Watch the length of the conflict and how shocks compound.
Watch the length of the conflict and how shocks compound.
Israel’s defense minister threatened a surge in attacks against Iran on Saturday and Britain condemned Iran for targeting a joint U.K.-U.S. base in the Indian Ocean as the war in the Middle East entered its fourth week.
The Iranian attack on the Diego Garcia air base — about 2,500 miles (4,000 kilometers) from Iran — suggested Tehran has missiles that can go farther than it had previously acknowledged.
Also Saturday, Iran’s Natanz nuclear enrichment facility was hit in an airstrike, an official Iranian news agency reported, saying there was no radiation leakage.
Israel’s Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a video statement that next week, “the intensity of the attacks” by Israel and the United States against Iran’s ruling theocracy will “increase significantly.”
He spoke shortly after fragments from an Iranian missile slammed into an empty kindergarten near Tel Aviv. Israeli army spokesman Nadav Shoshani posted a video on X of the kindergarten building. The school was empty at the time and no casualties were reported.
Overnight and into the morning, Iran’s capital saw heavy airstrikes, residents said. The attacks — and threats of more to come — indicate the Iran war shows no sign of abating.
The U.S. and Israel have offered shifting rationales for the war, from hoping to foment an uprising that topples Iran’s leadership to eliminating its nuclear and missile programs. There have been no public signs of any such uprising.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Japan’s Kyodo news service Friday that Iran wanted “not a ceasefire, but a complete, comprehensive and lasting end to the war.”
U.S. President Donald Trump said Friday that he was considering “winding down” military operations in the Mideast, which seemed at odds with his administration’s move to bolster its firepower in the region and request another $200 billion from Congress to fund the war.
The U.S. is deploying three more amphibious assault ships and roughly 2,500 additional Marines to the Mideast, an official told The Associated Press. Two other U.S. officials confirmed that ships were deploying, without saying where they were headed. All three spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the military operations.
In a move aimed at wrangling soaring fuel prices, the Trump administration announced it was lifting sanctions on some Iranian oil. The pause in sanctions applies to Iranian oil already loaded on ships as of Friday and is set to end April 19. The license has limits including a restriction on sales involving anyone in North Korea or Cuba.
The new move does not increase the flow of production, a central factor in the surging prices. Iran has managed to evade U.S. sanctions for years, suggesting that much of what it exports already reaches buyers.
Saudi Arabia said it downed 20 drones in just a couple of hours Saturday in the country’s eastern region, home to major oil installations. No injuries or damage were reported.
U.K. officials have not given details of the strike that targeted the ocean air base Friday, which was unsuccessful.
Britain’s Ministry of Defense said Saturday that Iran’s “lashing out across the region and holding hostage the Strait of Hormuz, are a threat to British interests and British allies.”
Britain has not participated in U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran but has allowed American bombers to use U.K. bases to attack Iran’s missile sites.
On Friday, the British government said U.S. bombers can also use U.K. bases, including Diego Garcia, in operations to prevent Iran attacking ships in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran targeted the base before that U.K. statement.
Iran’s official news agency, Mizan, said there was no leakage after Saturday’s strike on the Natanz nuclear facility, nearly 220 kilometers (135 miles) southeast of Tehran.
The facility, Iran’s main uranium enrichment site, was hit in the first week of the war and several buildings appeared damaged, according to satellite images. The United Nations nuclear watchdog — the International Atomic Energy Agency — had said “no radiological consequence” were expected from that earlier strike. Natanz had also been targeted in the 12-day war last June.
On Saturday, the IAEA said on X that it was informed by Iran about the Natanz strike and about there being no increase in off-site radiation levels. The agency said it was looking into the incident.
Iran’s top military spokesperson, Gen. Abolfazl Shekarchi, warned Friday that “parks, recreational areas and tourist destinations” worldwide will not be safe for the country’s enemies.
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei praised Iranians’ steadfastness in the face of war in a written statement read on Iranian television to mark the Persian New Year, or Nowruz. Khamenei has not been seen in public since he became supreme leader after Israeli strikes killed his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and reportedly wounded him.
With little information coming out of Iran, it was not clear how much damage its arms, nuclear or energy facilities have sustained in the punishing U.S. and Israeli strikes, which began Feb. 28 — or even who was truly in charge of the country.
But Iran’s attacks are still choking off oil supplies and raising food and fuel prices far beyond the Middle East.
The Israeli military said its forces were conducting a “targeted ground operation” Saturday with the support of Israeli aircraft and that at least four militants were killed.
Hezbollah also released a statement saying its fighters clashed with Israeli troops in the southern village of Khiam.
So far, Israeli strikes targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon have killed more than 1,000 people and displaced more than 1 million, according to the Lebanese government.
More than 1,300 people have been killed in Iran during the war. In Israel, 15 people have been killed by Iranian missiles and four others have died in the occupied West Bank. At least 13 U.S. military members have been killed.
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Welcome to the 3rd episode of our Mutual Fund Series for 2026.
The video explains the dual-cost framework of Gold FOFs, why it differs from index mutual funds, and how expense ratio and tracking error together decide investor outcomes. You will also see a data-backed comparison of leading Gold ETFs, practical illustrations on tracking efficiency, and why a higher-cost fund can still deliver better returns.
The focus stays on execution quality, tracking discipline, and choosing the right structure based on brokerage, liquidity, and long-term efficiency.
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Key Points
Millions of Americans leave the workforce each year — to raise children, care for aging parents, or simply because one income is enough. But stepping away from a paycheck does not have to mean stepping away from retirement savings.
The spousal IRA is a provision in the federal tax code that allows a non-working or low-earning spouse to build a retirement account in their own name, funded by the household’s shared income. It is one of the most underused tools in personal finance, and for many couples, it can add up to tens of thousands of dollars in tax-advantaged retirement savings over time.
A spousal IRA is not a separate type of account. It is a standard Traditional or Roth IRA opened in the name of the non-working spouse. What makes it different is the eligibility rule.
Normally, you can only contribute to an IRA if you have earned income (wages, salaries, self-employment income) of at least the amount you contribute. The spousal IRA is the exception: it allows a spouse with little or no earned income to contribute to an IRA based on the other spouse’s earned income.
The account belongs entirely to the non-working spouse. It is subject to the same rules, contribution limits, and distribution requirements as any other IRA. This distinction matters at retirement and in cases of divorce or death.
To use a spousal IRA, three conditions must be met:
The contribution limits in 2026 are $7,500 per person, or $8,600 for anyone age 50 or older. That means a couple where one spouse works and one does not could collectively contribute up to $15,000 (or $17,200 if both are 50 or older) across two separate IRA accounts.

Whether a Traditional IRA contribution is deductible depends on two factors: whether either spouse is covered by a workplace retirement plan (such as a 401(k) or 403(b)), and the couple’s combined MAGI. This is where the rules get specific — and where many households leave money on the table by not understanding the thresholds.
Neither spouse has a workplace retirement plan
If the working spouse does not have access to a 401(k), pension, or other employer-sponsored plan, both spouses can deduct their full Traditional IRA contributions regardless of income. There is no income phase-out in this scenario.
The working spouse has a workplace plan — deduction for the non-working spouse
This is the most common scenario for single-income households. If the working spouse participates in an employer retirement plan, the non-working spouse can still deduct their full spousal IRA contribution — unless the couple’s MAGI exceeds a threshold.
The working spouse’s own deduction — if covered by a workplace plan
For the working spouse’s own Traditional IRA contribution, a separate and lower phase-out range applies when they are covered by a workplace plan.
Couples who exceed the Traditional IRA deduction thresholds often find the Roth IRA a better fit. Roth contributions are not deductible, but qualified withdrawals in retirement are tax-free — a meaningful advantage for spouses who expect to be in a higher tax bracket later, or who want to minimize required minimum distributions (RMDs). Traditional IRAs require RMDs starting at age 73; Roth IRAs currently have no RMD requirement during the owner’s lifetime.
The spousal IRA matters for three reasons that go beyond the annual tax break. First, it builds retirement savings in the non-working spouse’s name — protecting their financial independence. If the marriage ends in divorce or the working spouse dies, those funds belong to the IRA holder. Second, it doubles a couple’s tax-advantaged retirement savings capacity. A household contributing to both a 401(k) and two IRAs can shelter a significant portion of income from taxes annually. Third, it builds Social Security gaps. A spouse who spends years out of the workforce may have a lower Social Security benefit in retirement. Consistent IRA contributions partially offset that gap.
Consider a married couple where one spouse earns $90,000 and the other stays home. Both are under 50. The working spouse contributes to a 401(k) at work. Under 2026 rules, the stay-at-home spouse can contribute $7,500 to a spousal Traditional IRA and deduct the full amount — reducing the household’s taxable income.
The working spouse can contribute up to $24,500 to their 401(k) in 2026. Together, the couple can shelter $32,000 from federal income tax in a single year, before accounting for any employer match.
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Editor: Colin Graves
The post Spousal IRA: How Non-Working Spouses Can Still Save for Retirement appeared first on The College Investor.
Colostrum supplements are exploding in popularity, fueled by celebrity endorsements and loose regulation. But what does the science actually say?
Well, that was certainly unpleasant. From Feb. 28, when bombs started falling on Iran, to March 7 — the end of the first week of the Iran war — gasoline prices in the U.S. jumped more than $0.48 to an average of $3.46 per gallon. They’re up another $0.42 over the last couple of weeks, hitting $3.88 per gallon on Wednesday evening.
If history is any guide, gas prices aren’t coming down anytime soon.
Image source: Getty Images.
Oil prices are rising on a supply shock. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has vowed that “not a litre of oil” will move through the Strait of Hormuz without its say-so. In response, the Trump administration says it’s considering providing U.S. Navy escorts for tankers transiting the Strait. Three weeks into the war, however, it seems in no hurry to start.
What does this mean for the price of oil — and gasoline? History gives us several examples of similar supply shocks, most originating in the same Persian Gulf where today’s troubles are unfolding.
If you examine a chart of historic gas prices, you’ll notice big jumps in gasoline prices around the time of the 1973 OPEC oil embargo, the 1979 Iranian Revolution that ousted the Shah, and also “Gulf War 1,” when U.S. and coalition forces ejected Iraq from Kuwait and Saddam Hussein’s army set the Kuwaiti oilfields on fire.
Over a near-50-year history, it’s hard to discern precise effects, but I can sketch them out. In 1973, after OPEC embargoed oil shipments to punish the U.S. for supporting Israel, gas prices initially didn’t rise much — only 10% to $0.39 per gallon, according to Department of Energy data. Prices really shot up in 1975, though, to $0.53 (a 47% increase from 1973).
They haven’t returned to such low levels since.
Gas prices averaged $0.63 in 1979, when the Shah was ousted. Prices surged 36% to $0.86 per gallon in 1980, then leapt another 38% (89% total) in 1981. It would be another six years — 1987 — before prices returned to 1980 levels.
1979’s gas price would never be seen again.
Gas prices in the U.S. averaged $1 a gallon in 1990 before Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait. Quick action and multilateral cooperation pushed him back out by 1991, limiting gas price increases to just $1.14 per gallon.
What’s more, with Hussein chastened, the Gulf region settled down, and gas prices actually began to fall. They were $1.13 per gallon in 1992, $1.11 in 1993, and still $1.11 in 1994. It was 1995 before inflation returned and oil prices resumed rising.
What can investors learn from the above? First, the initial $0.48 jump in gas prices may be only the beginning. The United States Oil Fund (USO +3.47%) ETF is up nearly 50% since the war’s start, after all. A year from now, gas prices could be even higher, and prices may not come back down for years — if ever.
Unless, that is, the current conflict resolves the underlying issue — namely, a belligerent Iran able to choke off global oil supplies at a whim. If you remove that threat, there’s a chance, as in 1991, that gas prices could return to “normal” after the shooting stops.
Keep your fingers crossed.
Here’s something new I haven’t seen this cycle.
A home builder is offering to cover your first 12 mortgage payments if you purchase one their homes.
This goes beyond those big mortgage rate buydowns we’ve seen where you can get a temporary interest rate of 0.99% the first year.
The promotion is intended to ease the burden of homeownership, which has gotten increasingly expensive over the years thanks to surging mortgage rates.
Coupled with a higher cost of living across the board, it has made home purchases hard to pencil these days.
The home builder in question is Mattamy Homes, which refers to itself as the “largest family-owned homebuilder in North America.”
They’re actually headquartered in Calgary, Alberta (Canada) and like the United States, the housing market has been tough up north as well.
The same affordability constraints have made it difficult to move inventory, leading to all sorts of creative incentives to sell homes.
As we know, home builders are “motivated sellers” because they don’t have a choice but to sell their homes.
As such, they’re coming up with some interesting ways to unload, the most common this cycle being the mortgage rate buydown.
We’ve seen both temporary and permanent mortgage buydowns, sometimes combined to really juice an offer.
I recall a lender offering a first-year rate as low as 0.99%, before it eventually increased to a still well-below-market rate of 3.99% for the remainder of the 30-year loan term.
But Mattamy Homes appears to be going a step further by covering all mortgage payments for the first 12 months during a “limited-time campaign.”
And they’re doing this on all single-family homes, semi-detached homes, rear-lane townhomes, and village homes with a maximum monthly payment of $4,150.
That’s a pretty expensive incentive, if we consider it’s about $50,000 ($49,800) over 12 months.
Whenever I see deals like this, I tell people to look at the big picture.
If you get a “deal” in one area, you have to factor in the price you’re paying elsewhere.
In other words, home much are you paying to buy the home in order to secure no payments for the first 12 months?
Same goes for those big mortgage rate buydowns here in the U.S. The builder is offering you a 30-year fixed set at 4.99% for the life of the loan. Great!
But what is the tradeoff? How much does the home cost? Are you perhaps paying more because they’re giving you the interest rate discount?
Would you pay that much for the property if you weren’t getting the mortgage rate deal?
There is no free lunch. So the cost is being baked in somewhere along the way, often via a higher sales price, all else equal.
You might be fine with it assuming it can make payments affordable over the course of your tenure in the property, but be sure to recognize this before you proceed.
The builder says its “First Year Mortgage, On Us” campaign was designed to give home buyers “peace of mind during their first year.”
Update 3/20/26: Bonus is down to four free night certificates everywhere except here. No idea on link source so keep that in mind. Hat tip to hic2482w
Sites with affiliate links are reporting that this offer will be pulled March 12th at 7 am EST. Sometimes referral links and non affiliate links last longer but I wouldn’t rely on that.
Direct link to offer (also available via referral link)
A similar offer has been recently available, and this time the spend requirement is lower at $3,000 (previous $5k). The offer is also made sweeter now with the two $50 airline credits which all Boundless cardholders can get in 2026. This is a fantastic offer and the best variation we’ve seen. (For context, when it’s a flat points offer it’s typically 100k-125k range.) We’ll add this to our best credit card bonus page.
The nice thing about this offer is that there is not any sort of restriction on when/where the free night certificates can be used and you can also top up the certificates with points if they cost more than 50,000 points per night (up to 15,000 points per night).
Just a reminder that the five free night certificates expire after one year from issuance.
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This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nischa does not provide tax or investment advice. The information is being presented without consideration of the investment objectives, risk tolerance, or financial circumstances of any specific investor and might not be suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal.
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