When you’re living paycheck to paycheck, it can be tough to find money to save. That was the situation one audience member, Natalie, wrote in about ahead of CNBC’s Women & Wealth event on Tuesday. While grappling with high childcare and housing costs, Natalie is barely breaking even, she wrote, which makes finding money to
Advisors
Mistakes happen, especially when it comes to money. Even our most trusted sources for financial information and advice have their own regrets. Here, CNBC Financial Advisor Council members share their greatest money mishaps, and what they do differently now. In every case, their younger selves made tradeoffs that sacrificed their long-term financial well-being. Maybe if
Izusek | E+ | Getty Images Emotions can get the better of us when it comes to investing — particularly when financial markets get volatile. Behavioral finance tells us we are inherently bad investors, prone to making decisions based on emotions rather than evidence and self-interest. Just as we are a bundle of biases and
Srdjanpav | E+ | Getty Images This tax season, older taxpayers may find they owe more money to Uncle Sam than they expected. The reason: More of their Social Security benefits may be taxed following a higher 5.9% cost-of-living adjustment in 2022. This year’s record 8.7% cost-of-living adjustment may also prompt more benefits to be
Tax season is upon us, and along with it comes the ensuing bout of paranoia about the dreaded IRS audit. But, statistically speaking, getting audited is unlikely for most American taxpayers. In 2022, the IRS audited 3.8 out of every 1,000 income tax returns. Audit rates have been on the decline since 2010. Across all
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 32
- 33
- 34
- 35
- 36
- …
- 92
- Next Page »