When Season Four of Yellowstone wrapped up, two things were certain: Beth Dutton was a married woman (even if she wore a conjugal visit dress to her wedding) and Beth Dutton no longer worked at Market Equities. Beth has quite a reputation for leaving a company on bad terms at this point in the show’s run. She also tends to get the last laugh. As we all know, 1 + 1=Reddit fan theory, and there’s one that meditates on this very thing—pointing out how Beth’s scorched-to-bits trail of past employers might be a key to the Yellowstone ranch’s future.
In a post on the Yellowstone Reddit, one user pointed out that there may be some conflicting interests when it comes to Beth, Market Equities, and Schwartz and Meyer.
So you know how Beth bought a bunch of land through Schwartz and Mayer [sic]? The “two hundred square mile moat”? Well after she did all that and got fired from Schwartz and Mayer [sic], the then made the terms and conditions of being hired at market equities be that she get controlling interest in Schwartz and Mayer. Does that mean that she now owns that controlling portion, even tho she gets fired from market equities? So she now owns all the land around the Yellowstone? Does my logic make sense
An excellent point, indeed. After some real shady business setting up her former company, Market Equities, for a public relations nightmare, she was unceremoniously ousted from her role as president of the Montana division. Only problem is, when she was hired on, one of the stipulations of her employment was to absorb the controlling interest in Schwartz and Meyer that Market Equities held.
So Market Equities might have eliminated Beth as a threat within their company, but they didn’t consider the fact that she owns the bank that also has major stake in the land around the Yellowstone. TLDR: the land that Market Equities is trying to take over from the Duttons becomes a lot less valuable when the land around it is not available. And no one under the sun is going to be more adamant about holding onto that land than Beth Dutton.
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Market Equities might have been a thorn in the Duttons side for two seasons straight, but if this logic shakes out, don’t expect the development company to be around much longer.
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