Listen 🎧 Looking for discounts while shopping? The store probably charges a lower price if you pay cash.
@WSJpersfinance's @MoiseNoise joins @WSJ host
@JRWhalen https://t.co/bJXeUPSvQk
In 2024, the average monthly Social Security check for retired workers will rise 3.2%—a smaller increase than the 8.7% raise retirees received this year https://t.co/SjctebOBXz
Roth IRAs Are For Kids: While many Americans haven’t saved for retirement at all, some are getting a really early start in their teens. Yours can, too
https://t.co/T8dKY6elmb via @WSJ
Banks raised limits on 18.4 million credit-card accounts in the first quarter of this year, up 22% from the same period in 2019. Meanwhile, the percent of Americans who say they want a line increase has barely budged. https://t.co/IuXu8EHYzL
Homeowners are increasingly forgoing home insurance, gambling that the likelihood of a disaster isn’t high enough to justify the cost of a policy. By @VeronicaDagher https://t.co/YgYOKvc391
A $5 million retirement nest egg puts you in the top 0.1% of households. Here’s what that money buys. https://t.co/GfI3EfOBSh via @VeronicaDagher@AnneTergesen
Higher interest rates made it much more expensive to carry credit-card debt, but that's not why Americans have racked up bigger balances, writes @MoiseNoise: https://t.co/h6b93UaGNO
Listen 🎧: How much are you willing to spend on after-school dance, piano, or soccer lessons? For many parents, that number keeps going up. @WSJ’s @oyinadedoyin5 joins @arianaluzzz to discuss.
https://t.co/1dRnIjcBKw