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New I Bond rates won't be tantalizing but they could be decent
Detroit Free Press· 6 days agoThe combined rate for I Bonds issued any time from last November through April was 5.27%. That rate...
Social Security's 2025 Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) Is on Track to Yield an Unpleasant Surprise
Motley Fool via Yahoo Finance· 2 days agoRather, only readings from the third quarter (July...increases from the average CPI-W reading in the...
Fed Gearing Up for a Hawkish Surprise Tomorrow? Here's What to Watch Out for
Investing.com· 4 hours agoTomorrow, markets expect the Fed to have a similar message as the previous meetings. While rate cuts...
Mortgages Move Up for Homeseekers: Today's Mortgage Rates for April 30, 2024
CNET· 4 hours agoFor a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, the average rate you’ll pay is 7.35% today, up 0.05% over the...
3 Social Security Changes Retirees Need to Know About in 2024
Motley Fool via Yahoo Finance· 2 days agoCOLA at 2.6%. That's not as high as 2024's COLA, but it's also a sign of cooling inflation, so...
Inflation is slowly falling, while student debt is climbing: 6 graphs that explain today’s CPI -...
EconoTimes· 5 days agoAustralia’s inflation rate has fallen for the fifth successive quarter, and it’s now less than half of what it was back in late 2022. The annual
What is inflation? Here’s how rising prices can erode your purchasing power
Bankrate via AOL· 4 days agoOfficially, they target...CPI. That preference matters because the two indexes show different...
FOMC Meeting: Stagflation, Presidential Election Could Put The Fed In A Bind
International Business Times· 1 day agoAccording to various recent economic reports, the U.S. economy is presenting a mixed picture, with...
Welcome to the white-collar recession
Business Insider via Yahoo News· 7 hours agoThe economy is adding hundreds of thousands of jobs each month. Wages are growing faster than inflation. By all the standard measures, the job market is...
Is April a Good Time to Buy New I Bonds?
Investopedia· 4 days agoI bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury are so-named because they're pegged to inflation. In periods of increasing inflationary pressure, I bonds pay well.