The season 4 finale of HBO's Industry depicts the widespread repercussions of Tender's downfall on its key characters. Harper Stern achieves financial success but faces personal losses, while Yasmin Kara-Hanani navigates moral dilemmas and Henry Muck confronts legal consequences. The episode leaves several arcs unresolved ahead of the show's fifth and final season.
In the season 4 finale of Industry, titled 'Both and,' the collapse of Tender affects nearly every character. Harper Stern, operating through her fund SternTao with Kwabena and Sweatpea, records a $110 million profit and loss amid the scandal. She leaves a voicemail for her former mentor Eric, who has departed, but receives no response. The trio plans to move into a new office and Harper distributes $2 million each to her partners, retaining the same for herself while keeping the rest in assets under management.
Harper attends a political fundraiser in Paris hosted by Yasmin for reform MP Sebastian Stefanowicz. She encounters racism from Nazi-affiliated guests and learns of escorts hired for 'gender balance.' Yasmin reveals a video of Eric with an underage prostitute, prompting Harper to urge her to leave. Yasmin responds, 'The world is not exploitation or opportunity. It's both, and.' She explains feeling important and less pain in this environment, kissing Harper's hand before Harper is escorted out.
Yasmin, seeking to avoid blame in the Tender fiasco, asks Henry Muck for a divorce, stating she no longer loves him. The next morning, she repeatedly listens to a voicemail from her late father. Meanwhile, Henry faces public scrutiny, appearing on the cover of The Guardian under the headline 'Britain's Shame: Comeback Capitalism.' Whitney Halberstram urges him to flee with hidden cash, revealing Russian state interest in Tender and potential dangers. Henry refuses, returns home to police, and later pleads guilty to fraud charges. He tells the press, 'Halberstram was a shadow man who built a shadow world. It starts and ends with him. We were all deceived.'
A journalist asks Harper if her vindication feels isolating, and she replies, 'Both, and,' echoing Yasmin. The show has been renewed for a fifth and final season.