How the fall of Bed Bath & Beyond—and its 20% coupon—is impacting the retail industry
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
Customers of Bed Bath & Beyond have been accustomed to using the popular 20% off any single item coupons the retailer has mailed out for years. With the retailer filing for bankruptcy and ending the use of the coupon, customers could be searching for new places to shop.Two retailers are accepting the 20% off coupons in a potential marketing move that could help their own struggling stock prices. SF restaurant that hosted anti-trans dinner apologizes amid backlash What Happened: Bed Bath & Beyond filed for bankruptcy protection in late April as the company has seen its shares fall over 90% in the last year and the company struggled with liquidity.The company has locations of Bed Bath & Beyond and BuyBuy Baby stores open during its wind-down process, but will no longer allow customers the ability to use its famous 20% off coupons, according to Retail Dive.Bed Bath & Beyond Chief Financial Officer Holly Etlin credited the success of the coupon in court documents recen...$1.5 billion of unclaimed tax refunds are about to expire
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
You wouldn't think that anyone would forget to collect a tax refund, but it happens. Typically, taxpayers have three years to file and claim their tax returns. However, because the 2020 tax season coincided with the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the filing deadline for 2019 earnings has been extended until July 17, 2023. Anyone with unclaimed tax refund money from their 2019 earnings stands to lose this cash if they don't file their return by this fast-approaching date. Bay Area city drops out of Top 10 in most-populous US cities MoneyGeek analyzed 2019 unclaimed tax refund data from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and estimated the average amount of unclaimed tax cash per affected resident in every state. We found that while the average resident in some states could gain more from filing their taxes, Americans across the board are sitting on significant refunds.KEY FINDINGS:There's still $1.5 billion in total unclaimed tax refunds for 2019 earnings — that's an average of...Marina man pleads no contest in fatal DUI crash
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
(BCN) -- A Marina man has pleaded no contest to charges in a 2022 fatal DUI collision case, Monterey County prosecutors said. Daniel Wetle, 40, pleaded no contest to one count of gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated and one count of driving under the influence of alcohol causing injury, admitting to an enhancement that he personally inflicted great bodily injury on the victim. SF restaurant that hosted anti-trans dinner apologizes amid backlash Just after 6 p.m. on Aug. 13, 2022, Wetle was driving a rented BMW sedan on state Highway 68 near Spreckels when he lost control of the vehicle and swerved into oncoming traffic, hitting a Toyota Camry head-on.The driver of the other vehicle was killed instantly and a passenger suffered serious injuries, prosecutors said. Wetle, who was uninjured in the collision, exhibited signs of being under the influence of alcohol, and a subsequent blood test showed he had a blood-alcohol level of .101. He faces up to 11 years and eight mo...Raising a kid is the most expensive in these 10 U.S. cities: report
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
SAN FRANCISCO (NEXSTAR) - It’s no secret that raising a child can be expensive. From childcare, housing, food, and other associated costs, the expenses can rise quickly. Depending on where you live, being a parent can be even more expensive. Using data from MIT’s Living Wage Calculator, personal finance website SmartAsset found that nationally, raising a child costs roughly $20,800 annually. That cost includes childcare (which, on average, will set you back more than $9,000), food and housing, healthcare, transportation, and other necessities. SmartAsset reviewed 381 U.S. metro areas to determine how much it could cost for a two-adult household to raise a child in 2023. Unsurprisingly, many of the most expensive cities were in California, specifically in and around the Bay Area. These are most popular baby names of 2022 Topping out the list was the San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley area, where SmartAsset found the annual cost of raising a child is more than $35,60...Stock market today: Wall Street ticks higher as it heads for best week since March
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street is ticking higher Friday as it heads toward its best week since March, despite a long list of worries hanging over it.The S&P 500 was 0.2% higher in midday trading and on pace for a 2% gain for the week. That would break a long, listless stretch where it failed to rise or fall by 1% for six straight weeks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 72 points, or 0.2%, at 33,608, as of 11:05 a.m. Eastern time, while the Nasdaq composite was virtually falt.Rising hopes that the U.S. government can avoid a disastrous default on its debt have been one of the main engines for the market this week. The White House said Friday morning in Japan that negotiators told President Joe Biden, who’s at a Group of Seven summit there, they’re making progress on a deal to raise the credit limit for the federal government. Without the ability to borrow more, the U.S. government could default on its debt for the first time and trigger widespread pain across the economy. The...How one North Carolina lawmaker’s defection from the Democratic Party upended abortion protections
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Mere weeks before North Carolina’s GOP-controlled legislature enacted a 12-week abortion limit over the Democratic governor’s opposition this week, state Republican lawmakers appeared just one vote shy of an override.But one House Democrat — formerly a strong advocate for women’s reproductive rights — unexpectedly switched to the GOP and then voted to squash Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto of the bill to limit abortion access. The switch by Charlotte-area Rep. Tricia Cotham also gave Republicans veto-proof margins in both the House and Senate, upending the state’s fragile power balance and perhaps opening the floodgates to a new wave of conservative policies.Republican bill sponsors also could use their newly attained veto-proof majority to propel some GOP-backed education policies and transgender restrictions across the finish line — several of which they introduced the same week she announced her party change.She ran last fall on a platfor...PGA Championship Scores
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
ThursdayAt Oak Hill – EastRochester, N.Y.Purse: $15 millionYardage: 7,394; Par: 70First RoundBryson DeChambeau, United States32-34—66Corey Conners, Canada33-34—67Scottie Scheffler, United States33-34—67Dustin Johnson, United States34-33—67Eric Cole, United States34-33—67Keegan Bradley, United States34-34—68Ryan Fox, New Zealand33-35—68Viktor Hovland, Norway34-34—68Adam Scott, Australia33-35—68Justin Rose, England33-36—69Keith Mitchell, United States33-36—69Sepp Straka, Austria36-33—69Justin Suh, United States34-35—69Hayden Buckley, United States35-34—69Thomas Pieters, Belgium35-34—69Pablo Larrazabal, Spain35-34—69Taylor Pendrith, Canada36-34—70Michael Block, United States36-34—70Adam Hadwin, Canada36-34—70Kurt Kitayama, United States36-34—70Matthew NeSmith, United States33-37—70Adam Svensson, Canada35-35—70Harold Varner III, United States35-35—70Patrick Rodgers, United States35-35—70Chris Kirk, United States34-36—70Victor Perez, France35-35—70Cameron Davis, Australia34-37—71M...Cristina Fernández de Kirchner reitera que no será candidata y afirma que “lo importante” es que el peronismo entre en el balotaje
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
(CNN Español) — “Lo importante es entrar en el balotaje”, dijo la vicepresidenta de Argentina, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, en una extensa entrevista televisiva realizada en la noche de este jueves en la que ratificó que no será candidata en las elecciones presidenciales de octubre.Con esta y varias definiciones más, Fernández de Kirchner volvió a un estudio de televisión después de casi seis años sin conceder entrevistas. Se presentó en el programa Duro de Domar, que se emite por la señal C5N, de tendencia oficialista. Su última participación en la televisión local había sido antes de las elecciones de 2017, cuando buscaba ser senadora.En esta entrevista, emitida en vivo y que se extendió por poco más de una hora, la exmandataria volvió a criticar a la oposición, a la Justicia y en especial, a la Corte Suprema, a la que acusó de proscribirla. “Estoy en libertad condicional, técnicamente”, afirmó.Aunque fue muy crítica con el Fondo Monetario Internacional y del acuerdo con ...PGA Championship Tee Times
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) _ Tee times for Friday’s second round of the PGA Championship at the Oak Hill Country Club (all times ET)7 a.m. _ Gabe Reynolds, Sam Ryder, Brandon Wu7:05 a.m. _ Matt Cahill, Cameron Davis, Taylor Montgomery7:11 a.m. _ Sadom Kaewkanjana, Ben Kern, Thorbjorn Olesen7:16 a.m. _ Michael Block, Hayden Buckley, Taylor Pendrith7:22 a.m. _ Webb Simpson, Danny Willett, Y.E. Yang7:27 a.m. _ Alex Beach, Sihwan Kim, Brendon Todd7:33 a.m. _ Harris English, Robert Macintyre, Sepp Straka7:38 a.m. _ Rasmus Hojgaard, Patrick Reed, Nick Taylor7:44 a.m. _ Pablo Larrazabal, Keith Mitchell, Thomas Pieters7:49 a.m. _ Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Chez Reavie, John Somers7:55 a.m. _ Brian Harman, Lucas Herbert, Callum Shinkwin8 a.m. _ Tommy Fleetwood, Hideki Matsuyama, Cameron Young8:06 a.m. _ Abraham Ancer, Sam Burns, Tom Kim8:11 a.m. _ Tony Finau, Max Homa, Adam Scott8:17 a.m. _ Sungjae Im, Chris Kirk, Seamus Power8:22 a.m. _ Tyrrell Hatton, Dustin Johnson, Xander Schauffele8:28 a....Grains mostly higher, Livstock mixed.
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:39:13 GMT
CHICAGO (AP) — Grain futures were mostly higher Friday in early trading on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat for May rose 6 cents at $6.1925 a bushel; May corn gained 14.50 cents at $5.7175 a bushel; May oats was off 2.25 cents at $3.3825 a bushel; while May soybeans was up 5.50 cents at $13.4450 a bushel.Beef was higher and pork was lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.Jun. live cattle rose .95 cent at $1.6450 a pound; May feeder cattle was up .62 cent at $2.0577 a pound; Jun. lean hogs fell 1.03 cents at $.8392 a pound.SourceLatest news
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