Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady, sets the stage for cuts. For consumers, this means relief from high borrowing costs — particularly for mortgages, credit cards and auto loans — may finally be on the way. https://t.co/V5TtAqzsUN
Ahead of the Fed meeting, inflation continues to drift lower, increasing the possibility of securing a sought-after soft landing.
There’s also a chance the central bank could achieve ‘no landing,’ one economist says. Here's what that means for you https://t.co/FTDndfbvJP
The Education Department says it will fix a problem with outdated inflation figures in the new FAFSA, which will result in more college financial aid for students applying this year. https://t.co/oDZIsVNjH5
Just months ago, we were coveting Loro Piana cashmere baseball hats and $300 Smythson notebooks in the name of quiet luxury and justifying such expensive purchases using girl math. But in 2024, quiet luxury is out and loud budgeting is in. https://t.co/IY4XMdIJTw
One of TikTok’s latest trends, coined the “silent depression,” aims to explain why Americans feel so bad about their own financial standing, even when the country is in good shape. https://t.co/zFMubtEUqj
Parent borrowers have been shut out of Biden administration's recent student loan relief measures, but this loophole could help https://t.co/tQPzBtwtSf https://t.co/tQPzBtwtSf
Between the Fed, early college application deadlines and some breaking news on America's credit health, it's been quite a week. Capping it off with a deep dive on Matthew Perry's ‘Friends' residuals. Always a pleasure to collab with @GregIacurci https://t.co/lL8n1qwENS
A14. I think impulse shopping is the biggest budget buster. Give yourself at least a day to mull a purchase and stay focused on the longer term goals you really want to achieve. #WinnieSun