Articles

Rents are finally falling in some parts of the country. Here’s who is actually feeling the relief.

Rents fell nationally in January, but they’re still at a high level due to a sharp run-up over the last few years.

Here are 7 charts guaranteed to stress you out about the stock market

The “Magnificent Seven” are breaking down, defensive consumer staples are on a tear — and then there’s the midterm curse.

‘We’ve been dating for 5 years’: My boyfriend’s parents say he doesn’t earn enough to marry. Should I speak to his father?

“Every year his very wealthy parents say that he needs to ‘earn more’ before he can marry me.”

Tempted to use buy-now-pay-later to split your rent payments? Watch out for these fees.

Want to pay rent in two installments instead of one? The fine print can make “0% interest” costlier than it sounds.

Social Security could run out of money in just 6 years — even sooner than originally feared

Higher inflation and lower income taxes on benefits may weigh on the program’s trust funds.

S&P 500’s failed breakouts signal a darkening technical cloud

Plus: Akamai, DoorDash and Alibaba are must-watch trades in a busy earnings calendar.

Three things to consider to make your money last the rest of your life

Good news: We’re living longer. Too bad most of us can’t afford it.

‘I’m part of a blended family that didn’t blend well’: My stepsister added her mailing address to our mother’s bank account. Can she be trusted?

“It’s things like this that make me wonder what else she might be doing.”

‘I’m close to retiring’: I’m behind on my property tax. Is this a really bad time to sell my house?

“I’ve never been late on a mortgage, so this makes me nervous.”

Tax refunds are up this year to an average of $2,290, early IRS numbers show. How does yours compare?

“Average refund amounts are strong,” the IRS said in an explanation of the data.

Amazon’s stock just clinched its worst losing streak in nearly 20 years. It’s giving investors AWS déjà vu.

As shares of Amazon deepen into a bear market, investors are once again weighing if the company’s spending plans will pay off.

‘You’re a line item on a spreadsheet.’ The case for why you don’t need to love your job.

Complacent high earners may be making tens of thousands of dollars less each year than they could be making elsewhere.
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