Sept 3, 2025 Top Stories
Social Security and Medicare cuts are coming because the bond market will eventually bring Congress to its knees, economist says Oxford Economics warns that the U.S. is heading toward a […]
Social Security and Medicare cuts are coming because the bond market will eventually bring Congress to its knees, economist says Oxford Economics warns that the U.S. is heading toward a […]
U.S. could potentially take stakes in more companies, adviser suggests The U.S. government’s reported 10% equity stake in Intel—funded with money from the CHIPS and Science Act—has prompted discussion about
The U.S. national debt has exceeded $37 trillion for the first time in history, reaching $37.004 trillion on Tuesday—just eight months after hitting $36 trillion and barely over a year since surpassing $35 trillion.
The U.S. national debt has exceeded $37 trillion for the first time in history, reaching $37.004 trillion on Tuesday—just eight months after hitting $36 trillion and barely over a year since surpassing $35 trillion.
The U.S. stock market may be breaking records, but Rich Dad Poor Dad author Robert Kiyosaki is sounding the alarm. In a blunt warning, he said:
The dollar isn’t dying quietly.
It’s being actively abandoned—and central banks aren’t just watching. They’re buying gold by the ton.
In a move that should have every saver, retiree, and investor on edge, the U.S. Treasury just announced plans to issue a record-breaking $100 billion in four-week Treasury bills.
U.S. and Chinese officials met in Stockholm and agreed to seek an extension of their current 90-day tariff truce, aiming to ease tensions in an ongoing trade war that threatens global growth.
Today at 2:00 p.m. EDT, the Federal Reserve released its latest FOMC statement. On the surface, it looked routine: interest rates held steady at 4.25%–4.5%
On Sunday, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick made it official: August 1 is the hard deadline for America’s new tariffs to kick in.
