The worrying signs for the US economy are piling up: unemployment is rising, Americans are cutting spending, and the housing market is still frozen.
From the job market to consumer spending, things are actually worse than the last time Trump took office.
Recession fears are fading and the job market is looking stronger. That's great news for average Americans and the stock market.
The number of unemployed Americans keeps rising. To keep the US job market from getting worse, the Fed needs to hurry up and cut interest rates.
The sudden resurgence of inflation has caused some more alarmist analysts to suggest that the US economy is in deep trouble.
Americans are getting more efficient on the job, and it's not because of AI. That's great news for the US economy and the stock market's future.
Conspiracy theorists have set their sights on a new target: the Fed. And that's bad news for the US economy.
With the job market holding up and inflation cooling off, 2024 is set to be a great year for the stock market.
Wall Street fearmongers keep warning that a recession and stock market crash are just around the corner. It's time to start ignoring them.
Wall Street is betting that the US is about to fall into a recession and inflation will drop off a cliff. The actual economy points to the opposite.
If a Wall Street "expert" is warning you that the stock market is about to crash or the economy is going to plunge into recession, check their math.
A suddenly surging economy will force the Federal Reserve to keep hiking interest rates. When that happens, investors and consumers better buckle up.
Inexperienced workers and constant turnover aren't just inconvenient for customers, they also threaten to tank profits and cause a stock market crash.
From a housing market crash to consumer spending slowdown, there are clear signs that the economy is in real danger of falling into a nasty recession.
The Federal Reserve is ramping up the pain even as the US economy is getting weaker and inflation is cooling off. That's a recipe for a recession.
Ugly warnings from tech companies are attracting a lot of attention, but the job market is still strong and American consumers have plenty to spend.
Google searches for "how to prepare for a recession" are spiking. But when the hysteria hits a fever pitch, it means there's good news ahead.
America was hit by a lethal mix of soaring prices, high unemployment, and weak growth in the 1970s. And the Fed's remedy was even more painful.
Communities are scrambling to build shopping centers, doctor's offices, and power plants to keep up with America's seismic shift to working from home.
Arguments that inflation or GDP growth are going to cool off are wrong. America's economic boom — and surging prices — are going to stick around.