August CPI shows inflation’s sticky in services
Two and a half percent. That’s how much inflation we’ve seen in this economy over the past 12 months, according to the August consumer price index, which the Bureau of Labor Statistics published Wednesday. Prices were up 0.2% from a month earlier, the smallest increase in more than 3½ years. Another …
Marketplace flipped this story into All Stories•29d
Related storyboards
Related articles
The CEO of disgraced crypto firm FTX actually announced his prison stint on LinkedIn
Ryan Salame, the former co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, has been seeking a two-month delay for the start of his prison sentence due to alleged injuries from a dog. However, it appears he has come to terms with his situation. In a recent LinkedIn post, he announced his new role as an inmate at FCI …
- Lee Stognerflipped into Innovation / Venture Capital / Startups
Tesla CEO Elon Musk on Optimus robot: This will be the biggest product ever of any kind
Tesla hosts its 'We, Robot' event on Thursday at Warner Bros. Discovery's movie studio in Burbank, California. Elon Musk said the company has made a …
Join the flipboard community
Discover, collect, and share stories for all your interests
Sign upMore stories from Inflation
- The Wall Street Journal.flipped into Latest From the WSJ
U.S. Producers’ Selling Prices Held Flat in September
Producers’ selling prices stayed flat in September, more evidence of cooling U.S. inflation. The producer-price index was unchanged last month compared with August, versus the 0.1% increase economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had expected. Over the past 12 months, producer prices have risen …
- The Motley Foolflipped into Retirement
It's Official: Social Security Benefits Get a 2.5% COLA in 2025, but It Comes With Bad News for Retirees
Social Security's 2025 COLA is the smallest raise for retired workers in four years. The Social Security Administration released news on Thursday, …
Ignore The Macro Noise
As the world swirls in chaos—with hurricanes, wars, and elections of unprecedented consequence—it’s easy to lose sight of one fundamental investing fact: rates of return, over hours and days, are affected by nearly everything. But over quarters and years, they’re only affected by earnings, interest …