businesses, policymakers and technology providers understand key trust drivers and barriers and ultimately grow trust in the digital economy to stimulate broader economic growth. Of the 18 distinct dimensions investigated in all markets, those that correlate most closely with the overall trust score were trust that new technology makes payment safer and trust in AI tools. This illustrates the inherent economic value of innovative payments and AI technologies.

China has a clear lead in trust in the digital economy, scoring full marks on trust in new payment methods, biometric security, and a belief that new technology makes payments safer. This suggests a mature technology infrastructure, cultural openness to digital innovation, and a supportive regulatory environment.

Broader regional trends show that the Middle East dominates in trust in the digital economy, with the UAE, KSA and Egypt taking second, third and fourth place in the Index respectively. All have high trust in biometrics, blockchain, and AI, possibly linked to government-led digital strategies and a supportive regulatory environment akin to China’s. Egypt punches above its weight here despite having relatively low digital payment volumes, due to its exceptionally high trust in AI tools and digital IDs.

Europe and North America lag behind in trust in the digital economy, particularly regarding trust in blockchain, biometric security and AI tools. This points to privacy concerns and general skepticism around digital advancements. Brits are particularly concerned about being scammed by deepfakes when shopping online, as well as having their image stolen and used for deepfakes while online shopping.

Spain leads Continental Europe in the Digital Economy Trust Index, while consumers in the Netherlands are more cautious but boast very high participation in the circular economy, a model of production and consumption which extends the life cycle of products via methods such as refurbishment, repair and reselling. German consumers are confident in consumer protections but cybersecurity and privacy are significant trust barriers. France has the second lowest overall trust score in the Index, only scoring higher than Japan. All European countries scored very low on digital wallet usage, in which China scored 10 out of 10, demonstrating the significant adoption gap between East and West and a global divide in preferred payment methods.

Despite sitting in the middle of the pack overall, Americans showed complete trust in online checkout security, while trust in blockchain and consumer protections scored lowest. Canada shares the lack of trust in consumer protection but has less experience of fraud and slightly more trust in storing payment card data online.

New Zealand leads developed economies in trust for digital ID and AI. Although 8th out of 16 in the overall Digital Economy Trust Index, it is a quiet frontrunner in trust outside of financial technology.

The Digital Economy Trust Index also validates Brazil’s emergence as a fintech powerhouse. High trust in digital money management and strong gig economy participation is likely buoyed by its young population and investment in and adoption of new digital payments technology, such as Pix.

The overall trends reflect the ‘leapfrog’ effect in payments. Traditionally more mature, card-based economies are falling behind emerging markets that have moved directly from cash to digital wallets when it comes to trust in the digital economy.

Checkout.com COO Jenny Hadlow says: “In the traditional economy, with physical commerce, trust is built in. You pay with chip and PIN or cash, and leave with your products in hand. In the digital economy, trust is earned. Clicking “buy” is part of a journey – with consumers handing over sensitive data, needing to believe in recourse if anything goes wrong, and making leaps of faith with emerging technologies. This index measures that trust and explores the distinct barriers that consumers globally face when it comes to embracing the digital economy, giving leaders the insight needed to overcome them.

“The digital economy is the economy of the future, and the future is arriving quickly. As such, governments and businesses urgently need to work together to increase trust in the digital economy and educate consumers on safe behaviours online to stimulate economic growth.”

“Fever has grown rapidly not just because we’ve democratised access to culture and arts, through the use of technology and data but because people know they can trust us,” commented Patricia Fernandez Hermida, Director of Operations, Fever. “We’ve embedded trust into every stage of the platform journey and reaped the rewards. To do that on a global scale across the whole digital economy would unlock more growth for everyone”.

See the full Digital Economy Trust Index here: trustindex.checkout.com

Methodology

The Digital Economy Trust Index is calculated based on three core pillars, each representing a key aspect of digital trust:

Usage and Behaviours, which assess how frequently and in what ways people engage with digital technologies, financial tools, and emerging innovations.Trust in the System, which measures consumer confidence in the security, reliability, and integrity of digital systems.Emerging Tech Adoption, which evaluates willingness to embrace and integrate newer technologies into daily life.

The pillars consist of six sub-pillars, each representing a specific dimension of digital trust. These sub-pillars are based on survey responses from 18,000 consumers across 16 countries, which research conducted by YouGov.

Responses are weighted and scored to ensure higher values reflect greater trust. Each sub-pillar score is then normalised on a 1 to 10 scale, ensuring equal weighting and comparability across measures.

The pillar score is calculated as the average of its six sub-pillars. The final Digital Trust Economy Index score is the average of the three pillar scores.

The Pearson correlation coefficient between national GDP growth rates and the Digital Economy Trust Index is approximately -0.71. This negative correlation suggests that higher GDP growth rates are associated with better (i.e., lower-numbered) rankings in trust in the digital economy.

Country

Digital Economy Trust Ranking

National GDP Growth 2014-2024 ranking

China

1

1

United Arab Emirates

2

3

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

3

4

Egypt

4

2

New Zealand

5

5

Brazil

6

15

Australia

7

8

Spain

8

7

United States

9

6

United Kingdom

10

12

Canada

11

11

Netherlands

12

9

Sweden

13

10

Germany

14

14

France

15

13

Japan

16

16

About Checkout.com 

Checkout.com processes payments for thousands of companies that shape the digital economy. Our global digital payments network supports over 145 currencies and delivers high-performance payment solutions across the world, processing billions of transactions annually. 

With flexible and scalable technology, we help enterprise businesses boost acceptance rates, reduce processing costs, combat fraud, and turn payments into a major revenue driver. Headquartered in London and with 19 offices worldwide, Checkout.com is trusted by leading brands such as Alibaba, Docusign, GE Healthcare, Remitly, Sainsbury’s, Sony, The Financial Times, Uber Eats, Vinted, and Wise. 

Checkout.com. Where the world checks out.

 

Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2665474/5309109/Checkout_com_Logo.jpg

 

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/americans-trust-online-checkout-but-lack-confidence-in-consumer-protection-according-to-new-global-index-from-checkoutcom-302451137.html

SOURCE Checkout.com

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New global Digital Economy Trust Index exposes correlation between GDP growth and consumer trust in online payments

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Checkout.com launches inaugural Digital Economy Trust Index, which ranks countries based on consumer perception of security, transparency and user experienceChina tops the digital economy trust rankings, followed closely by the Middle East, while Europe and North America lag behind due to strong mistrust for blockchain and consumer AI toolsThe Index reveals first of a kind correlation between consumer trust in the digital economy and national growth in GDP

LONDON, May 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Today Checkout.com, a leading global digital payments company, launches the inaugural Digital Economy Trust Index, which measures consumer confidence in digital platforms and ranks 16 countries based on security, transparency and user experience in the digital economy. The ranking reveals a strong direct correlation between consumer trust in the digital economy and individual country GDP growth rates between 2014 and 2024, demonstrating the critical importance of digital trust to economic growth in the modern era.

China tops the Index ranking with a trust rating of 8.6 out of 10, followed by the United Arab Emirates (UAE), The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), and Egypt. Surprisingly, considering the high rates of digitisation and e-commerce adoption in the region, Japan comes in last with an overall trust rating of just 2.6.

The Digital Economy Trust Index is intended to provide a comprehensive view of how individuals interact with, trust, and adopt digital systems. This helps businesses, policymakers and technology providers understand key trust drivers and barriers and ultimately grow trust in the digital economy to stimulate broader economic growth. Of the 18 distinct dimensions investigated in all markets, those that correlate most closely with the overall trust score were trust that new technology makes payment safer and trust in AI tools. This illustrates the inherent economic value of innovative payments and AI technologies.

China has a clear lead in trust in the digital economy, scoring full marks on trust in new payment methods, biometric security, and a belief that new technology makes payments safer. This suggests a mature technology infrastructure, cultural openness to digital innovation, and a supportive regulatory environment.

Broader regional trends show that the Middle East dominates in trust in the digital economy, with the UAE, KSA and Egypt taking second, third and fourth place in the Index respectively. All have high trust in biometrics, blockchain, and AI, possibly linked to government-led digital strategies and a supportive regulatory environment akin to China’s. Egypt punches above its weight here despite having relatively low digital payment volumes, due to its exceptionally high trust in AI tools and digital IDs.

Europe and North America lag behind in trust in the digital economy, particularly regarding trust in blockchain, biometric security and AI tools. This points to privacy concerns and general skepticism around digital advancements. Brits are particularly concerned about being scammed by deepfakes when shopping online, as well as having their image stolen and used for deepfakes while online shopping.

Spain leads Continental Europe in the Digital Economy Trust Index, while consumers in the Netherlands are more cautious but boast very high participation in the circular economy, a model of production and consumption which extends the life cycle of products via methods such as refurbishment, repair and reselling. German consumers are confident in consumer protections but cybersecurity and privacy are significant trust barriers. France has the second lowest overall trust score in the Index, only scoring higher than Japan. All European countries scored very low on digital wallet usage, in which China scored 10 out of 10, demonstrating the significant adoption gap between East and West and a global divide in preferred payment methods.

Despite sitting in the middle of the pack overall, Americans showed complete trust in online checkout security, while trust in blockchain and consumer protections scored lowest. Canada shares the lack of trust in consumer protection but has less experience of fraud and slightly more trust in storing payment card data online.

New Zealand leads developed economies in trust for digital ID and AI. Although 8th out of 16 in the overall Digital Economy Trust Index, it is a quiet frontrunner in trust outside of financial technology.

The Digital Economy Trust Index also validates Brazil’s emergence as a fintech powerhouse. High trust in digital money management and strong gig economy participation is likely buoyed by its young population and investment in and adoption of new digital payments technology, such as Pix.

The overall trends reflect the ‘leapfrog’ effect in payments. Traditionally more mature, card-based economies are falling behind emerging markets that have moved directly from cash to digital wallets when it comes to trust in the digital economy.

Checkout.com COO Jenny Hadlow says: “In the traditional economy, with physical commerce, trust is built in. You pay with chip and PIN or cash, and leave with your products in hand. In the digital economy, trust is earned. Clicking “buy” is part of a journey – with consumers handing over sensitive data, needing to believe in recourse if anything goes wrong, and making leaps of faith with emerging technologies. This index measures that trust and explores the distinct barriers that consumers globally face when it comes to embracing the digital economy, giving leaders the insight needed to overcome them.

“The digital economy is the economy of the future, and the future is arriving quickly. As such, governments and businesses urgently need to work together to increase trust in the digital economy and educate consumers on safe behaviours online to stimulate economic growth.”

See the full Digital Economy Trust Index here: trustindex.checkout.com

Methodology

The Digital Economy Trust Index is calculated based on three core pillars, each representing a key aspect of digital trust:

Usage and Behaviours, which assess how frequently and in what ways people engage with digital technologies, financial tools, and emerging innovations.Trust in the System, which measures consumer confidence in the security, reliability, and integrity of digital systems.Emerging Tech Adoption, which evaluates willingness to embrace and integrate newer technologies into daily life.

The pillars consist of six sub-pillars, each representing a specific dimension of digital trust. These sub-pillars are based on survey responses from 18,000 consumers across 16 countries, which research conducted by YouGov.

Responses are weighted and scored to ensure higher values reflect greater trust. Each sub-pillar score is then normalised on a 1 to 10 scale, ensuring equal weighting and comparability across measures.

The pillar score is calculated as the average of its six sub-pillars. The final Digital Trust Economy Index score is the average of the three pillar scores.

The Pearson correlation coefficient between national GDP growth rates and the Digital Economy Trust Index is approximately -0.71. This negative correlation suggests that higher GDP growth rates are associated with better (i.e., lower-numbered) rankings in trust in the digital economy.

Country

Digital Economy Trust Ranking

National GDP Growth 2014-2024 ranking

China

1

1

United Arab Emirates

2

3

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

3

4

Egypt

4

2

New Zealand

5

5

Brazil

6

15

Australia

7

8

Spain

8

7

United States

9

6

United Kingdom

10

12

Canada

11

11

Netherlands

12

9

Sweden

13

10

Germany

14

14

France

15

13

Japan

16

16

About Checkout.com 

Checkout.com processes payments for thousands of companies that shape the digital economy. Our global digital payments network supports over 145 currencies and delivers high-performance payment solutions across the world, processing billions of transactions annually. 

With flexible and scalable technology, we help enterprise businesses boost acceptance rates, reduce processing costs, combat fraud, and turn payments into a major revenue driver. Headquartered in London and with 19 offices worldwide, Checkout.com is trusted by leading brands such as Alibaba, Docusign, GE Healthcare, Remitly, Sainsbury’s, Sony, The Financial Times, Uber Eats, Vinted, and Wise. 

Checkout.com. Where the world checks out.

 

Logo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2665474/5309109/Checkout_com_Logo.jpg

 

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/news-releases/new-global-digital-economy-trust-index-exposes-correlation-between-gdp-growth-and-consumer-trust-in-online-payments-302453761.html

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