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In this video we go over the top strategies for personal finance by different income levels, around the $40,000 salary level, the $75,000 salary level, and if you make more than $100,000+! I hope you enjoy
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WHO AM I?
Hello 👋 I’m Humphrey, I used to be a financial advisor, worked in gaming/tech, and started my own eCommerce business. I make practical, rational content on investing, personal finance, the news, and much more with a data-backed approach. My goal is to help you with financial literacy and creating wealth.
PS: I am no longer a current Financial Advisor, any investment commentary are my opinions only. Some of the links in this description are affiliate links that I do receive a commission for & they help support the channel!
Earn 5% cash back on dining (including both restaurants and deliveries), on up to $50k per year; earn 10% cash back on hotels and cars and 5% cash back on flights, booked via Robinhood travel portal; earn 1% cash back on everything else.
Complimentary Robinhood Gold membership ($5/month without this card).
A thick coupon book, see below.
Priority Pass Select (PPS) airport lounges.
Global Entry & TSA Pre check credit.
No foreign transaction fee.
Varies Credits
$300 travel credit: $150 per six months. Eligible transactions include rideshare services, hotel charges, flights, and other travel-related purchases. Transactions do not need to be booked through the Robinhood travel portal to be eligible. This is likely one of the easiest credits to use, so it can reasonably be valued at face value.
$500 hotel credit: Eligible cardholders will receive up to $250 in statement credits for qualifying luxury hotel bookings per six-month period, with the option to use up to $100 of that credit toward standard hotel bookings. Qualifying hotels are identified in the App and must be booked through the Robinhood travel portal. Minimum two-night stay required. This credit comes with significant restrictions. In particular, the “qualifying luxury hotel bookings” may refer to a relatively small list of properties, and prices at these hotels could be inflated. For most people, the portion that is realistically usable is likely just the $100 per six months for standard hotel bookings.
$250 restaurant credit: $20 per month, with an extra $10 in December. It is limited to “qualifying dining purchases at participating local restaurants.” They claim that more than 15,000 restaurants participate in the program. People living in large cities may find it easier to use, but having to remember to go out of your way each month to dine at a specific restaurant just to use the coupon can also take quite a bit of effort.
$250 DoorDash credit & DoorPass membership: Two $10 off coupons each month, with one additional coupon in January. The coupons require a minimum subtotal of $50, excluding fees and taxes. The value of these coupons is really limited to people who already order from DoorDash frequently.
$250 autonomous rides credit: $20 per month, with an extra $10 in December.
$200 wearable credit: (the list of merchants are not available yet)
$70 Oura membership
$365 Function Health membership
$199 Amazon One Medical membership
Disadvantages
$695 annual fee.
It seems there is no sign-up bonus.
It appears that you cannot hold both the Robinhood Gold Card and the Robinhood Platinum Card at the same time. Considering that the Robinhood Gold Card earns 3% cash back on all purchases with no annual fee, making it a very strong card, this restriction significantly increases the opportunity cost of holding the Robinhood Platinum Card.
Summary
In this era, almost every premium card has started copying AmEx and turning into a coupon book, which makes analyzing them quite exhausting. Among these credits, only the $300 travel credit can reasonably be valued at face value. The hotel credit might realistically be counted as $100 × 2 if you can manage to use the standard hotel portion, and the restaurant credit might be usable for people living in large cities. The rest are basically equivalent to paying the annual fee just to buy coupons, which is not really worth it.
Historical Offers Chart
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Application Link
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Real estate trends usually announce themselves loudly. There’s a new buzzword, a viral tweet, a flood of “this is the next big thing” posts.
Monthly rentals arrived quietly. They just kept getting booked, month after month, while most of the conversation stayed focused on short-term versus long-term rentals.
Over the last several years, furnished monthly rentals (stays of 28 days or more) have quietly grown into a meaningful part of the U.S. rental market. This is a third lane that solves a unique problem, acting as a supplement to existing strategies. When you look at the data, it’s clear this is a permanent shift in the market.
The Data Tells a Much Bigger Story Than the Headlines
According to the latest Monthly Rental Market Trends Report from Furnished Finder and AirDNA, demand for monthly rentals has grown at a pace that’s difficult to ignore. From 2019 through 2025, booked monthly rental nights increased from roughly 20 million to 46 million. That’s more than double in just a few years.
Even more telling, monthly rentals now represent about 19% of total rental demand in the U.S. Nearly one out of every five rental nights is for a stay lasting 28 days or longer. At that scale, monthly rentals have become a core segment of the housing market.
Supply has followed demand. Listings on Furnished Finder alone grew from around 20,000 pre-pandemic to more than 300,000 today. That kind of growth only happens when renters are actively searching and booking.
Why This Growth Is Happening Now
This surge happened because the way people live, work, and move has fundamentally changed. Remote work, hybrid schedules, job flexibility, and project-based employment all created a larger group of renters who require more than a weekend stay but less than a one-year lease.
Monthly rentals sit perfectly in that gap. They offer a balance of flexibility and commitment. As lifestyles became less linear, housing followed.
Who the Monthly Renter Really Is
One of the most misunderstood parts of the monthly rental market is where demand actually comes from. Monthly renters tend to be people in transition, often with stable income and a defined reason for needing housing for several weeks or months at a time. This group includes traveling healthcare professionals, corporate employees on temporary assignments, families relocating between homes, remote workers spending time in new cities, and contractors or consultants working on multimonth projects.
As a result, their expectations differ significantly from those of short-term guests. They prioritize functionality, comfort, and ease of living. A well-equipped, practical space that feels easy to settle into is the primary requirement for these tenants.
Why Monthly Rentals Are Sustainably Profitable
Monthly rentals typically feature longer stays, fewer turnovers, and more predictable income patterns. For many investors, especially those scaling portfolios, this consistency is a major advantage. Fewer check-ins mean fewer opportunities for things to go wrong. Less turnover results in lower operational stress. Predictability is a primary benefit of this model.
Monthly Rentals Are Not Just a Big-City Phenomenon
It’s easy to assume monthly rental demand is concentrated in major metros like New York or Los Angeles. Those markets are certainly strong, but they’re far from the whole story. Some of the most interesting growth is happening in secondary and tertiary markets, where housing supply is tight, and employment hubs are expanding.
Monthly rental demand is showing up in:
Hospital-adjacent markets.
University towns.
Growing job centers.
Smaller metros with limited new housing.
Areas with seasonal or project-based workforces.
In many of these locations, renters arrive before investors fully recognize the opportunity.
Where the Opportunity Starts to Take Shape
Monthly rentals often work best as a flexible layer inside a broader portfolio. Investors use them to fill seasonal gaps, stabilize cash flow, or reduce operational intensity without locking into long-term leases.
They tend to make the most sense when:
Short-term rentals face off-season softness.
Long-term leases feel too rigid.
Operating costs push toward fewer turnovers.
Local regulations favor longer stays.
Some investors run monthly rentals year-round. Others shift between monthly, short-term, and long-term models, depending on demand. The strategy adapts to the market.
What Monthly Renters Actually Value
One advantage of monthly rentals is the practicality of renter expectations. Monthly renters usually value livability above all else. Their priorities are straightforward and consistent across markets. They want:
Reliable, fast Wi-Fi.
Comfortable furniture.
A functional kitchen.
Laundry access.
Parking.
A dedicated workspace.
Because expectations are clearer, successful monthly rentals thrive on simplicity. Practical design is a competitive advantage.
Final Thoughts
Monthly rentals grew because of genuine demand. As renter behavior continues to evolve, strategies that offer a middle ground between rigid and reactive are likely to play an increasingly important role.
For investors willing to explore monthly rentals with data, clarity, and realistic expectations, the opportunity is now a proven reality.
Getting a tax refund always feels like finding a crisp $100 bill in an old winter coat. But this year, that coat is holding a lot more cash.
According to recent data from the IRS, the average tax refund is sitting at $3,804. That’s up 10.2% — or about $351 — from the same time last year.
Why the sudden jump? You can thank the new tax laws passed last year, which expanded standard deductions and eliminated taxes on tips and overtime.
Now, I could lecture you about how a refund just means you gave the government a massive interest-free loan. And yes, you should probably adjust your W-4 withholdings. But right now, if you’ve got a pile of cash sitting in your checking account, you need a plan.
Here’s how to make that windfall actually work for you, so you don’t look back in July wondering where it all went.
5 things to do with your windfall
1. Crush your high-interest debt: Let’s be honest. If you’re carrying credit card debt at a 24% interest rate, you’re losing money every single day. Taking your refund and wiping out a credit card balance is an instant, guaranteed 24% return on your money.
You can’t find a legitimate investment anywhere in the world that guarantees those kinds of numbers. Knock out the debt first. (See “The Best and Worst Ways to Destroy Debt.”)
2. Supercharge your emergency savings: Life is incredibly expensive right now, and unexpected expenses aren’t a matter of if, but when. Your car will need new brakes, or your water heater will decide to quit on a Tuesday.
If you don’t have three to six months of living expenses set aside in a high-yield savings account, use your refund to get there. (See “25 Tips for Saving Money If Your Budget Is Stretched Thin.”)
3. Jump-start your retirement: Time is the most valuable asset you have when it comes to investing. If your debt is handled and your savings account is healthy, consider funneling that tax refund straight into a Roth IRA or your workplace 401(k).
If you invest $3,800 today and never add another dime, it could grow into more than $26,000 over 25 years, assuming an average 8% annual return. That’s how wealth is actually built. (See “8 Ways to Maximize Your Traditional or Roth IRA.”)
4. Handle delayed home or car maintenance: Ignoring a funny noise in your car engine or a slow leak under the sink will always cost you more in the long run. Using your tax refund to handle preventative maintenance is a highly practical way to protect your assets. Fix the roof now so you aren’t paying for major water damage later.
5. Spend a little on yourself: I’m a financial writer, but I’m also a realist. If you try to be 100% disciplined all the time, you’ll eventually burn out. Take 10% of your refund and do whatever you want with it. Go out for a nice dinner, buy those concert tickets, or upgrade your coffee machine.
Take care of your financial future with the bulk of the money, but give yourself permission to enjoy the present.
The bottom line is that a larger tax refund gives you a rare opportunity to get ahead. Make a deliberate choice before the money simply evaporates into everyday spending.
Shares of Ciena(CIEN 15.07%) plummeted 18.6% on Thursday as of 1:05 p.m. EDT.
As a leader in optical networking hardware and software platforms, Ciena’s share price has skyrocketed with the advent of generative AI and the associated infrastructure build-out. The stock, even with today’s sell-off, is up a whopping 271% over the past year alone.
That may be why Ciena’s fiscal first-quarter earnings report, which showed both a strong revenue and earnings beat, didn’t lead to a positive outcome for the stock.
Today’s Change
(-15.07%) $-51.76
Current Price
$291.79
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$49B
Day’s Range
$278.39 – $315.24
52wk Range
$49.21 – $365.90
Volume
237K
Avg Vol
3.3M
Gross Margin
39.31%
Ciena’s growth accelerates, but it’s not enough for its now-lofty valuation
In the fiscal first quarter ending at the end of January, Ciena saw growth rise 33.1% to $1.43 billion, while adjusted (non-GAAP) earnings per share rallied 111%. Both figures handily beat analyst expectations. Management also raised full-year guidance to a range of $5.9 billion to $6.3 billion, up from a prior range of $5.7 billion to $6.1 billion, and above the consensus estimates of $5.96 billion. Ciena also raised its gross margin guidance to 44% at the midpoint, up from prior guidance of 43%.
CEO Gary Smith noted in the release:
Our record fiscal fourth-quarter and full-year performance reinforce our position as the global leader in high-speed connectivity, with an expanding role in the AI ecosystem… Looking ahead, we are confident in our growth trajectory over the coming years, driven by durable demand from our cloud and service provider customers and a growing set of opportunities inside and around the data center.
Image source: Getty Images.
Ciena investors are selling the good news
To be honest, it’s really hard to come away with any negatives in this earnings release. It should be noted that many AI and semiconductor-related stocks were down on Thursday amid fears over supply chain disruptions from the U.S.-Iran war, which caused a pullback in the sector.
Still, Ciena was down by even more. That likely means investors might have been hoping for an even bigger guidance raise. Of note, the full-year outlook would imply a 28% growth rate over fiscal 2025, which would mark a deceleration from first-quarter results and second-quarter guidance of 33% growth. The guidance therefore implies a significant deceleration in the back half of the year. So despite the guidance raise, investors might have been looking for even more, given the strong first quarter.
Yet that may also be management playing things conservatively. Ciena has a recent history of regularly beating guidance, so it may be the case that management is merely managing expectations. Shares came into the day trading at 77 times this year’s earnings estimates, so investors may merely be locking in substantial gains, with the stock price already reflecting much good news.
Weare expanding our commercial lending platform significantly. We’re now offering Fannie Mae Multifamily financing with loan amounts ranging from $1 million to $100 million.
This is a transformative opportunity for investors, syndicators, and commercial property owners seeking long-term, stable financing for multifamily assets nationwide.
A New Level of Multifamily Financing Power
Fannie Mae’s DUS® platform is considered the gold standard for multifamily lending, providing reliable execution, attractive terms, and creative structuring. With our enhanced offering, we can now deliver:
National Lending Footprint
Loan Amounts Starting at $1M — Up to $100M
Access to Fannie Mae DUS® Products
Interest-Only Options Available
Tier-Based Pricing for LTV & DSCR
Fannie Mae continues to reward borrowers who invest in affordability, sustainability, or smaller-unit buildings.
Affordable housing
Green-certified properties
Energy-efficient improvements
Small-unit multifamily (5–50 units)
Perfect for Refinances and Acquisitions of Stabilized Properties
This program is for stabilized multifamily properties, assets with strong occupancy, solid income, and dependable cash flow.
Rate and term refinances
Cash-out refinances for recapitalization
Long-term permanent financing after construction or bridge loans
New acquisitions for stabilized buildings
Multifamily Financing
We navigate Fannie Mae’s underwriting with precision
We secure competitive pricing across LTV & DSCR tiers
We provide guidance from application to closing
We support both small balance and institutional transactions
With over 550 Google reviews, we emerge as the go-to mortgage company for financing both residential and commercial properties. Get in touchwith us, and we’ll provide the financing information.
Eduardo Maqui, Nicholas Vause and Márcia Silva-Pereira
In recent decades, the corporate bond market has grown from a relatively niche source of finance for UK corporations to a central pillar alongside bank loans. This transition raises an important question: as with bank credit conditions, have supply conditions in the corporate bond market come to significantly affect UK economic activity? Our recent research suggests the answer is a resounding yes. We show that a measure of corporate bond financing conditions − the Excess Bond Premium (EBP) − not only anticipates macroeconomic outturns in the UK, but also influences investment by UK firms, especially those that are highly leveraged and more reliant on bond finance.
The rise of bond financing
To motivate our analysis, Chart 1 shows how the composition of UK corporate debt has changed over the past 35 years. A key feature is the rising share of debt securities (mainly corporate bonds), which increased from just 15% in the early 1990s to over 40% by the mid-2020s. Indeed, UK corporations now raise as much finance from bonds as bank loans.
Chart 1: Composition of UK corporate debt
Notes: Non-bank loans includes finance leasing and peer-to-peer lending as well as direct and syndicated loans from non-bank financial institutions. Debt securities is mainly (>90%) corporate bonds but also includes commercial paper.
Source: Bank of England calculations.
Measuring bond financing conditions: the excess bond premium
To study how financing conditions in the corporate bond market affect economic activity, we first require a summary measure of those conditions. Thus, we follow Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012) by decomposing corporate bond spreads − the additional compensation required by investors to buy corporate bonds rather than government bonds − into two components. One component reflects ‘fundamentals’ relating to the riskiness of the borrowers or the specific bonds. The residual component is known as the EBP and reflects risk appetite of investors. Specifically, when the EBP rises, it signals that investors require more compensation to hold corporate bonds, over and above what is justified by borrower default risk or bond-specific risks such as illiquidity.
We compute the EBP for the UK by identifying the bond obligations of individual UK firms over time, taking into account mergers and acquisitions. We then combine various sources of data on these matched firms and bonds in order to regress corporate bond spreads on measures of obligor-specific default risk (in particular the distance to default) and bond-specific market and liquidity risks (such as modified duration and size of issue). We retain the residuals from this regression and aggregate them across firms to form the EBP.
Chart 2 shows our results. Investor willingness to invest in UK corporate bonds at lower rates of compensation generated a negative EBP for much of the decade preceding the 2007−08 global financial crisis (GFC) − a period of low macroeconomic uncertainty (The Great Moderation). The EBP then swung sharply positive during the GFC, when investors required substantially more compensation to invest in bonds than suggested by fundamentals. The EBP was also distinctly positive in other periods of financial stress or economic uncertainty, in particular following the dot-com crash (2000−01), during the euro-area sovereign debt crisis (2010−12), ahead of the Brexit referendum (2016), at the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic (2020), and following the Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022).
Chart 2: Decomposition of UK corporate bond spreads
Notes: The chart shows an index of corporate bond spreads constructed from 1,680 bonds issued by 149 UK private non-financial corporations (black line) and how it decomposes into a component explained by borrower and bond-specific fundamentals (dark blue) and the excess bond premium (light blue).
Source: Authors calculations. Based on Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012).
What happens when bond financing conditions tighten?
Equipped with our measure of bond financing conditions, we first study the consequences of changes in conditions for macroeconomic indicators, including GDP, investment and the unemployment rate. We take two approaches. First, we employ local projections, regressing changes in the macroeconomic indicators from 1 to 16 quarters ahead on contemporary changes in the EBP. In these regressions, we include the policy interest rate and the term spread, as well as several other control variables, to isolate changes in the macroeconomic indicators already anticipated by these other predictors. As shown in Chart 3, a one standard deviation increase in the EBP (of 53 basis points) is associated with a decline in GDP of as much as 2 percentage points, a reduction in investment of as much as 4 percentage points, and an increase in the unemployment rate of as much as 0.5 percentage points. These peak effects all occur about 1.5 years after the shock.
Chart 3: Impulse response of macroeconomic outcomes to an EBP shock
Notes: The panels show estimates of the effects of a one standard deviation EBP shock on macroeconomic outcomes up to four years after the shock. The solid lines show the expected effects, while the darker and lighter shaded areas respectively show ranges in which we are 90% and 95% confident that the effects lie. Refer to the staff working paper for details of the methodology. Investment is gross fixed capital formation.
Source: Authors calculations. Based on Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012).
While these effects are sizeable, note that the estimates come with a significant range of uncertainty (blue-shaded areas of the chart). They also depend on our assumption of being able to infer shocks to bond financing conditions from changes in the EBP, which may to an extent be confounded by other macroeconomic drivers. As a sensitivity check, we compute impulse response functions based on a vector auto-regression model and find weaker responses, of around half the magnitudes reported above (refer to Appendix D in the paper), although these effects remain economically significant. Potential limitations to our identification should bite less at the firm level, which we explore below, since firm-level outcomes are less likely to be correlated with confounding aggregate dynamics.
Digging into these aggregate economic responses with similar analyses at sector level, we find that the impact of changes in the EBP is not uniform across different parts of the economy. Notably, investment in capital-intensive assets − like machinery, equipment, and buildings − declines much more than investment in intellectual property. Similarly, investment in manufacturing and production industries is hit harder than investment in services. Interestingly, public-sector investment tends to move countercyclically, increasing when private investment falls, which helps to stabilise capital formation in aggregate.
Firm-level effects: who gets hit hardest?
Finally, we study the effects of shocks to bond financing conditions, as captured by changes in the EBP, on individual firms. Here, we allow for different responses depending on both the level and composition of firms’ debt. Specifically, we allow for different responses for firms in each of the four groups shown in Table A. We estimate these responses through separate local projections for each group, where we regress firm-level outturns − such as growth in investment, assets, sales and profits − over various future horizons on contemporaneous changes in the EBP.
Table A: Firm groups by leverage and share of bond financing
Group
Leverage (long-term debt/total assets)
Bond share (bond debt/long-term debt)
Low leverage and low bond share (LL)
Below median
Below median
Low leverage and high bond share (LH)
Below median
Above median
High leverage and low bond share (HL)
Above median
Below median
High leverage and high bond share (HH)
Above median
Above median
Chart 4 shows the results for investment, which is one of our key findings. While the first three panels show no statistically significant response of investment − as measured by capital expenditure − by LL, LH or HL firms to changes in the EBP; the final panel shows that HH firms cut investment aggressively, with a peak decline in investment of almost 10 percentage points around 1.5 years after a one standard deviation shock. Hence, it appears to be the behaviour of these firms − which are not only highly leveraged but have a high share of bonds in their debt − that drives the response of aggregate investment (shown in Chart 3).
Chart 4: Impulse response of firm-level investment to an EBP shock
Notes: The panels show estimates of the effects of a one standard deviation EBP shock on the capital expenditure of UK firms up to four years after the shock for firms with low leverage and low bond share (LL), high leverage and low bond share (HL), low leverage and high bond share (LH) and high leverage and high bond share (HH). The solid lines show the expected effects, while the darker and lighter shaded areas respectively show ranges in which we are 90% and 95% confident that the effects lie. Refer to the staff working paper for details of the methodology.
Source: Authors calculations.
This evidence is consistent with a financial accelerator mechanism in which highly leveraged firms cut investment especially sharply when the cost of finance increases, thereby amplifying the sensitivity of aggregate investment to changes in EBP compared to an economy with a more-even distribution of debt. Our results add a new dimension to this mechanism, as we show the amplification of the investment response to changes in the EBP depends not only on a firm’s leverage but also on the share of bonds in its debt. The results therefore characterise a specifically market‑based finance propagation channel, in which the structure of corporate debt shapes the transmission of financing shocks to real economic activity.
Why does this matter for policy?
Our findings have several important implications. First, the EBP provides a timely signal of changes in bond financing conditions that can foreshadow changes in economic activity. Hence, it may serve policymakers as a useful complement to other business-cycle indicators. Second, the amplified response to changes in the EBP for highly leveraged, bond-reliant firms highlights the importance of diversified funding sources for economic resilience. Third, having shown how changes in bond financing conditions ripple through investment, employment and growth, future research on what in turn determines these conditions seems particularly valuable.
Eduardo Maqui works in the Bank’s RegTech, Data and Innovation Division, Nicholas Vause works in the Bank’s Market-Based Finance Division and Márcia Silva-Pereira is an Economist at Banco de Portugal.
If you want to get in touch, please email us at bankunderground@bankofengland.co.uk or leave a comment below.
Comments will only appear once approved by a moderator, and are only published where a full name is supplied. Bank Underground is a blog for Bank of England staff to share views that challenge – or support – prevailing policy orthodoxies. The views expressed here are those of the authors, and are not necessarily those of the Bank of England, or its policy committees.
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🔃 Update (Mar 05, 2026) – 🥳🍾🎉 Avios posted today. Enjoy your fancy bags and those first class flights!
🔃 Update (Jan 30, 2026) – Well this is promising. Avios are now showing as pending at 250X rate. Check your accounts.
➡️ Original article (Jan 02, 2026) – The British Airways Club’s shopping portal is offering 250X Avios on Kate Spade New York purchases. That’s a great way to get cheap Avios if this really tracks. You’re buying them for 0.4 cents each.
I would look for items that you can return in case this doesn’t work out.
I bought me a purse, so good luck to us all!
Some other portals are also offering increased rates of 100X+