Here's a link to an article in USA Today by Bill McNabb, Vanguards CEO. Solid, sensible advice. The column's title is: Why take risks with your investments? http
Airliners have been quietly raising baggage fees since last September, according to a USA Today survey. While Spirit Airlines ( SAVE +0.1% ) is the clubhouse leader with a whopping $100 carry-on fee, other carriers
In yet another sad reflection on the state of the Schrodinger-economy, USA Today notes that over 200,000 households will use their tax rebate this year to pay for ( drum roll please ) a bankruptcy filing and
scoff: “It can’t last, a big decline is around the bend.” Could that be true now? To be sure, no one knows. USA Today on March 31, 2012, quoted Sam Stovall, chief investment strategy guru at S&P. He noted: “Big pullbacks don
Alert that there were significant government policy changes that signaled the market had hit rock bottom. According to USA Today , from the 2009 bottom through the end of the first quarter, the S&P 500 Index increased more than 100 percent. No
increase in the number of renters should help sustain the demand for apartments. An analysis of U.S. Census data by USA Today shows that since 2006, the number of households that rent has increased by about 700,000 every year, while the number
President Obama has opened the first significant lead of the 2012 campaign in the nation's dozen top battleground states, a USA TODAY /Gallup Poll finds, boosted by a huge shift of women to his side." http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics
didn't know, now you know! At least that's what Thomas Lee, chief equity strategist at JPMorgan says according to USA Today : "Stocks are levitating like a balloon" adds Thomas Lee, chief equity strategist at JPMorgan. With stocks undervalued
of-work auto worker. Of course, there is a downside to the success. The sheer volume of sales is, according to USA Today , straining the factory network of the Detroit automakers, as well as the companies that make the thousands of parts
coming in 2013 or 2014, he warns. "This will be a repeat of 2008-09, only bigger, when it finally hits," Dent told USA TODAY . Gerald Celente, a trend forecaster at the Trends Research Institute, says Americans should brace themselves for an