Home Blog

U.S. Bank Launches Split Credit Card (Buy Now, Pay Later)


U.S. Bank has launched a new credit card called ‘U.S. Bank Split™ World Mastercard®‘. This is a buy now, pay later card that splits purchases into three payments. There are no fees if you choose a three month plan and a fixed ‘plan fee’ if you choose a 6 or 12 month plan. The card does not earn any rewards.

Card Basics

  • No annual fee
  • No sign up bonus
  • Card does not earn rewards
  • No interest fees
  • No plan fee on a three month plan, fixed fee for six or twelve month plan (disclosed when extending from a three month plan)

Our Verdict

Can’t see this being very useful to any of our readers due to the fact that there is no rewards program. Might be able to arbitrage funds into a high yield account if you get a high enough credit limit and buy cash equivalents but I doubt that would ever be worth it. 

Hat tip to reader 14lopeza

HSBC: AI use in treasury functions can boost efficiency by up to 70%


Financial institutions are deploying AI in nearly all back-office functions and are showing improved efficiencies in operations.  Deployment of AI within treasury management processes can improve efficiencies by up to 70%, freeing as much as 140 hours per month for teams to focus on strategic objectives instead of manual tasks, according to HSBC’s 2025 Global […]



This Week In College And Money News: October 31, 2025


Colleges and student loan borrowers are facing another week of shifting federal rules, proposed legislation, and new university affordability initiatives.

Here’s a quick look at the most important stories shaping higher education and student personal finances for October 31, 2025.

🎓 Headlines at a Glance

  • Education Department finalizes new Public Service Loan Forgiveness rules.
  • Senators Warner and Kaine introduce a bill to pause student loans during government shutdowns.
  • Student loan forgiveness processing continues despite government shutdown.
  • Colgate University expands free-tuition financial aid program.

Admissions office at Colgate University.

Would you like to save this?

We’ll email this article to you, so you can come back to it later!

1. Education Department Finalizes New PSLF Rule

The U.S. Department of Education issued a final rule revising the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. The rule changes the definition of a qualifying employer to prevent any employer from engaging in any conduct deemed to have a “substantial illegal purpose.” Officials said the goal is to ensure long-term stability of the program while protecting taxpayer dollars, but critics warn the definitions are broad and political.

➡️ Impact: The change is expected to block approximately 10 employers per year, according to the Department of Education. Lawsuits have already been announced to challenge the rule.

2. Senators Warner and Kaine Propose Student-Loan Pause During Shutdowns

Senators Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Tim Kaine (D-Va.) introduced the Shutdown Student Loans for Feds Act, which would automatically pause payments and interest accrual for federal workers, contractors, and military personnel during any government shutdown. The measure aims to prevent financial strain on public-sector employees affected by delayed pay.

➡️ Impact: If enacted, the pause would function similarly to pandemic-era relief, shielding roughly 2 million workers from missed payments or delinquency during future funding lapses.

3. Loan Forgiveness Approvals Still Moving Forward

Despite the ongoing federal government shutdown, the Education Department is continuing to approve student-loan forgiveness applications for eligible borrowers under income-driven repayment and PSLF programs. Officials have confirmed that existing staff and contractors are processing discharges, though its unclear how many staffers are working and what’s actually being processed.

➡️ Impact: Borrowers nearing forgiveness thresholds may see relief, but communication delays and limited staff capacity could slow final processing.

4. Colgate University Expands Free-Tuition Financial Aid Program

Colgate University announced a major expansion of its Colgate Commitment initiative. Starting fall 2026, students from families earning up to $175,000 annually will attend tuition-free, and those from families up to $200,000 will have all demonstrated need met without loans. Colgate is the number 3 most expensive college in the United States based on tuition.

➡️ Impact: The move positions Colgate among a small group of private universities offering middle-income families a path to attend without borrowing, reflecting a growing push toward debt-free models.

Related Reading:

@media (min-width: 300px){[data-css=”tve-u-199ef3eae55″].tcb-post-list #post-66208 [data-css=”tve-u-199ef3eae5c”]{background-image: url(“https://thecollegeinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/CollegeInvestor_1280x720_Google_AI_Inaccurate_For_Personal_Finance-150×150.png”) !important;}}

37% of Google AI Finance Answers Are Inaccurate in 2025

37% of Google AI Finance Answers Are Inaccurate in 2025
@media (min-width: 300px){[data-css=”tve-u-199ef3eae55″].tcb-post-list #post-66730 [data-css=”tve-u-199ef3eae5c”]{background-image: url(“https://thecollegeinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Rule-Change-Delayed-150×150.jpg”) !important;}}

IBR Rule Change Delayed By Technical Issues

IBR Rule Change Delayed By Technical Issues
@media (min-width: 300px){[data-css=”tve-u-199ef3eae55″].tcb-post-list #post-9889 [data-css=”tve-u-199ef3eae5c”]{background-image: url(“https://thecollegeinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/25136608005091-150×150.jpg”) !important;}}

Government Shutdown and Student Loans Explained (2025 Update)

Government Shutdown and Student Loans Explained (2025 Update)

Editor: Colin Graves

The post This Week In College And Money News: October 31, 2025 appeared first on The College Investor.

What Your Company Can Expect As Employer Health Insurance Costs Climb in 2026



Employer-provided family health insurance plan prices rose 6 percent this year, and will likely increase by double-digits next year.

Research monkeys got loose after a truck overturned on a highway. Their owner, destination, and exact purpose remain shrouded in mystery



The recent escape of several research monkeys after the truck carrying them overturned on a Mississippi interstate is the latest glimpse into the secretive industry of animal research and the processes that allow key details of what happened to be kept from the public.

Three monkeys have remained on the loose since the crash on Tuesday in a rural area along Interstate 59, spilling wooden crates labeled “live monkeys” into the tall grass near the highway. Since then, searchers in masks, face shields and other protective equipment have scoured nearby fields and woods for the missing primates. Five of the 21 Rhesus macaques on board were killed during the search, according to the local sheriff, but it was unclear how that happened.

Key details remain shrouded in secrecy

Mississippi authorities have not disclosed the company involved in transporting the monkeys, where the monkeys were headed or who owns them. While Tulane University in New Orleans has acknowledged that the monkeys had been housed at its National Biomedical Research Center in Covington, Louisiana, it said it doesn’t own them and won’t identify who does.

An initial report from the sheriff described the monkeys as “aggressive” and carrying diseases such as herpes, adding to the confusion. Tulane later said the monkeys were free of pathogens, but it is still unclear what kind of research the monkeys were used for.

The questions surrounding the Mississippi crash and the mystery of why the animals were traveling through the South are remarkable, animal advocates say.

“When a truck carrying 21 monkeys crashes on a public highway, the community has a right to know who owned those animals, where they were being sent, and what diseases they may have been exposed to and harbored simply by being caught up in the primate experimentation industry,” said Lisa Jones-Engel, senior science adviser on primate experimentation with People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

“It is highly unusual — and deeply troubling — that Tulane refuses to identify its partner in this shipment,” Jones-Engel added.

One thing that is known is that the 2025 Chevrolet Silverado pickup hauling the monkeys was driven by a 54-year-old Cascade, Maryland, man when it ran off the highway into the grassy median area, the Mississippi Highway Patrol said in a statement to The Associated Press. The driver wasn’t hurt, nor was his passenger, a 34-year-old resident of Thurmont, Maryland.

Confidentiality is built into contracts, blocking information

Transporting research animals typically requires legally binding contracts that prohibit the parties involved from disclosing information, Tulane University said in a statement to the AP. That’s done for the safety of the animals and to protect proprietary information, the New Orleans-based university said.

“To the best of Tulane’s knowledge, the 13 recovered animals remain in the possession of their owner and are en route to their original destination,” the statement said.

The crash has drawn a range of reactions — from conspiracy theories that suggest a government plot to sicken people to serious responses from people who oppose experimenting on animals.

“How incredibly sad and wrong,” Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene said of the crash.

“I’ve never met a taxpayer that wants their hard-earned dollars paying for animal abuse nor who supports it,” the Georgia congresswoman said in a post on the social platform X. “This needs to end!”

Tulane center has ties to more than 155 institutions worldwide

Tulane’s Covington center has received $35 million annually in National Institutes of Health support, and its partners include nearly 500 investigators from more than 155 institutions globally, the school said in an Oct. 9 news release. The center has been funded by NIH since 1964, and federal grants have been a significant source of income for the institution, it said.

In July, some of the research center’s 350 employees held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the opening of a new 10,000-square-foot office building and a new laboratory at the facility. This fall, the facility’s name was changed from the Tulane National Primate Research Center to the Tulane National Biomedical Research Center to reflect its broader mission, university officials announced.

Research monkeys have escaped before in South Carolina, Pennsylvania

The Mississippi crash is one of at least three major monkey escapes in the U.S. over the past four years.

Last November, 43 Rhesus macaques escaped from a South Carolina compound that breeds them for medical research after an enclosure wasn’t fully locked. Employees from the Alpha Genesis facility in Yemassee, South Carolina, set up traps to capture them. However, some spent two months that winter living in the woods and weathering a rare snowstorm. By late January, the last four escapees were recaptured after being lured back into captivity by peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.

In January 2022, several cynomolgus macaque monkeys escaped when a truck towing a trailer of about 100 of the animals collided with a dump truck on a Pennsylvania highway, authorities said. The monkeys were headed to a quarantine facility in an undisclosed location after arriving at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on a flight from Mauritius, an Indian Ocean island nation, authorities said. A spokesperson for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said all of the animals were accounted for within about a day, though three were euthanized for undisclosed reasons.

Commercial Bridge Loans From $1 Million To $10 Million


Our Commercial Bridge Loan Program is here to help you move quickly and strategically.

We now proudly offer bridge financing from $1 million to $10 million for purchase or refinance transactions. With 2- and 3-year interest-only terms, high LTVs, and competitive rates starting at 9.500%, our program delivers the creativity and speed that commercial investors need.

Bridge Financing

Our bridge solutions are ideal for:

  • Lease-ups and stabilization projects
  • Foreclosure purchases and distressed assets
  • Discounted payoffs and note acquisitions
  • Construction loan take-outs
  • Property rehabilitations and value-add improvements
  • Opportunistic acquisitions with quick closing timelines

Program Highlights

  • Loan Amount: $1MM – $10MM
  • Loan Term: 2–3 years with two optional 6-month extensions
  • Amortization: Interest-only during the primary term
  • Purpose: Purchase or Refinance
  • Max LTV: Up to 75% as stabilized
  • Interest Rate: Starting at 9.500%
  • Recourse: Full, limited, or non-recourse (with standard carve-outs)
  • Exit Fee: 1 point
  • Extension Fee: 0.50% (per extension, not to exceed 12 months total)

Our Commercial Bridge Loan program is for investors who need speed, creativity, and reliability.

Contact us, and we’ll connect you with our commercial department, which can provide more information about our commercial bridge financing options.

Two sides of the coin: Smarsh’s approach to AI


AI-driven communication compliance company Smarsh’s approach to AI is twofold: it builds proprietary AI technology for regulated industries while also outsourcing its AI-driven customer service capabilities.  Smarsh offers AI-driven platforms that monitor, collect, manage and analyze communication data within regulated industries, including financial services, Chief Customer Officer Rohit Khanna told FinAi News.   For example, […]



Rate Cut, Gold & Crypto: Web3 Thoughts Of The Week


US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and rate cuts dominated Web3 thoughts this week, but some still had time to weigh in on gold and crypto.

Speaking of rate cuts…

“The Federal Reserve’s rate cut was widely expected, though it comes at a unique moment without access to key data points like labor and inflation figures due to the government shutdown. Historically, lower rates have been supportive of digital assets, and we’d expect that trend to continue.


Historically, lower rates have been supportive of digital assets, and we’d expect that trend to continue

Click to Share

“As we move through earnings season, market sentiment will likely remain sensitive to corporate results and outlooks. Strong earnings could reinforce confidence in the recovery narrative, while softer results might highlight the uneven effects of current economic conditions. Overall, a lower-rate environment tends to be constructive for both equities and digital assets, and we view this backdrop as broadly positive for crypto as investors look toward alternative and growth-oriented assets.”

Andrew Forson, president, DeFi Technologies

“The big day is here, and the markets have already priced in a 25 basis point rate cut later today. But it’s still worth getting out the popcorn for Jerome Powell’s customary press conference, because it’s the rhetoric and the forward guidance that investors will be waiting for with bated breath.

“While economists still expect to see two rate cuts this year, opinions are diverging on whether this truly is the best policy move. The debate has certainly become incredibly politically charged, so Chair Powell is walking a precarious tightrope right now. Today will shed light on whether politics or data is in the driving seat.

“The ongoing uncertainty, which has dominated markets all year, is perhaps the reason we are not seeing more euphoria in the cryptocurrency space. Indeed, Bitcoin is exhibiting a potential double top pattern, a bearish signal, and daily exchange volumes have dropped off a cliff.


In the long term, the investment case for Bitcoin and other risk assets remains intact

Click to Share

“In the long term, the investment case for Bitcoin and other risk assets remains intact. We’re seeing easing monetary conditions across the globe – not just the US – so fiat currency debasement is inevitable. In the short term, though, volatility still reigns supreme. Any trader considering high leverage in this market should think long and hard before committing.”

– Nic Puckrin, investment analyst and co-founder of The Coin Bureau

“The Fed’s decision to lower the federal funds rate for the second time this year signals a welcome recognition of moderating inflationary pressures and the need to support growth in a high-uncertainty environment. From the perspective of Naoris, which operates at the intersection of cybersecurity and next-generation infrastructure, the policy move carries both opportunity and caution.

“On the opportunity side, easier monetary conditions may help stimulate risk-taking, venture capital deployment, and innovation — elements that are essential for decentralized security frameworks and Web3 ecosystems that Naoris champions. Lower borrowing costs can accelerate adoption of new technologies, spur investment in digital-security platforms, and support the build-out of resilient infrastructure.


In short, we view this rate cut as a positive backdrop for fintech, security-tech and Web3 innovation

Click to Share

“In short, we view this rate cut as a positive backdrop for fintech, security-tech and Web3 innovation; it gives a tailwind. But we continue to monitor underlying fundamentals closely, because sustainable adoption of advanced security architectures depends not just on stimulus but on stable growth, predictable policy, and structural productivity gains. Naoris remains committed to harnessing this environment to advance quantum-secure security, while remaining vigilant to macro policy shifts and tightening cycles down the road.”

– David Carvalho, CEO of Naoris Protocol

“The Fed’s second rate cut this year—split across two moves—wasn’t about strategy, it was about optics. Powell didn’t want to deliver a full 50 basis points in one go, but the result is the same.

“Yet, these rate cuts won’t restore prosperity to the American middle class. There’s a myth that lower rates and ‘domestic manufacturing revival’ will bring back the good times. The reality is harsher: China’s manufacturing base operates a standard deviation ahead in automation, its factories literally run in the dark because they don’t need lights for robots. That’s the future: production without people.

“What the U.S. has left is military dominance and monetary leverage. Rate cuts might buoy markets for a few months, but structurally, we’re in decline. Expect three to six months of optimism, then turbulence. When you see masked men pulling neighbors off the street, you know the cracks are already showing.”

– Dylan Dewdney, co-founder and CEO of Kuvi.ai

“The news (of) Federal Reserve rate cuts for the second time this year is another progressive move, trimming its benchmark rate to roughly 3.9%, down from about 4.1%. That’s a notable shift from the 5.3% peak reached in around 2023–2024. This should gradually ease borrowing costs, and lower rates tend to push investors toward alternative assets, including tokenized assets. With traditional yields shrinking, tokenized real-world assets, digital securities or blockchain-based funds could attract fresh capital.”

– Hedy Wang, CEO and co-founder, Block Street

“Lower borrowing costs are the rocket fuel for innovation. We’re already seeing record highs in AI-driven markets—Nvidia hitting $5 trillion in market cap isn’t coincidental. Cheaper capital accelerates the deployment of transformative technologies, from artificial intelligence to blockchain infrastructure.

“For companies building the future economy, this rate environment creates unprecedented opportunity to scale solutions that will define the next decade.

“Rate cuts historically trigger significant capital inflows into risk assets, and we’re seeing that playbook unfold again. Bitcoin’s resilience above $42,000 despite regulatory headwinds demonstrates that digital assets are maturing into a legitimate store of value.

“For innovative companies, lower rates mean increased institutional appetite for novel solutions and AI-powered agent economies. The convergence of accommodative monetary policy and breakthrough AI capabilities is creating a perfect storm for innovation as we accelerate towards a post-agentic economy.

“While Powell’s cautious tone about December’s cut reflects the challenging data environment, the trajectory is clear—we’re in an easing cycle. The question isn’t whether rates will continue falling, but at what pace. For entrepreneurs and investors, this is the time to deploy capital strategically. The companies that scale during this transition period will emerge as the infrastructure leaders of tomorrow.

“The Fed is threading the needle between supporting growth and controlling inflation. For the innovation economy—from AI to Web3—this rate environment is a green light for bold builders. Lower capital costs accelerate the transition to an agent-driven economy where individuals own their AI rather than be replaced by it.”

– Syed Hussain, founder and CEO of SHIZA

Gold’s still a good bet, no matter what some crypto fans say

“With the Fed widely expected to cut rates again today, and US-China trade tensions easing again, it’s no surprise we’re seeing a rebound in crypto markets and a sell-off in gold. But this isn’t the death knell for the safe-haven asset, because the recent gold rush hasn’t been driven by geopolitical and macro fears alone. It’s been as much about diversifying away from US dollar-denominated assets, and that trend isn’t going anywhere.

‘Gold is a real, tangible asset with a finite supply. The recent sell-off only reinforces this fact. As fiat currencies continue to suffer from devaluation due to the global shift toward easier monetary policy, real assets like gold will remain a cornerstone of diversified portfolios – even more so as the tokenization of real-world assets gathers pace.

“On the blockchain, real assets like gold become more than just a safe haven or a store of value. They become a verifiable, uncorrelated form of collateral that is more stable than digital assets or stablecoins pegged to devaluing currencies, and a way to earn yield regardless of the market environment. Over time, this will expand to other real assets, like real estate, ensuring more stability for the digital asset ecosystem and for investors’ portfolios.”

– Kevin Rusher, founder of RAAC

Mounting debt levels in major economies, including the United States and the United Kingdom, are driving a surge of investor interest in alternative assets, says the CEO and founder of deVere Group, one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory and asset management organizations.

“Government debt in leading economies has grown to unsustainable levels. Investors can see what’s coming. When debt piles keep expanding faster than growth, the value of money is quietly diluted, and those holding conventional assets take the hit.”

The US national debt has now climbed above $38 trillion, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, and is projected to reach about 125% of GDP by the end of 2025. In the UK, public sector net debt has risen to 96.4% of GDP, its highest level in more than six decades, while the IMF warns that global government debt could approach 100% of world GDP by 2029.

“These are not abstract figures. They represent governments borrowing from the future to fund today’s promises. The result is a slow erosion of purchasing power and a growing risk that the world’s largest economies will struggle to finance themselves without constant central-bank support.

“Traditional bonds are losing their defensive value, and cash offers no protection against currency depreciation. This is why we’ve been seeing renewed demand for tangible stores of value such as gold, silver, and increasingly, digital assets like Bitcoin. These are assets that don’t rely on governments or central banks to maintain credibility.

“When debt keeps expanding and productivity doesn’t, investors know something has to give.  They’re reallocating toward assets that can hold value if the dollar, the pound, the euro, and other traditional currencies lose purchasing power. It’s a redefinition of what safety means in a world of structural deficits.

“When the largest and most conservative investors start allocating to gold and digital assets, it’s a clear signal that this shift is strategic. They’re not chasing volatility; they’re protecting capital from fiscal dilution.

“Governments are stuck. If they keep rates high to control inflation, debt servicing becomes crushingly expensive. If they cut rates to ease the burden, they weaken their currencies and re-ignite inflation.

“This is the start of a structural shift. Investors are positioning for a future defined by scarcity and decentralization rather than by debt and dilution. Precious metals, digital currencies, and certain private assets are becoming core components of modern wealth strategies.

“Neither Washington nor Westminster has the political will to reverse debt accumulation. Voters expect high spending, and politicians deliver it with borrowed money. This is why this rebalancing toward alternative assets is an evolution.

“The smart money, including, increasingly, from institutional investors, is already diversifying into alternatives that can outlast the debt cycle.”

– Nigel Green, CEO, deVere Group



How Much Vacation Time Are American Workers Actually Taking?


Mariia Korneeva / Shutterstock.com

The FlexJobs Work and PTO Pressure Report found that nearly one-quarter (23%) of U.S. workers didn’t take a single vacation day over the past year. The survey of 3,063 respondents, conducted in August 2025, found that even though most employees (82%) have paid time off (PTO), many avoid using it due to heavy workloads, manager expectations, and unsupportive company cultures. Nearly half (42%)…