- 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.


A Canadian media family is about to receive one of the bigger AI-related paychecks of the year. It has nothing to do with chips.
The owners of Thomson Reuters, the firm behind the Reuters newswire and a sprawling legal data business, are cashing in as the firm returns more than $1.2 billion to shareholders.
Thomson Reuters announced earlier this year it would push two deals through at the same time:
Combined, that's $1.205 billion flowing to investors. Court approval came earlier this month. The cash payout becomes effective at 3:01 a.m. EDT on May 4.
The Thomson family doesn't hold its position personally. Their stake runs through Woodbridge Co., a private holding firm that has controlled Thomson Reuters since the family bought Reuters in 2008.
Woodbridge owns roughly 70% of the common stock and supported both deals. That ownership share is the entire story.
Seventy percent of $605 million works out to about $424 million. Their slice of the buyback brings the family payout close to $1 billion.
Most of the AI rally has flowed into chip and cloud names. Thomson Reuters is the rare exception in the data layer.
The firm runs Westlaw, the legal database lawyers have leaned on for decades. It also owns the Reuters newswire and a tax and accounting research arm.
None of that sounds like an AI play. The point is what those products are built on: more than 175 years of case law, statute notes, and journalism.
In February, Thomson Reuters told investors that data is now its moat. The firm has been embedding Anthropic's Claude across legal, news, and financial products to turn that archive into AI agents lawyers and accountants actually use.
Q4 organic sales growth landed around 7%. The stock jumped roughly 14% on the print.
CEO Steve Hasker has called the strategy a "walled garden." The AI piece pulls customers in. The 175 years of company-owned content keeps them there.
Some analysts have lifted their price targets toward $135. Goldman Sachs has reiterated its Buy rating and called the AI strategy resilient.
Management says it has roughly $11 billion of capital capacity to deploy through 2028. Much of that is earmarked for AI deals on top of the $850 million in bolt-on acquisitions already done.
The wrinkle for retail investors: the share split. After the cash payout, shares get consolidated by the same amount. That leaves the same ownership stake but fewer shares at a higher price each.
Thomson Reuters has also pledged to roughly double the pace of its AI investments this year. The firm says the goal is to defend its core legal and tax business from a wave of new AI startups looking to disrupt it.
The board left the dividend untouched. The cash return doesn't replace it.
This isn't a chip stock or a cloud giant. It's a 174-year-old news and legal data company. Its biggest shareholders just turned an AI strategy into a billion-dollar payday.
The Thomson family is one of the largest private fortunes in Canada. The clan first built its wealth in newspapers, then in legal and tax research. AI is now the third leg of that long arc.