With gas prices soaring, the humble sedan is making a comeback. Recent US sales data reveals a “sedanaissance” among major automakers like Honda, Hyundai, and Toyota.
Americans are keeping their cars longer than ever, and remaking the auto industry. Automakers, dealers and repair shops are changing business practices to adapt to a new normal: the 13-year-old car.
The problem isn’t that Americans feel lonely; the problem is that too many Americans, who are spending more time alone than ever, do not feel lonely enough.
When your mind plays tricks on you, you believe irrational things and become even more anxious. (Here’s how to fix it.)
Forty hours a week, fifty weeks a year, forty years: a career is about 80,000 hours. Yet it’s striking how little serious thought goes into career decisions relative to, say, choosing a mortgage.
Decades of scientific investment have paid off just in the last month, with researchers announcing promising breakthroughs against cancers and other deadly afflictions.
People have been trying to predict a new bubble every year since the Great Financial Crisis. A lot of people are sure this is finally it. But you also have to consider the possibility that AI will be adopted at a rate that’s fast enough to keep the market gods at bay.
The labor market appears to be motoring along — an average of +188k jobs over the past three months — after a slow 2025. Here’s the key point: When the labor market looks like this, take that recession talk off the table.
In most housing markets, land values eventually rise over a 30-year period, and the cash-poor homeowner can sell for more than their original purchase price. Home ownership requires a constant investment in the house just to keep it in line with the market, because most of your neighbors are doing the same.
To get to the bottom of your inflation risk and how strenuously you need to defend against it, ask yourself three questions.





