Good morning. This is Sterling PrestonBetty Lin-Fisher with today's The Daily Money.
If you're in the market shopping for your dream home, your dreams of a lower mortgage rate have been dashed, my colleague Medora Lee reports.
The Fed last week put a hold on interest rate cuts and tweaked plans for its balance sheet. Those actions may not raise mortgage rates significantly, but will likely keep them elevated, analysts say.
Read more about mortgage rates in Medora's story.
In the latest volley in the TikTok battle, the social media company and its Chinese parent company Byte Dance have filed a lawsuit in federal court.
The lawsuit seeks to block a new law that would force the sale or a nationwide ban of the popular short-form video app.
Read more in my colleague Jessica Guynn's story.
Consumers soon won't be able to get Charged Lemonade drinks at Panera Bread. The fast-casual food chain announced on Tuesday that it was removing the line of drinks from the menu. Panera has been hit with several suits over the drinks, including two lawsuits alleging the drink's caffeine contents caused fatal cardiac arrests, and a third, filed this year, alleged it caused permanent heart issues.
Find out more about when the drinks might disappear from the menu in this story.
Each weekday, The Daily Money delivers the best consumer news from USA TODAY. We break down financial news and provide the TLDR version: how decisions by the Federal Reserve, government and companies impact you.
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Among the dozens of executive actions President Trump signed on his first day in office is one aimed
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