Reading List for December 4-6
Investing
- Michael Batnick provides a well thought out answer to the question “is Robinhood (any zero commission/fraction share platform) good for investors?” (The Irrelevant Investor)
Economics
- Why economists support more stimulus, and what will happen come January 1 if there is no further stimulus. (NYTimes – subscription)
- The number of Americans using credit cards to pay rent has risen 70% over last year. NPR
- Mortgage rates hit yet another record low: the 30-year rate dropped to 2.71% (APNews)
- Unemployment claims last week totaled 712,000 (DOL).
- The November jobs report came in at about half the projection (245,000 vs. 460,000) and unemployment ticked down slightly to 6.7%. The unemployment rate is an incomplete statistic: the labor force participation rate dropped too. (CNBC,NYTimes)
- Researchers at the Fed take a closer look at what is going on with Millennial spending and it may be eye-opening for some who stereotype them (although probably not news to Millennials themselves). (NPR)
Retail
- What is going on with retail stores? These charts tell the story. (VOX)
- Cyber Monday hit a new record high of $10.8 billion volume of sales. ((MarketWatch)
Student Loans
- The Department of Education’s “Next Gen” initiative is aimed at simplifying student loan management and repayment, and drops the number of loan servicers to five. (Forbes)
Higher Education
- Inside Higher Education had a few interesting articles related to the pandemic. The first article shares results from a survey that suggests students do better if they are on campus, even if most of their classes are online.
- The second article suggests that more prospective college students are reconsidering higher education altogether than before.
Digital Currencies
- Read what the PayPal CEO has to say on the topic of the future of digital currencies (and cash.) (Bloomberg)
- Bitcoin hit another new high this week. Coindesk gives you five reasons why this happened.
Entrepreneurship
- Junior Achievement and Janus Henderson announce a new online simulation to help teens learn how to run a business. (PRNewswire)
Covid
The New York Times has an interactive model that predicts where you "stand" in the line for the Covid-19 Vaccine.
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