Search volume for the retailer has hit a three-year high. Wall Street calls it a turnaround. The data suggests it’s a symptom of the 'Great Trade-Down'.
It was supposed to be the cord-cutter's savior. Now, with plummeting subscriber numbers and a confusing pricing labyrinth, Sling TV looks less like a bargain and more like a math test you're destined to fail.
The Fed is popping champagne over the latest CPI numbers, but for anyone paying rent or booking a flight, the 'cooling' economy burns just as much. Here’s why the official stats don't match your bank account.
After the $18 Big Mac fiasco and a viral revolt, the Golden Arches are retreating to the bargain bin. But is the new 'McValue' strategy a real fix, or just a band-aid on a broken business model?
While fans scream over $400 Oasis tickets and the Justice Department sharpens its knives for a 2026 showdown, Live Nation just posted another record year. Is the monopoly really in danger, or is this just political theater?
The confetti is still falling on Wall Street, but the hangover has already started for everyone else. Why the Dow's latest milestone isn't a victory lap—it's a warning siren.
The screens are red, but don't blame it on simple profit-taking. The Anthropic shock and AMD's plunge signal a terrifying new reality: AI isn't just a bubble; it's starting to eat the software industry alive.
Remember when we left Comcast for a $35 Google subscription? Those days are dead. With a price tag hitting $83 and a strategy mirroring the giants it sought to destroy, YouTube TV faces its identity crisis.
Forget the avocado toast arguments. The latest data reveals a brutal economic reality: in 91 of America's top 100 cities, keeping two kids in daycare now costs more than housing them. Welcome to the market failure no one wants to bail out.
Headlines are celebrating the 'stabilization' of mortgage rates as a victory. But for the average household, the math remains brutal. Why the slight dip in 2026 won't solve the affordability crisis.
Walmart stock is crushing the S&P 500. Wall Street calls it a triumph of strategy. A closer look reveals a more disturbing truth: the American middle class isn't thriving; it's capitulating.
It's the only industry where demand is infinite, prices are astronomical, and yet the business model is collapsing. Who is actually making money off your child's nap time? Spoiler: It’s not the teachers.