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It's November and for those excited people who replaced their spider web decor with a Christmas tree at exactly 12:01 this morning, it's the start of the holiday season. Katie Wedell here with your top headlines for the day. |
It's also open enrollment season for most health plans. We recently reported that inflation may finally be catching up with your healthcare premium in the new calendar year. |
As plans continue to shift more cost burden onto their members – that's you – we took a look at the role patient assistance programs and drug manufacturer coupons play in the always confusing world of drug pricing. |
You can read more about how the various available drug discounts work, and what pitfalls to be aware of with each here: The pros and cons of drug copay coupons and patient assistance programs. |
Amazon and Apple foresee slowdown |
If you go by the projections of giants Amazon and Apple, the outlook for consumer spending may be dimming, even though government data doesn't currently reflect that. |
Ecommerce giant Amazon.com and gadget maker Apple raised eyebrows with disappointing sales outlooks going into year-end holidays. |
π° More stories you shouldn't miss π° |
This may be the year to dine out for Thanksgiving, thanks to, what else, inflation. |
A new report says the Native American unemployment rate hovers near the lowest level in 22 years. |
Twitter's verification process may be revamped, including a possible $20 monthly fee to get that blue checkmark. |
π You get a car! π |
Okay, not really. Seriously, it's not time to buy a car right now. |
But it IS time for Oprah's annual Favorite Things List of gifts to give. |
Don't miss our investment guide |
Stay calm and invest on. Consider your choices – and what to invest in, and whether to do it yourself. Get more advice like this in USA TODAY's Personal Finance Investment Guide. |
About The Daily Money |
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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