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What happens if you don’t pay a medical bill, now that medical debt may not hurt your credit score?
Unpaid medical debt will no longer affect credit scores, according to a new rule from Biden administration regulators who want to mitigate the financial repercussions of those bills.MarketWatch - 2d -
Do you still have to pay your mortgage if your house burns down? Some multimillion-dollar homes may not qualify for disaster relief.
The multimillion-dollar homes burning in the L.A. wildfires may not qualify for mortgage relief.MarketWatch - 2d -
Why these ETF bets in stocks and bonds may pay off in 2025, according to BlackRock
Heading into 2025, ETF investors appeared enthusiastic about prospects for the U.S. bull market to keep running.MarketWatch - 3d -
Fed Minutes May Show Why More Rate Cuts Will Face Hurdles
After a quarter-point cut in December, Chairman Jerome Powell said policymakers may be more cautious, since the incoming administration will create more uncertainty.Inc. - 5d -
Five things you may have missed from Week 18: Bryce Young has career day, backup QBs shine and more
Some things you may have missed from the weekend finaleCBS Sports - Jan. 6 -
Here's why one of our favorite industrial stocks is up more than 3% Friday
Every weekday, the Investing Club releases the Homestretch; an actionable afternoon update just in time for the last hour of trading.CNBC - Jan. 3 -
Why law enforcement thinks New Orleans truck attacker may have had help
The FBI says the driver is not believed to be "solely responsible" for the early New Year's Day truck attack on New Orleans' Bourbon Street. CBS News' Samantha Vinograd and Nicole Sganga have more.CBS News - Jan. 1 -
17 Best Mattresses You Can Buy Online—We Tested for a Week Each (2025)
I’ve spent years testing dozens of bed-in-a-box hybrid, foam, and certified organic mattresses.Wired - Jan. 1 -
3 Things Science Learned About Emotional Intelligence This Year That Will Make You More Successful in 2025
Psychology researchers have been busy this year turning up easy and effective ways to boost your emotional intelligence.Inc. - Dec. 31
More from CNBC
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There's a popular tech stock washout Monday as Palantir, Nvidia and Rigetti Computing drop
Popular technology stocks tumbled Monday as bond yields rose, dragging down tech-heavy Nasdaq-100 futures.CNBC - 1h -
Retailers post early holiday results — and Wall Street isn’t impressed
Lululemon, Abercrombie & Fitch and American Eagle all hiked their holiday guidance, but Abercrombie's growth is slowing.CNBC - 3h -
Instagram head Mosseri says app will prioritize original content, with potential TikTok ban days away
Adam Mosseri, head of Meta's Instagram, said the app will focus on prioritizing original and creative content in its algorithmic rankings in 2025.CNBC - 18m -
Microsoft CEO Nadella forms new AI group to build and run apps for customers
In a memo to employees on Monday, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said former Lacework CEO Jay Parikh will lead a new a group focused on AI tools.CNBC - 53m -
Biden's total student debt relief passes $183 billion, after he forgives another 150,000 borrowers
In his final days in office, President Joe Biden announced that his administration would forgive student debt for more than 150,000 borrowers.CNBC - 2h
More in Business
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A juiced-up economy is good news, right? Not if inflation reignites. That’s the worry now.
Fresh worries about rising prices are troubling Wall Street.MarketWatch - 9m -
MicroStrategy resumes bitcoin buying, but prices keep falling
MicroStrategy resumes buying bitcoin after a short break, while prices keep pulling back.MarketWatch - 9m -
A juiced-up economy is good news, right? Not if inflation reignites. That’s the worry now.
Fresh worries about rising prices are troubling Wall Street.MarketWatch - 9m -
Eli Lilly strikes deal for cancer treatment, gives timeline for weight loss pill
Every weekday, the Investing Club releases the Homestretch; an actionable afternoon update just in time for the last hour of trading.CNBC - 13m -
This doctor retired at 45 and then got ‘deeply depressed.’ What he finds wrong with FIRE.
Jordan Grumet was a FIRE true believer, now he has a new perspective on purpose, money and retirement.MarketWatch - 17m