David Keller

David M. Keller is a finance writer based in Columbus, Ohio, covering personal finance and consumer-focused economic topics. He earned his degree in journalism from Ohio University and began his career reporting on local business and economic trends for a regional media outlet. Since then, he has contributed to a variety of online publications, focusing on clear, practical coverage of topics such as cost of living, debt, and everyday financial decision-making.

Fed the federal reserve system the central banking system of the united states of america

Nine of the Fed’s 18 policymakers now expect rates to rise in 2026, and the Fed stripped its bias toward cutting

Half of the Federal Reserve’s rate-setting participants now project at least one interest-rate increase before the end of 2026, a sharp shift that arrived alongside the removal of language that had long signaled the central bank’s preference for easing. The June 16-17 FOMC meeting produced a statement that dropped the forward-guidance sentence referencing “the extent…

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Cashing out an annuity early can trigger a surrender charge that starts around 7% and falls each year

Investors who pull money from a variable annuity before the contract’s surrender period expires face fees that can consume a significant share of their principal, with a typical first-year charge starting around 7% and declining by roughly one percentage point each subsequent year. The surrender period on these contracts often runs six to eight years,…

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At Home is closing 32 stores in Chapter 11 bankruptcy after sourcing nearly all of its goods overseas

At Home, the Texas-based home decor chain that built its business model around high-volume imports, is shutting down 32 stores as part of its Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings. The closures are already underway, with liquidation firm Hilco Consumer-Retail managing store-closing sales across two separate waves. The retailer’s near-total reliance on overseas-sourced merchandise left it exposed…

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Bank of America says the Fed’s inflation problem has gotten “unambiguously worse” and sees rate hikes in September, October and December

Bank of America analysts have declared that the Federal Reserve’s inflation problem has gotten “unambiguously worse,” projecting that the central bank will raise interest rates at its September, October, and December meetings this year. The call follows the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May 2026 Consumer Price Index release on June 10, 2026, which showed persistent…

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Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities raise their value with inflation, unlike a regular bond

Investors holding standard U.S. Treasury bonds watch their fixed interest payments lose buying power every time consumer prices climb. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, known as TIPS, work differently: the principal itself rises and falls with inflation, and interest is calculated on that adjusted amount. At maturity, the holder receives whichever is greater, the inflation-adjusted principal or…

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Attacking your highest-rate debt first saves the most money over time

Borrowers carrying balances on multiple credit cards face a straightforward math problem: every dollar of extra payment directed at the wrong account costs them real money in avoidable interest. Federal regulators, university researchers, and public extension services all point to the same answer. Paying down the card with the highest annual percentage rate first, before…

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Before you invest, confirm the company registered its offering with the SEC, for free

Investors scrolling through social-media feeds or email inboxes encounter pitches for private deals, crowdfunding rounds, and startup shares on a near-daily basis. Many of these promotions skip a basic step that costs nothing and takes minutes: checking whether the company actually filed its offering documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC’s Office of…

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