All Economy
- Roth IRA: Use ShareBuilder or Vanguard?Roth IRA is easy to set up immediately in ShareBuilder, but patience and Vanguard mean fewer fees in the long run for your Roth IRA. See question No. 7 in the reader mailbag.
- Five outrageously pricey pooches Malachy the Pekingese won Best in Show at the 2012 Westminster Kennel Club dog show Tuesday, receiving a silver cup, a raft of media appearance, and the promise of breeding fees. But the crowd-pleasing champion has nothing on these five uber-expensive dogs. Most of us think our furry best friends are priceless (author included). But some dog lovers are willing and able to put their money where their heart is. Here's our list of five pricey pooches. Can you guess which breed took the top spot, and at what price?
- Compound interest is great, but there's a catchThe return on investment from a compound interest savings account isn't impressive at first, but if you stick with it, it becomes a locomotive. But it can take a very long time.
- How to ruin your economy, like ArgentinaThe financial moves of the Argentinian government over the past decade have set the pace for the rest of the world.
- No budget? No problem! The strange politics behind a budgetless America.President Obama has proposed a federal budget. Congress looks sure to ignore it, and Senate Democrats show no desire to pass any budget. It would be the fourth straight budgetless year.聽
- Obama's budget: What it means for your tax billWhen it comes to taxes, Obama's budget is long on principles but woefully short on statistics.
- Stocks rally as Greek debt talks show signs of lifeAfter losing for most of the day, the Dow rallied to close up four points at 12878 on late reports that suggested the unraveling Greek debt talks might be saved after all.
- Can a Prius increase global warming?Some argue that driving fuel-efficient cars will actually encourage people to drive more, boosting carbon emissions and hastening climate聽 change. Here's why they're wrong.
- India's economy loses its lusterIndia's much-heralded economic boom is faltering, with stock index declining 25 percent. Speed bump or meltdown?
- Valentine's Day: cost of romance rising for flower delivery, 4 other things When you arrange for flower delivery or take a special someone out for dinner this Valentine's Day, it'll cost more than it did a year ago. That's the cold hard fact about a warmhearted and festive day, according official US inflation data.But the rising cost may actually be a relatively small one: Those chocolate or flower prices haven't been rising at gas-pump-fast rates. Here's the official inflation tally of five common Valentine's Day activities, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
- In Frankfurt, Europe's banking capital, Occupy soldiers onEven amid last week's record low temperatures in Europe, a hardy group of protesters kept Frankfurt's Occupy encampment going between towering bank buildings. 聽
- Obama's budget plan hammers investorsThe president's plan to raise tax revenue could mean disaster for the equity markets.
- Apple stock at $500 a share. And climbing?Apple stock hit the $500 mark on Monday. By common valuation standards, Apple stock should be much higher.
- America's big wealth gap: Is it good, bad, or irrelevant?The gap between rich and poor is at its widest since the Roaring '20s. Obama complains that it's unfair, but a growing chorus of economists and sociologists say it's worse than that.
- Does higher minimum wage increase unemployment?Some say that as unemployment falls, the quality of available workers diminishes, which droves down wages. Is it true?
- Five budget realities no politician will talk about (not even Ron Paul) Ron Paul deserves credit for making the boldest proposals of any candidate in the presidential race. The astonishing reality of the federal government鈥檚 budget situation, however, is that even his plans might not be enough to keep Uncle Sam out of bankruptcy. While President Obama offers a $3.8 trillion budget that optimistically might cut the federal deficit to $575 billion by 2018, federal data suggest the United States is already broke. The Federal Reserve estimates that the net value of all private assets, including real estate, stocks, bonds, businesses, cash, etc., is $57 trillion. But the Treasury Department estimates the federal government鈥檚 net worth is a negative $61 trillion. Here are five budget realities that no candidate wants to acknowledge:
- Verizon SNL skit: Is smartphone market too confusing?Verizon and other wireless carriers are marketing so many devices and options that smartphone shopping may be too confusing for the general consumer. Even SNL has poked fun via a Verizon skit.聽
- $1 billion Empire State Building IPO: why it won't be like Facebook IPOThe Empire State Building is set to make a $1聽billion聽IPO, but investors probably won't be as excited as they were about Facebook or other tech IPOs.
- In surprise move, GOP leaders admit defeat in payroll tax battleHouse GOP leaders had wanted to offset the cost of a payroll tax extension by spending cuts. But their decision Monday suggests that the political cost of a stalemate was too high.
- Fracking study sends alert about leakage of potent greenhouse gasA new study finds that fracking is releasing methane, a greenhouse gas, from a Colorado field at a higher rate than estimates suggested. Researchers must determine if the field is an anomaly or part of a bigger problem.聽