- Blockchain is a digital ledger that records every transaction on a public network.
- Once a transaction is recorded, it cannot be changed or deleted.
- It is the foundation of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and thousands of other cryptocurrencies.


The deepest pockets in sports just told LIV Golf to find a new wallet.
Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund is ending its funding of LIV after the 2026 season, giving the league roughly seven months to figure out what comes next.
LIV launched in 2021 as a direct rival to the PGA Tour, spending huge sums to sign the biggest names in golf and build a global tour from scratch.
A merger with the PGA Tour was announced in 2023, but three years later that deal still has not closed, leaving LIV stuck between two business models without fully owning either.
The financials tell the rest of the story, with LIV's non-U.S. operations losing nearly $600 million in 2024 alone.
TV ratings have lagged the PGA Tour even after the league signed new broadcast deals in 2025 with FOX, IVT, DAZN and KC Global Media to put more events in front of viewers.
Revenue is climbing, with the league saying it is on pace for $100 million more in 2026 than the year before, helped by sponsorship deals from Rolex, HSBC, and Salesforce.
But $100 million in extra revenue is a long way from closing a $600 million annual hole.
LIV's biggest draw is its roster of star golfers, and that roster is getting expensive to keep around.
Bryson DeChambeau is a free agent at the end of this season, and Jon Rahm is on the books through 2027, meaning any new investor is buying both a league and the renewal bills that come with it.
A committee of independent directors will evaluate "strategic alternatives" once PIF steps back, with LIV planning to announce its path forward Thursday.
The plan includes new board members, new leadership, and a hunt for long-term financial partners, with the league saying it is already in talks with prospective global investors.
CEO Scott O'Neil hinted at the funding cliff earlier this month at a tournament in Mexico City, comparing LIV to "any other private equity-funded business in the history of mankind."
His point: every business eventually has to pay its own bills.
Earlier this week LIV postponed a tournament scheduled for late June in New Orleans as it works through the funding question.
For investors watching the broader sports media space, the LIV situation is a live test of how much a deep-pocketed sovereign backer is actually worth when the underlying business cannot stand on its own. PIF has spent years trying to turn LIV into a self-funding asset rather than a permanent line item on its budget.
Whoever steps in after PIF will inherit a brand with global reach, a thin TV business, and a bench of stars whose contracts are mostly paid by someone else for the moment.
The league is still spending. The check that paid for it just got an expiration date.