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 […]
Social Security and Medicare cuts are coming because the bond market will eventually bring Congress to its knees, economist says […]
U.S. could potentially take stakes in more companies, adviser suggests The U.S. government’s reported 10% equity stake in Intel—funded with
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.