The “Influentials” Who Help Us Save Money
On Wall Street, in Washington and beyond, these folks have a huge impact on our daily lives and futures.


On Wall Street, in Washington and beyond, these folks have a huge impact on our daily lives and futures.
Each year, when the holidays roll around, it’s always tempting to spend more money than we actually have. We get swept up in the excitement of the season — and the buying and the giving — and we lose track of what we’re doing.
I call it the buy-it-now bug: We come down with it every giving season and feel the effects in January when we see our credit card statements.
Whenever you feel fear about spending money that should be a sign that you’re spending money you don’t have to possibly even impress people you don’t even know or like.
U.S. financial guru Suze Orman has teamed with the producer of the popular Body Worlds exhibits for a new traveling show to look at how we relate to and understand money.
Score one for Suze Orman. In her last book, The Money Class, Orman urged readers to keep their emergency savings not in a money market fund, but in an interest-bearing checking account.
The Chicago-born finance expert says a final goodbye to her mother, Ann Orman One would think that after writing nine consecutive New York Times best sellers, it would be effortless for me to write an obituary for my own mother.