RECENT NEWS
- How to Choose a Savings Account – 5 Key Considerationson July 6, 2025 at 8:40 pm
Savings are a crucial foundation of financial success. This article tackles savings accounts and explores key considerations for choosing.
- Why You Should Prioritize Your Emergency Fund Over 401(k) Investmentson July 6, 2025 at 8:40 pm
Building up a few months of expenses in emergency savings before aggressively funding retirement accounts can help prevent you from cannibalizing your future wealth during temporary setbacks.
- Want a Job That Pays Enough for a Comfortable Lifestyle? You'll Have the Best Shot in This U.S. City — and the Worst in 4 Others.on July 6, 2025 at 8:40 pm
How far will your wages go? It all comes down to location.
- 7 Must-Have Money Skills You Weren’t Taught In Schoolon July 6, 2025 at 8:40 pm
School and college prepare you to pass exams. But often, you're left ill-prepared for real life. Here are seven money skills that you need to learn in 2025.
- The Markets Are Balancing on a Knife’s Edgeon July 6, 2025 at 8:40 pm
The world has been anything but peaceful, but you wouldn’t know that from looking at the markets, which have been remarkably indifferent lately. As Jeff Sommer writes in the New York Times, markets are fundamentally amoral and apolitical, to pandemics, elections, civil unrest and just about everything else that may be extraneous to the central purpose of making profits. And corporate profits remain strong, despite everything.
Weekly Market Commentary

Buybacks Are Back | Weekly Market Commentary | February 26, 2024
After a brief lull in 2023, buyback activity appears to be back this year. A resilient U.S. economy, easing inflation pressures, and expectations for an eventual shift to interest rate cuts have given corporate America confidence to boost authorized share repurchases. These companies have a history of outperforming the broader market and tend to have more exposure to momentum, value, and growth factors. While buybacks also reduce share count and help support earnings growth and valuations, they can also help limit downside volatility during periods of selling pressure.

Treasuries: Who’s Buying and Why It Matters | Weekly Market Commentary | February 20, 2024
As the Federal Reserve (Fed) continues with its Quantitative Tightening (QT) program, questions abound regarding the Treasury Department’s expanding funding needs. The QT program is designed to reduce the Fed’s balance sheet — now $7.7 billion down from $9 billion — after Treasury notes (mostly) were bought after economic concerns intensified during the COVID-19-related pandemic. Households and, perhaps surprisingly, foreign investors have been buyers recently, and with the amount of Treasury supply coming to market, both will need to keep buying.

Outlook For U.S. Economy Continues To Brighten | Weekly Market Commentary | February 12, 2024
When we wrote the annual outlook last November, the data was mixed. Some metrics hinted at emerging cracks in the economy while others suggested the growth trajectory in capital markets and the economy had legs. So, the variety of the data produced the narrative that business activity in the New Year would grow on an annual basis but experience some bumps in the first half of the year. Now, enter the revisions.

Will The January Barometer Come Through? | Weekly Market Commentary | February 5, 2024
Yale Hirsch, creator of the “Stock Trader’s Almanac”, first discovered this seasonal pattern back in 1972, which he called the January Barometer and coined its popular tagline of ‘As goes January, so goes this year.’ Here, we assess the likelihood that this popular stock market adage delivers more gains for investors this year. The weight of the evidence leans toward yes, as we explain.

Is Too Much Optimism Priced In? | Weekly Market Commentary | January 29, 2024
On traditional valuation measures, valuations do appear high and it does seem reasonable to expect more moderate stock market returns going forward. Here we walk through several different stock valuation approaches to get a more complete picture and even make the case that they aren’t as pricey as they look.