-
15 votes
-
How much have record corporate profits contributed to recent US inflation?
41 votes -
Study shows that US public pension funds would be $21 billion richer had they divested from fossil fuels a decade ago
17 votes -
The Fed thinks catastrophe is coming for US businesses
15 votes -
SEC charges former DWAC board member and others for insider trading in DWAC securities
6 votes -
Over $200 billion potentially stolen from COVID-19 relief programs in US
12 votes -
Is Dr. Bronner’s the last corporation with a soul?
41 votes -
Gen Z is expecting a forty-year retirement. Good luck, experts say.
28 votes -
US rent going up? One company’s algorithm could be why.
47 votes -
A Delaware city is set to give corporations the right to vote in elections
28 votes -
RICO lawsuit targets Credit Suisse
7 votes -
US President Joe Biden can probably forgive student debt even if Supreme Court of the United States rules against him
28 votes -
US Federal Reserve holds off on rate hike, but says two more are coming later this year
24 votes -
What are your investing/trading moves this week?
Do you expect a Fed rate hike, pause, or rate cut on June 14? I personally believe the Fed will surprise the market with another rate hike because although CPI has cooled, core PCE has remained...
Do you expect a Fed rate hike, pause, or rate cut on June 14?
I personally believe the Fed will surprise the market with another rate hike because although CPI has cooled, core PCE has remained sticky and the Fed doesn’t want inflation to rear its ugly head at all costs.
According to the CNN Fear & Greed Index we are at “extreme greed” levels not seen since February 3rd, which also coincided with a temporary market top.
This leads me to believe the market will begin to fall over the next few weeks until we hit “fear” or “extreme fear” levels again around July.
13 votes -
Any finance tips and tricks for those who are financially illiterate?
So I'm 20, in the US (California to be exact), and I'm planning to (secretly) move out of my parents' house sooner or later. I have a plan and all that, but I'm a bit anxious since I know nothing...
So I'm 20, in the US (California to be exact), and I'm planning to (secretly) move out of my parents' house sooner or later. I have a plan and all that, but I'm a bit anxious since I know nothing about finance. I was never taught about it at school beyond some surface-level vocabulary words (no personal finance. Only like how econ is related to governments and all) and I grew up with a dad who thought he was being selfless by making sure I never had to think about money ever. Mix that in with some good ol' learning problems and I'm clueless about money
Here are some things I learned to give an example of what I mean when I imply I'm absolutely clueless:
- Apparently taxes will sometimes differ from each store I buy from. I have not learned how or why each store has a different percentage (I thought it was by state), just that it sometimes does
- Also, groceries don't have taxes, but they tend to cost more than the pre-packaged stuff
- Speaking of taxes, apparently if you make enough for them you can completely ruin your parents' taxes if you forget to communicate with them. Luckily, I didn't have to learn this the hard way, but I suddenly realized why people who were keeping their jobs a secret from their parents were concerned about making too much
- Credit cards are like a loan that you are forced to pay monthly. I legitimately thought the money was directly transferred from your bank account to the card, but no, it's from this storage in the bank that they have where they take your and everyone else's money and lend it to others
- This was also why I was so confused as to why the banks collapsed right before the Great Depression
- A lot of things only take credit cards. For example, paying a house via cash is literally impossible, which is why you need to rely on a bank (to my disappointment). In fact, living bankless will only cause more problems than it does save money
- I figured out what a lease was. No one taught me that and I never sought to learn it until I was asking for apartment rooms
I'm lucky in that I'm not paying any sort of bills or insurance, and that I'm still reliant on my parents for that. However, I really want to get away from them, even though I would be tied to my parents' insurance plans and all. (I don't think they will ever kick me out of them, no matter what I do.) I don't want to be thrust into something that's difficult to reverse, so for those of you who are older and know what you're doing, is there any finance advice you recommend? What should I expect money-wise when I move out? What has been a regretful decision you've made and what has worked for you?
Resources are also nice, though I'm wary of books that are only found online and thus, I need to pay to see what's inside.
30 votes -
US inflation rose at a 4% annual rate in May, the lowest in two years
12 votes -
SEC sues Coinbase over exchange and staking programs, stock drops 12%
6 votes -
Elon Musk is accused of insider trading by investors in Dogecoin lawsuit
13 votes -
Why are US red states hiring so much faster than blue states?
7 votes -
Thoughts on brinkmanship with the US national debt?
Putting aside specific criticisms of the GOP as it exists today, what do you think of using the debt ceiling as a tool to reel in spending and put the US on a sustainable path with its national...
Putting aside specific criticisms of the GOP as it exists today, what do you think of using the debt ceiling as a tool to reel in spending and put the US on a sustainable path with its national debt? People make it out to seem backwards and manipulative, but this whole situation seems like we're driving a hundred miles an hour toward a cliff and the person saying we should slam the breaks is getting flack because it'll damage the car.
14 votes -
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sells entire stake in TSMC
13 votes -
Time to break up Hollywood
5 votes -
The ugly truth behind “We buy ugly houses”
10 votes -
Deposit franchises as natural hedges
4 votes -
How Mexico is becoming the new China
6 votes -
Half of America’s banks are potentially insolvent – this is how a credit crunch begins
14 votes -
US economy is in a 'freight recession,' with China trade decline continuing
7 votes -
Social media as a bank run catalyst
8 votes -
Google’s eighty-acre San Jose mega-campus is on hold as company reckons with economic slowdown
7 votes -
The high-wire drama of raising the US debt ceiling is making headlines again. Is there a better way? Perhaps Denmark has the answer.
5 votes -
University of California under fire for Blackstone investment
3 votes -
Substack opens up a $2 million community fundraising round
4 votes -
CFTC is suing Binance, CEO Changpeng Zhao
4 votes -
After Signature Bank deal, FDIC is left with $11 billion in ‘toxic waste’ loans
6 votes -
Age of Easy Money | PBS Frontline documentary
2 votes -
Joko Widodo wants local governments to ditch Visa, Mastercard
4 votes -
KPMG gave SVB, Signature Bank clean bill of health weeks before collapse. Accounting firm faces scrutiny for audits of failed banks.
6 votes -
T-Mobile acquires Mint, partially owned by Ryan Reynolds
7 votes -
Silicon Valley Bank has failed and been taken over by the FDIC
25 votes -
Signature Bank shut down by US regulators
10 votes -
The incredible tantrum venture capitalists threw over Silicon Valley Bank
5 votes -
Other people's money
5 votes -
The lie that's destroying the economy
5 votes -
Why the South has such low credit scores
9 votes -
The greatest tax system in the world – why can't America be as great as the Faroe Islands?
14 votes -
The incentive problem at the heart of the American justice system
7 votes -
New Yorkers never came ‘flooding back.’ Why did rents go up so much?
18 votes -
Amazon discontinues charity donation program amid cost cuts
18 votes -
Consumer prices fell 0.1% in December, in line with expectations from economists
8 votes -
Donald Trump's company sentenced to pay $1.61 million penalty for tax fraud
11 votes