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Although there are no restrictions on how often you can file for bankruptcy, there are restrictions on how often you can receive a discharge. While Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcies will have the same effect on your credit score, creditors may view a Chapter 13 bankruptcy more favorably. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy will stay on your credit report for 10 years, while a Chapter 13 bankruptcy will fall off after seven years. Frequently asked questions about how often you can file for bankruptcyCan I file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy after a Chapter 7 bankruptcy? Yes, you can file Chapter 13 after Chapter 7 bankruptcy, but you must wait at least four years after the discharge of your Chapter 7 to file Chapter 13.
Persons: Filers, you've, Adrienne Hines, Hines, Scott Glatstian, Rosenblum, Lamine Zarrad, , Jennifer, Read Organizations: refiling, Wright Co, Rosenblum Law, Federal Trade Commission, Business, Yahoo, Finance, CBS, MSNBC, CNBC, Forbes, Black Enterprise, USA, The Johns Hopkins University Carey School of Business, Business Journalists Locations: Kademenos, Chevron, America, TheGrio, New York City
Barron Trump is going to NYU
  + stars: | 2024-09-04 | by ( Bryan Metzger | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +1 min
Barron Trump is set to attend New York University. "He's a very high aptitude child, but he's no longer a child," Donald Trump told the Daily Mail. AdvertisementBarron Trump, the youngest son of former President Donald Trump, is set to attend New York University this fall. "He'll be going to Stern, the business school, which is a great school at NYU," the former president told the Daily Mail, adding: "It's a very high-quality place. He also told the outlet that Barron "was accepted to a lot of colleges" and considered attending the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, where Trump attended.
Persons: Barron Trump, Donald Trump, he'll, , Stern, Barron, Trump Organizations: New York University, Daily Mail, Service, NYU, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Business
When Shake Shack founder Danny Meyer interviews job applicants, he likes to ask a couple of his favorite questions. "It gives me a chance to actually see the person and see how they see themselves." Meyer's other favorite job interview question, he said: Tell me about something that happened in your life, before you turned 12, that you think had more of an impact on you today than anything else. "The point is that whatever that story is, you then get a chance to talk about how did it change who you are today," he said. "I'm looking for honesty, vulnerability, willingness to grow, looking maybe for a little growth mindset."
Persons: Danny Meyer, Adam Grant, Meyer, who's Organizations: Shake, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, New, Square Hospitality Locations: New York
Related storiesShould the plan ultimately be blocked, David said he might have to sell his home or get a second job to afford higher student-loan payments again. But he's highly concerned about his fate with the SAVE plan up in the air. They cited an estimate from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania that found the SAVE plan could cost $475 billion over 10 years. Are you enrolled in the SAVE plan and concerned about student-loan payments? Will student loans influence how you vote in the election?
Persons: David, David —, , Joe Biden's, we've, you'll, he's Organizations: Service, Business, BI, Circuit, GOP, Education Department, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, SAVE Locations: recalculate
A score between 580 to 669 is considered a fair credit score while a score under 580 is considered a poor credit score. Free credit score check servicesWhile many of these services do charge money, some of the best credit monitoring services are free, such as Capital One CreditWise or Credit Karma. As the base on which your credit score is calculated, credit reports don't actually include your credit scores. Checking credit score frequently asked questionsWill checking my credit score lower it? Your credit reports do not show when you check your credit score, so the credit scoring algorithms have no way of knowing if you checked your credit score.
Persons: Experian, FICO, you've, they're, VantageScore VantageScore, it's, Kendall Clayborne, Clayborne, Jennifer, Read Organizations: Fair, Consumers, Business, America, CBS, MSNBC, CNBC, Forbes, Black Enterprise, USA, The Johns Hopkins University Carey School of Business, Business Journalists Locations: AnnualCreditReport.com, Chevron, TheGrio, New York City
The best way to find out what you're good at is to ask other people, says organizational psychologist Adam Grant. Reach out to 15 to 20 colleagues, family members, and friends, and see if they'll share stories of when you were at your best. The activity, created by researchers from Harvard Business School and the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, helps you see yourself "through the eyes of others." It's one of the rare ones that I love as much with undergrads as I do with CEOs," Grant said. "In my experience doing it, people can't anticipate what their strengths are in other people's eyes and so it turns out we have positive blind spots, not just negative ones."
Persons: Adam Grant, Reach, Grant, Brené Brown, Simon Sinek Organizations: Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard Business School, University of Michigan's Ross School of Business
But good habits and a well-established routine can help you make the choices you are trying to stick to, she told CNN earlier. Habits are behaviors people engage in without conscious thought and are reinforced through repetition, social psychologist Wendy Wood told CNN in a previous article. Try to sleep better: Babies and young children often have a specific routine every night to help them sleep better — maybe it’s a bath, a few books, a song and a snuggle. Grown-ups need that, too, clinical psychologist and sleep expert Michael Grandner told CNN earlier. If you want more impactful wellness habits you can build into your routine, look for more CNN articles every week this National Wellness Month covering sleep, exercise, food and mindfulness.
Persons: Let’s, it’s, Katy, James G, Dinan, Wendy Wood, Michael Grandner, I’ll, , they’ll, , Nitat, Steph Grasso, dietitian, Grasso, Rosamund Dean, Adam Smiley Poswolsky, ” Poswolsky Organizations: CNN, Wellness, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, US Centers for Disease Control, World Heart Federation, Research
The average FICO credit score is 718, and the average VantageScore credit score is 702. Minnesota has the highest average FICO credit score, with an average FICO score of 742. Understanding credit scoresWhat a credit score meansA credit score is a number that indicates how likely a person is to repay their creditors back on time, based on payment history from their credit report. The 10 states with the lowest average VantageScore credit scores show a similar pattern, predominantly comprised of southern states. Along with exploring credit scores, credit reports, and how to build credit, Jennifer analyzes how current economic trends impact everyday people and offers her expert advice on budgeting, saving, and growing wealth in today’s economy.
Persons: you've, Experian, You'd, aren't, Jennifer, Read Organizations: Minnesota, . Vermont, Wisconsin, ., . New Hampshire, Washington, . South Dakota, . North Dakota, Hawaii, . Massachusetts, . Montana, Oregon, Vermont, . Wisconsin, Colorado, South Carolina, . Arkansas, Oklahoma, Georgia, . Texas, Alabama, Louisiana, US Census, West Virginia, . Kentucky, Business, America, CBS, MSNBC, CNBC, Forbes, Black Enterprise, USA, The Johns Hopkins University Carey School of Business, Business Journalists Locations: Minnesota, . Mississippi, Mississippi, . New, . South, . North, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico, South, United States, Chevron, U.S, TheGrio, New York City
The stock market is about to see a major shift once the Fed cuts rates, Jeremy Siegel said. The top economist thinks value stocks could start outperforming growth stocks once the Fed eases policy. Cooling inflation data supports a Fed rate cut by September, Siegel predicted. The Wharton School finance professor pointed to opportunity lurking in value stocks, an unloved group of the market that's underperformed this year when compared to growth stocks. Growth stocks have outperformed partly due to Wall Street's AI craze, which has ignited investor fervor for growth stocks, like mega-cap tech firms.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, , Powell Organizations: Service, Wharton School, CNBC
Around this time in 2022, Sunny Choi had a six-figure salary, an apartment in New York City and a job as director of global creative operations at Estée Lauder. I had kind of resigned myself to [thinking] this might be my life forever because of the relative financial stability." "I thought this was probably the best opportunity I'd get, timing-wise, to make this kind of a jump," she said. The decision to leave Estée Lauder and her salary wasn't easy. She called the prospect of stepping away from her job and into financial uncertainty "extremely challenging and very, very scary."
Persons: Sunny Choi, Estée Lauder, Still, Choi, I'd Organizations: Wharton, Generation, Scholastic, CNBC, Team USA Locations: New York City, Estée
With digital price tags, big retailers, in theory, could do the same. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said that type of dynamic pricing is "incredibly important in our economy." AdvertisementSome experts agree, saying dynamic pricing practices could benefit consumers who are able to gain some understanding of the system and shop around. After customers complained online that those changes would surge prices, a spokesperson announced the company did not intend to implement surge pricing. How does dynamic pricing impact you?
Persons: There's, Uber, it's, Greg Cathey, Elizabeth Pancotti, Pancotti, Jerome Powell, Powell, John Zhang, Wendy's, Sen, Sherrod Brown, Zhang, Organizations: Service, Walmart, Business, Roosevelt Institute, Federal, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Democratic, SNAP
Supply and DemandThe case for housing deregulation starts with Econ 101: Allowing builders to significantly increase housing supply leads to much lower prices. It isn’t rising demand, as the U.S. population rose even faster back when housing prices were roughly stable. Standard of LivingWhat would happen if homebuilders could once again freely build until housing prices were driven back down to cost? The admittedly small number of studies on the link between YIMBY and babies support common sense: Less regulation lowers housing prices, and lower housing prices generally raise birth rates and hasten child-bearing. In a rational world, the panacea policy of housing deregulation would be a done deal.
Persons: Ben Denzer, Taylor, Wharton, homebuilders, Thomas Piketty’s, , Matthew Rognlie, Peter Ganong, Daniel Shoag, Anne Case, Angus Deaton Organizations: Republicans, Research, Area, Wharton, Francisco, Francisco Los Angeles New, Francisco Los Angeles New York Phoenix Denver Houston Dallas, Japan Japan France France Britain Britain, Japan Japan France France Britain Britain Canada, → Utah Nevada Arizona New, San, San Francisco New, Atlanta Houston Boston, Democrats, Republican Locations: Minnesota , Oregon, California, New York City, Houston, Dallas, Francisco Los, Francisco Los Angeles New York, Wharton, United States, Japan, France, Britain, Canada, U.S, Japan Japan France France, Japan Japan France France Britain Britain Canada Canada, Bay, Dodge, → California Nevada Florida New York Arkansas, → Utah Nevada Arizona, → Utah Nevada Arizona New York West Virginia, Washington, San Francisco, San Francisco New York Los Angeles Rochester, N.Y, Atlanta
But that data, which makes it possible to compare insurance premiums around the country, also shows something even more surprising: As climate change makes extreme weather more likely, the cost of home insurance doesn’t line up all that closely with risk. Deciphering the cost of home insurance from one place to another is almost impossible. They obtained data showing how much millions of American households pay to mortgage service companies, which typically includes insurance. Then they deducted payments for mortgages, property taxes and other fees, leaving them with an estimate of home insurance premiums. The result is first-of-its-kind data, piercing the veil that insurers and regulators have placed over the cost of home insurance in different parts of the country.
Persons: you’re, — Benjamin Keys, Philip Mulder, University of Wisconsin — Organizations: Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, University of Wisconsin
The S&P 500 index and Nasdaq closed at record highs, driven by a 2% gain in Nvidia. UBS raised Nvidia's price target to $150 due to strong demand for its chips and a reasonable valuation. Investors are awaiting June's CPI inflation report Thursday and comments from Fed Chairman Jerome Powell. AdvertisementThe S&P 500 index and Nasdaq closed at record highs on Monday, driven by a nearly 2% gain in Nvidia stock. The AI darling rose after UBS raised its price target to $150 per share in a Monday note.
Persons: Jerome Powell, , Price, Jeremy Siegel Organizations: Nasdaq, Nvidia, UBS, Service, Nvidia's, Blackwell, Federal, Wharton School
The rally in stocks could be endangered if the Fed doesn't cut rates soon, Jeremy Siegel warned. The Wharton professor made the case for the central bank to cut rates in September as data softens. AdvertisementThe rally in stocks and the strength of the economy is at risk if the Fed doesn't start cutting interest rates soon, according to Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel. No rate cut in September could put a recession on the table, Siegel warned, in addition to endangering the trajectory for stocks. Advertisement"So although I think stocks are still in an uptrend and the growth stocks are still certainly walloping the value stocks, I think Powell has to take note," Siegel said.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Wharton, , who's, Siegel, Powell Organizations: Service, CNBC, Atlanta Fed, New, Fed
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFed should 'tee up' rate cuts next meeting, says Wharton's Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, The Wharton School professor emeritus of finance and Wisdom Tree chief economist, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss markets, the presidential debate, the Fed's subsequent decisions, and more
Persons: Wharton's Jeremy Siegel Jeremy Siegel Organizations: The Wharton
The promise of a more rapid climb up the corporate ladder has made Alpine's CIT program incredibly popular. While it's too soon to know how Alpine's CIT program ranked this year, it received 750 applications for just 12 slots. AdvertisementAnderman's own non-conventional career took her from college dropout to ballet dancer to the world of international development to business school. When she interviewed for her job at Alpine, Weaver asked how she could handle the job with no prior experience. — Alpine's founder and CEO — Alpine's founder and CEOThe first attribute the company looks for is IQ, but not in the traditional kind.
Persons: , it's, Tal Lee Anderman, you've, Tal Lee Anderson, Graham Weaver, GSB, Weaver, whittle, Anderman, David Wurtzbacher, Wurtzbacher, they're, Geoff Smart Organizations: Service, Business, CIT, Harvard Business School, Stanford's, School of Business, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard, Tal Lee Anderson Alpine, Stanford, Wharton, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern, University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Alpine, Alpine's San, Citadel, Yale Law School, America Locations: Alpine's, Alpine's San Francisco, Blackstone, Anderman, Manhattan, Jackson , Mississippi, Hong Kong
For example, a call that the S & P 500 would rise 100 points on a positive consumer price index print came true last year. That's true so far, with the S & P 500 jumping 4.8% in May after finishing April down 4.2%. As equities struggled, (the S & P 500 fell almost 20% in 2022), Lee felt like the risk of inflation was being mispriced. Because of that, he foresaw a rebound in 2023, a year that sent the S & P 500 more than 24% higher. "There was a pretty widely-held view that the Fed had to crash the economy in order to contain inflation," Lee said.
Persons: Fundstrat's Tom Lee, Lee, it's, that's, Lee doesn't, Russell, hiccups, Salomon Smith Barney Organizations: Fundstrat, CNBC Pro, Wharton School, selloff, Apple, Netflix, Nasdaq, JPMorgan
"It never occurred to me until that conversation that I was severely underpaid." She said she didn't think to negotiate her salary when she received the job offer. "The term underpaid shouldn't be used to compare you to a colleague," said Sho Dewan, career expert and founder of Workhap. One option if you suspect you're being underpaid is to request a salary adjustment from your employer. This is where that market research comes in handy, along with highlights from your performance review.
Persons: Kelly Harry, Harry, Maddie Machado, It's, Peter Cappelli, Sho Dewan, there's, Machado, Dewan, Henry, " Machado, you've, Cappelli, doesn't Organizations: CNBC, Finance, Workers, Research Center, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Human Resources, Pew Research Center Locations: New York City, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia not overvalued despite low forward P/E and market cap, says DataTrek's Nick ColasSean Myers, assistant professor of finance at the Wharton School, and Nicholas Colas, co-founder at DataTrek Research, join CNBC's 'The Exchange' to discuss Nvidia's valuation, how much weight to give P/E ratios, and more.
Persons: Nick Colas Sean Myers, Nicholas Colas, CNBC's Organizations: Nvidia, Wharton School, DataTrek Research
A quarter of family offices surveyed reported suffering a cyberattack in 2023, up from 17% in 2020. With their large wealth and small staffs, family offices have become lucrative targets for hackers and cybercriminals, experts say. Since family offices value efficiency and speed over risk management, he said, today's family offices often don't have adequate technology and planning in place for possible cyberattacks. Less than a third of family offices say their cyber risk management processes are well-developed, according to the survey. Marshall said family offices need to take a more proactive stance on overall assessment that goes beyond cyberattacks.
Persons: Robert Frank, Willie Sutton, Edward Marshall, Marshall, cyberattacks Organizations: Wharton, Family Alliance Locations: cybercriminals, EY U.S, cyberattacks
One constant refrain at these protests is the call for college endowment funds to divest from Israel and the many American companies that do business there. Tech companies such as Google and Amazon and defense contractors such as Boeing and Lockheed are on that list. "These endowments are famously opaque," said Alison Taylor, clinical associate professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. However, many universities have ignored the calls to divest from Israel or companies that do business there. Watch the video above to learn more about how divesting from Israel and companies who do business there would actually work, and how it would affect the tens of billions of dollars at stake in college endowment funds.
Persons: Alison Taylor, University's, Witold Henisz, there'll Organizations: Tech, Google, Boeing, Lockheed, University's Stern School of Business, University of California, Universities, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania Locations: Israel, New, Berkeley
Jeff Bezos recently advised Adam Neumann to speak last in meetings. Bezos' "speak last" strategy is supported by organizational psychologists like Adam Grant. AdvertisementJeff Bezos recently gave Adam Neumann some unsolicited advice: Speak last in meetings, a leadership style espoused by a leading organizational psychologist. Neumann said Bezos came up to him with the recommendation after the WeWork cofounder spoke at an event. Related storiesAt WeWork, Neumann was famous for his eccentric leadership style.
Persons: Jeff Bezos, Adam Neumann, Neumann, Adam Grant, , Bezos, Flow's, Andreessen Horowitz, Lex Fridman, Jeff Organizations: Service, Thursday's Bloomberg Tech Summit, Business, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Business Insider Locations: San Francisco
One women-focused nonprofit has launched a new way to help them get faster answers to their queries through the use of an online AI chatbot. The organization, Savvy Ladies, was founded more than 20 years ago by Stacy Francis, a certified financial planner and president and CEO of Francis Financial in New York City. After seeing her grandmother stay in an abusive situation because she lacked financial resources, Francis created the nonprofit with the goal of helping other women avoid similar situations. watch nowThe new chatbot — provided through Microsoft Copilot — allows visitors to the Savvy Ladies website to type in their financial questions and receive immediate answers curated from the website's content written by CFPs and other financial professionals. Investors are more likely to trust advice from generative AI tools than from social media, according to a survey released last year from the CFP Board, a professional organization representing professional financial planners.
Persons: Stacy Francis, Francis, CFPs, Judy Herbst, Michael Roberts, William H, Lawrence, Roberts Organizations: Francis Financial, Microsoft, CNBC's FA, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, CFP Locations: New York City, CNBC's
What is divestment? And does it work?
  + stars: | 2024-04-28 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
From Princeton University in New Jersey to the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, the same chant can be heard: “Disclose! The specifics of student protesters’ divestment demands vary in scope from school to school. Other students, like those at Cornell University and Yale, are asking their schools to stop investing in weapons manufacturers. Other common threads include demanding universities disclose their investments, sever academic ties with Israeli universities and support a ceasefire in Gaza. Proponents for divestment counter that its value lies in raising awareness and stigmatizing partnerships with targeted regimes or industries.
Persons: , ” Israel, Witold Henisz, Henisz, , Nicholas Dirks, ” Dirks, Dirks, “ They’ll, Anna Cooban, Michelle Bowman, Eli Lilly, Estee Lauder, Jerome Powell Organizations: New, New York CNN, Palestinian, Princeton University, University of Southern, Columbia University Apartheid, Columbia, Cornell University and Yale, Research, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, CNN, University of California, Columbia’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Dallas Fed, Samsung, AMD, Starbucks, Benz Group, Volkswagen, PayPal, adidas, Diamondback Energy, Restaurant Brands, Pinterest, Caesars Entertainment, PMI, Conference Board, Mastercard, Qualcomm, Pfizer, Marriott, eBay, US Commerce Department, Apple, Novo Nordisk, Shell, ConocoPhillips, Cigna, Universal Music Group, Hershey, US Labor Department Locations: New York, New Jersey, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, Columbia, Palestine, Israel, Gaza, South Africa, Berkeley, United States, Europe, DoorDash
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