I Bond rates will drop to 6.48% on Nov. 1 from a record high 9.62%. If you act quickly, you can still lock in the record rate for six months.
Author: Medora Lee, USA TODAY
Energy price shuffle means no inflation relief. Winter utility bills to cancel gas savings.
Consumers will still feel the strain of high energy prices this winter. It’ll just show up in soaring utility bills instead of at the pump.
Amazon Prime Day: Inflation pushes household staples to top of spending categories – again
Household essentials top early spending categories, again, at Amazon Prime Day in a sign of how inflation’s shaping spending even ahead of holidays.
The Daily Money: It’s finally here! Amazon Prime Day kicks off online holiday shopping.
Amazon Prime Day marks the start of online holiday shopping. Record sales this year may not be in the cards, but record discounts may be, analysts say.
The best holiday shopping gift? Inflation relief. Why you may get it — and deep discounts.
Brimming retail inventory means deep holiday discounts this year and some relief from inflation.
The Daily Money: Ex-Fed chief wins Nobel Prize and how zip code affects Medicare prices
Today’s headlines include Nobel Prize in economics winners, Medicare enrollment considerations and more.
Americans began new businesses at record pace in 2021. Here’s how they’re doing.
Facing 40-year high inflation, small business owners who can’t access traditional bank loans are using various forms of micro loans to stay afloat.
Workers won’t be able to say “I quit” much longer as job openings fall
There’s still 1.67 open jobs for each jobless American, but that’s fast changing as the labor market cools. Next year, 1.2 million jobs could be lost.
Porsche shares power through market turmoil in one of Europe’s biggest market debuts
Shares in Porsche AG rose on their first day of public trading after Volkswagen raised $9.1 billion for one of the largest IPOs in European history.
Health care costs are about to skyrocket. Analysts explain inflation’s drastic impact.
Increases in health care premiums are coming amid skyrocketing rent and food costs, and those higher costs are likely to stick around, analysts warn.