-
Some of Justice’s most eye-popping debts appear nowhere on Senate financial disclosure
Gov. Jim Justice, now the frontrunner for U.S. Senate after incumbent Joe Manchin’s announcement that he will not seek re-election, acknowledges many but not all of his big debts on a mandatory financial disclosure. Gov. Jim Justice Justice’s financial disclosure for Senate, filed a few weeks ago, reports between $37.5 million and $108.1 million in…
-
Treasury-yield surge boosts tokenization of real-world assets on blockchains, leading ‘huge paradigm shift’ in finance
The rise of Treasury yields since 2022 has delivered a major boost to the tokenization of real-world assets. The total value of on-chain, real-world assets sits at $118.6 billion, according to Fundstrat. “It’s becoming increasingly likely that blockchains can become the back-end infrastructure for almost every asset class.” Loading Something is loading. Thanks for signing…
-
Expert reveals why sadness and anger cause us to overspend
Hunger, loneliness, fatigue, stress and sadness all affect our financial decisionsStudies have found that being sad makes people vulnerable to overspendingAs the holiday season approaches consumers are advised to ‘pause’ and ‘reflect’ By Neirin Gray Desai Consumer Reporter For Dailymail.Com Updated: 07:28 EST, 12 November 2023
-
Childhood gift of stamp and coin collection turns into a valuable financial windfall
My grandfather died in 2003 when I was five years old. A year or two before he passed away, he gave me a collection of stamps and coins which remained in my parents’ attic as I have never had an interest in stamps or coins. I recently got the collection valued and a value of…
-
Stock tips from TikTok? The platform brims with financial advice, good and bad
One TikTok influencer adopted the guise of a 7-year-old in pigtails to demystify investment advice. Another appraised the field of S&P 500 investment funds in 56 seconds. A third presented the ultimate Chipotle hack: A sort of reverse-engineered burrito that costs four dollars.TikTok has emerged as an unlikely mecca for personal finance advice, under the…
-
Why some Gen Z Philadelphians and financial experts say to put down the apps and budget by hand
When Abby Bailey tried the popular budgeting app Mint, she wasn’t sold.To Bailey, the app didn’t feel user-friendly — her bank and credit card accounts, for instance, couldn’t sync, she said. She wanted more personalized spending categories. And she felt like the platform, which its owner, Intuit, recently announced is shutting down, provided more of…
-
Hong Kong should aim to expand ‘friends circle’ at Apec summit: finance chief
Hong Kong should aim to expand its “circle of friends” and promote economic opportunities at the
-
Voting group founded by Abrams, once led by Warnock, faces financial scrutiny
The New Georgia Project, a voting rights organization founded by the state’s Democratic star Stacey Abrams and overseen for more than two years by Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, is beset by allegations of financial misuse and irregularities, according to a six-month POLITICO investigation. The organization, which played a key role in registering the new voters…
-
South Korea inflation likely to ease in November
SEOUL, Nov 12 (Reuters) – South Korean inflation is likely to ease in November to about 3.6% as prices of agricultural products have started to fall, the finance minister said on Sunday.South Korea’s consumer price index stood 3.8% higher in October from a year ago, the fastest inflation rate since March 2023 and above the…
-
South Korea inflation likely to ease in November By Reuters
South Korea’s consumer price index stood 3.8% higher in October from a year ago, the fastest inflation rate since March 2023 and above the 3.6% forecast by a Reuters poll.”Oil prices have been falling a little bit recently. If this is the trend, the inflation rate will be around 3.5% to 3.6%, and this kind…