Economy
Trump’s unlikely promise to ‘end inflation’ still saw families paying an extra $2,120 for goods and services in 2025
Exclusive: The year-on-year inflation increase equates to an added cost of $2,120 per household, assuming they purchased the same goods and services in 2025 that they bought in 2024. That includes an increase of $123 on electricity bills and $150 on groceries.
Newsletters
- MPW DailyThe Netflix-Warner Bros. deal has Hollywood’s A-list scared for the future of movie theaters. The exec behind ‘The Housemaid’ says women are key to box office success
- CFO DailyTech CFOs face a new challenge: Selling unprecedented capex as ‘disciplined’
- Term Sheet$100 million-plus funding rounds used to be incredibly rare. Now, 40% of seed and Series A rounds are clearing that bar
- Coins2Day TechApple delivers blowout earnings; gets bupkis
- CEO DailyInside Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol’s nascent turnaround plan—and why it’s working
- Eye on AIAI has made hacking cheap. That changes everything for business
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World’s Most Admired Companies
January 21, 2026
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December 16, 2025
Coins2Day 500 Europe
October 29, 2025
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June 2, 2025
Great Place to Work rankings

Coins2Day 100 Best Companies To Work For – Southeast Asia
December 1, 2025
Best Large Workplaces for Parents
November 18, 2025
World’s 25 Best Workplaces
November 13, 2025
100 Best Large Workplaces for Women
October 23, 2025
Commentary
- regulationAmerica’s AI regulatory patchwork is crushing startups and helping China
- Letter from LondonStruggling to remain relevant during the AI watercooler chat? Talk about your latest ‘new collar’ hire
- regulationTrump is driving capital out of capitalism
- InsuranceJohn Hancock CEO: We all have a role in driving better health outcomes for Americans
- start-upsThe real promise of AI isn’t fewer jobs, it’s cheaper thinking
- SportsFootball snubs Bill Belichick, one of its greatest ever coaches—showing how his unapologetic leadership style came with a cost
Topics
Environment

3 big hurdles undermine Trump’s plan to extract Greenland’s mineral wealth—and America’s fraying relationship with Europe is one of them
Asia is one of the world’s least insured places, even as it’s battered by climate change and natural disasters
Climate change mans Southern Africa got a year’s worth of rain in just 10 days, killing over 100 people
Finance

Netflix may be turning into an ‘entertainment giant,’ but its stock looks like ‘dead money’ to investors
The mystery behind Elizabeth Holmes’ tweeting spree from prison
Meet the first CEO of the IRS: A Jamie Dimon protege facing a $5 trillion test this tax season
Health

9 Best Mattresses for Couples in 2026: Tested and Reviewed
5 Best Sauna Blankets of 2026: Tested by Recovery Experts
How to Choose a Mattress: The Ultimate Guide
Leadership

Ryan Serhant starts work at 4:30 a.m.—he says most people don’t achieve their dreams because ‘what they really want is just to be lazy’
Minnesota CEOs chose deescalation over outrage. Did it work?
Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla’s best leadership advice: Being optimistic is better than being right
Lifestyle

Netflix may be turning into an ‘entertainment giant,’ but its stock looks like ‘dead money’ to investors
Five years after the short squeeze, GameStop’s CEO is betting on a ‘genius or totally foolish’ $100 billion-plus acquisition
Twenty-somethings discover nostalgia, throwing back to a carefree time before the ‘dark days’: 2016
Personal Finance

The mystery behind Elizabeth Holmes’ tweeting spree from prison
How is interest on a personal loan calculated?
Are there personal loans for veterans and military members?
Politics

Minnesota CEOs chose deescalation over outrage. Did it work?
The mystery behind Elizabeth Holmes’ tweeting spree from prison
Kevin Warsh will inherit a challenge no Fed chief has faced since post-World War II regarding the spiraling $31 trillion national debt
Retail

Five years after the short squeeze, GameStop’s CEO is betting on a ‘genius or totally foolish’ $100 billion-plus acquisition
‘What do you think is going on with the stock price?’: Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol says baristas’ market savvy makes him proud
Walmart doubles down on health, giving 3,000 pharmacy workers a promotion and a raise of up to 86%—with no college degree required
Tech

Netflix may be turning into an ‘entertainment giant,’ but its stock looks like ‘dead money’ to investors
Elon Musk and Jeffrey Epstein emailed each other for years trying to meet up, new Justice Department records show
After a decade of silence, Elon Musk’s tunneling startup and its reclusive president, are hitting the media circuit







































