Latest Articles

How Banks Create Money: Why Your $100 Can Exist Twice
A plain-English walkthrough of how commercial banks create money through lending, why deposits and loans can appear to 'exist twice,' and what limits and risks shape that process.

Nearly 1 Million Jobs Lost in 2025 Revision: What It Means
A major Bureau of Labor Statistics revision cut U.S. payrolls for the 12 months around 2025 by roughly 0.9–1.0 million jobs, reshaping the narrative about last year’s labor market. This article explains what changed, why revisions happen, who was hit, and what it means for policy, businesses and workers.

U.S. Jobs Revised: 2025 Payroll Gains Cut by 911,000
A major BLS benchmark revision sharply reduced reported payroll gains for 2024–2025, reshaping how economists, policymakers and markets view recent labor-market strength. The correction forces a re-evaluation of growth, inflation risks and the Federal Reserve’s path.

Why Las Vegas Roulette Payouts Always Favor the House
Roulette payouts in Las Vegas are intentionally below the mathematically fair odds so casinos maintain a built-in profit margin. This article explains how payouts are set, shows the math behind house edge for American and European wheels, and walks through what that means for players and strategies.

Stellantis' €22B Shock: Inside the Feb 6 Stock Collapse
On February 6, 2026, Stellantis disclosed a €22.2 billion write-down tied to an abrupt EV strategy reset that triggered a record one-day share collapse and halted trading. This article unpacks what happened, why the market reacted so violently, and what investors and the auto industry can expect next.

U.S. Dealers Fear Impact as Canada Approves Chinese Cars
Canada's decision to allow Chinese-made vehicles into its market has rattled U.S. dealerships, exposing vulnerabilities in pricing, supply chains, and customer retention. This article examines why dealers are alarmed, how automakers and consumers might respond, and what strategies could stabilize the market.