All Economy
- Tesla Model X: Era of the all-electric SUV is arrivingTesla Model X marks an expansion of all-electric offerings beyond coupes and sedans. Tesla Motors says the AWD version of the Tesla Model X has more zip than many sports cars.
- Obama, seeking to quell birth control furor, shifts cost to insurersPresident Obama, yielding to pressure from religious groups and others, withdrew a mandate that religiously affiliated institutions include free birth control in health insurance plans for employees. Now, insurers will pay.
- Unemployed people per job opening dropsThe number of unemployed people available per open job used to be seven; now it's around four.
- The real importance of good personal financeA solid personal finance foundation will help you reach your goals and prioritize your life.
- The economy is improving whether conservatives like it or notConservatives who would like to bash Obama on the economy are having an awfully hard time right now, as the recovery proceeds apace.
- Mortgage relief plan: Can it spark housing rebound?Mortgage relief aimed at trying to boost lagging housing sector. Most of the $25 billion mortgage relief will go to homeowners struggling to pay their mortgages.
- 401(k) plans: Did yours grow? Most didn't in 2011.401(k) plans averaged $69,100 per participant at the end of 2011, down $300 from a year earlier. Fidelity said fees and poor investment performance were behind the lack of growth in 401(k) plans.
- The end of the small brokerage firmThe era of the small brokerage firm is gradually coming to a close as several of the most well-regarded boutique brokers call it quits.
- The $26 billion mortgage settlement: who gets help and howThe main thrust of the $26 billion mortgage settlement is to help homeowners whose homes are 'under water.' Refinancing a reduced loan will lower payments and help people facing foreclosure stay in their homes.
- Use public transportation. Save hundreds.Even if it's not every day, riding the bus or train instead of driving a car will put money back into your wallet.
- 102 percent tax rate? Really?Is聽 a 102 percent tax rate really possible? On taxable income, yes. On all income, no.
- Jobless claims dropInitial unemployment claims declined 15,000 to 358,000 claims from last week鈥檚 revised 373,000 claims while聽 continued claims increased by 64,000.
- Dunkin' Donuts turning a profit againDunkin' Donuts' parent company, Dunkin Brands, returned to profitability in its fiscal fourth quarter as traffic at Dunkin' Donuts stores improved and customers spent more.
- Despite complaints, House passes insider-trading ban 417-2STOCK Act does not include measure that would regulate those who sell 'political intelligence' to Wall Street, upsetting Democrats and some Republicans. Senate insider-trading ban passed last week with the provision.聽
- Will $26 billion settlement from big banks repair US housing market?In the short term, the deal between 49 states and five big banks may actually boost foreclosures, some say. In the longer term, it should clear the inventory of homes that depresses prices and help the middle class.
- Greece secures last-minute bailout deal, but it will hurtGreece has agreed to implement painful austerity measures 鈥 including a 22 percent cut in the minimum wage 鈥 in order to receive the money it needs to pay off debt due in March.
- Rebounding economy: Unemployment assistance drops to four-year lowThe number of people seeing unemployment aid dropped to a four-year low, the Labor Department said Thursday. It comes on the heels of 8.3 percent unemployment rate, the lowest in three years.
- Ben Bernanke shows his mettle, againIn recent remarks, Ben Bernanke showed that he鈥檚 not at all swept up in optimism about recent improvements鈥攈e鈥檚 particularly on point regarding continued weaknesses in the job market鈥攁nd he clearly cites all the reasons to keep pressing on monetary stimulus.
- The upside to sprawl?The undeniable upside to sprawl is comfort and space. But are those luxuries really worth it?
- Does Suze Orman鈥檚 prepaid card solve anything?Released with great fanfare, The Approved Card from Suze Orman is supposed to help people who use cash responsibly get a good credit score. But it doesn't 鈥 and probably never will. 聽