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The Plum Card® from American Express Discontinued


The Plum Card® from American Express Discontinued

American Express has discontinued the Plum Card. This was a business card that rarely offered a signup bonus and had a relatively high annual fee of $250.

The main feature on the card is the uncapped 1.5% Early Pay discount if you pay in full early. Or you get up to 60 days to bring your balance down to zero without interest. 

You can see more details about the card here, but the application page is no longer available.

It looks like Amex removed the Plum Card from its lineup when they launched the Graphite Business Cash Unlimited Card.

HT: DoC

Some communities are enduring unprecedented long waits on federal disaster requests



The Trump administration approved major disaster declaration requests for at least seven states this week, according to information released Saturday by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, allowing affected communities to access federal support. About 15 requests for assistance from others states and tribes for extreme weather events this year and last seem to be pending, along with three appeals of previous denials.

Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota and Washington were granted major disaster declarations, which can unlock federal support and funding for recovery needs such as public infrastructure repairs and aid for survivors.

The announcement, in a FEMA daily briefing document, comes weeks into Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin’s tenure overseeing the disaster relief agency and is the latest signal that the former Republican senator from Oklahoma could ease some of the turmoil from the leadership of his predecessor, Kristi Noem, who was fired by President Donald Trump in March.

Nonetheless, FEMA’s work could be undermined by the ongoing DHS shutdown, now eight weeks long. While disaster response and recovery can continue through a shutdown because FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund does not lapse, that money is running low as the funding impasse drags on. The DHS appropriations bill would replenish the fund with more than $26 billion.

Mullin said Tuesday that he planned to brief Trump that day on the pending declaration requests, affirming his intention to speed up work on past disasters in the run-up to Atlantic hurricane season, which begins June 1.

“We’re trying to push this stuff forward as fast as possible,” Mullin said after surveying Hurricane Helene recovery work in North Carolina on his first official visit as DHS secretary, acknowledging that “disasters are happening constantly.”

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said Saturday that Trump responds to such requests “with great care and consideration, ensuring American tax dollars are used appropriately and efficiently by the states to supplement — not substitute — their obligation to respond to and recover from disasters.” She said an administration goal is having state and local governments “invest in their own resilience before disaster strikes, making response less urgent and recovery less prolonged.”

While Mullin assured fellow senators during his confirmation hearing that he believed in FEMA’s mission, the agency’s future is uncertain. Trump has expressed a desire to push more responsibility for disasters down to states. The FEMA Review Council he appointed last year has not released a recommendation report expected to include sweeping changes to how the federal government supports disaster resilience, response and recovery.

It was not immediately clear whether other states or tribes had also been told of approvals or denials that were not yet announced publicly. Hawaii Governor Josh Green, a Democrat, said Wednesday said his state had received a disaster declaration for devastating March flooding.

Trump also amended past disaster declarations for Tennessee and Mississippi, adding more counties for individual assistance after a severe winter storm in January.

Some communities have experienced unprecedented long waits for answers on their disaster requests during Trump’s second term. An analysis by The Associated Press in September found approvals were taking more than a month on average.

It took less than two weeks on average for a governor’s disaster declaration request to be granted by presidents in the 1990s and early 2000s. That rose to about three weeks during the past decade under presidents from both major parties.

Arizona has been waiting nearly three months for an answer to its appeal after being denied support for severe storms and flooding that occurred in September.

Some Democrat-led states have complained about being denied disaster declarations despite proving need. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore called Trump’s decision “deeply frustrating” after the president twice denied the state’s request for support for May 2025 flooding despite a FEMA assessment showing over $33 million in damages.

While FEMA assesses damage and uses a specific formula to analyze the possible impact on states and local jurisdictions, disaster declarations are ultimately at the president’s discretion.

None of the approvals made this week includes hazard mitigation funding, a once-typical add on to disaster declaration support that helped communities build back with more resilience. Trump has not approved a hazard mitigation request for more than a year.

Should You Be Investing in Bitcoin… or a Basket of Diversified Cryptocurrencies?


Single-crypto ETFs are all the rage in the crypto market these days. The most popular of these, of course, are the spot ETFs that invest in only Bitcoin (BTC +0.15%). Collectively, these spot Bitcoin ETFs have pulled in more than $100 billion from investors.

But there’s just one problem here: Bitcoin is down nearly 20% for the year, and almost 45% from its all-time high of $126,000 in October. Going all in on Bitcoin doesn’t appear to be the optimal investment strategy right now. Shouldn’t prudent investors be seeking out exchange-traded funds that invest in a basket of diversified cryptocurrencies to provide more downside risk protection?

The merits of portfolio diversification

In theory, investing in a basket of cryptocurrencies should be a more effective strategy than going all in on just a single cryptocurrency. Read any textbook on portfolio management, and that’s exactly what you’ll find. Diversification is the fundamental building block of Modern Portfolio Theory. Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.

Image source: Getty Images.

In the stock market, for example, ETFs that track the S&P 500 are extremely popular. You could just as easily find an ETF that tracks a specific industry or sector. You could choose to own a basket of small company stocks, or perhaps a basket of stocks from a different country. The goal, in each case, is to diversify away your risk by holding a broad basket of stocks.

In the same manner, there should be some diversification advantages to having a blended crypto portfolio. With that in mind, Coinbase Global (COIN 0.69%) has even created a crypto index — the Coinbase 50 Index — to track a broad group of cryptocurrencies and crypto assets.

Bitcoin vs. the major crypto indices

However, theory and practice often differ significantly in the crypto market. As of April 9, 2026, Bitcoin is down 17% year-to-date. Broader-based crypto indices are down even more. For example, the CoinMarketCap 20 Index is down 23% in 2026.

Bitcoin Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(0.15%) $111.25

Current Price

$73390.00

Even with all the additional diversification (owning 20 cryptos, rather than just one), investors would still be underperforming Bitcoin. And that’s not even taking into account the potential management expenses of owning an ETF tied to this index.

Bitcoin vs. multi-crypto ETFs

For me, it all comes down to a single question: Can multi-crypto ETFs beat Bitcoin? If they can, then they are worth taking a closer look. If not, then I’ll pass.

Bitwise 10 Crypto Index ETF Stock Quote

Bitwise 10 Crypto Index ETF

Today’s Change

(1.51%) $0.71

Current Price

$47.87

To illustrate this point, consider the Bitwise 10 Crypto Index ETF (BITW +1.51%). It holds 10 different cryptocurrencies to help investors diversify their exposure to the crypto market. Yet, it’s down 22% in 2026, nearly the same as Bitcoin.

No, diversification didn’t protect investors from downside here.

Why is it so hard to outperform Bitcoin?

At the end of the day, Bitcoin still accounts for a whopping 60% of the crypto market’s market cap. So any diversified fund or index that is market-weighted is going to have roughly 60% of its assets invested in Bitcoin.

Take the Coinbase 50 Index, for example. Given that it invests in a mix of 50 different cryptocurrencies and crypto assets, you might at first assume that it wouldn’t hold more than a smidgen of Bitcoin. But it actually has a 50% position in Bitcoin. In order to track the crypto market, it must track Bitcoin.

And there’s a second factor at work here. Most cryptocurrencies are highly correlated with Bitcoin. As Bitcoin goes, so goes the crypto market.

The easiest way to see this is with Ethereum (ETH +2.30%), the second-largest cryptocurrency in the world. Historically, its correlation with Bitcoin is close to 0.90. Over the past 12 months, the correlation is still a robust 0.85. That’s about as close to 1 as you’re going to get with two different assets.

Put another way, Bitcoin and Ethereum tend to march in lockstep. If Bitcoin is falling in price, Ethereum is likely to follow suit. You’re not going to gain a lot by rotating out of Bitcoin into Ethereum.

In fact, it’s extremely difficult to find any cryptocurrency that doesn’t have a strong positive correlation with Bitcoin. Using data from DeFi Llama, it’s possible to play around with crypto asset price correlations. And no matter which major cryptocurrency you attempt to compare with Bitcoin, you’ll likely find a strong positive correlation of 0.70 or higher. In other words, it’s hard to find a cryptocurrency that can zig when Bitcoin zags (and vice versa). 

Takeaway lessons for crypto investors

This is not an attempt to convince you to become a Bitcoin maximalist (i.e. someone who only invests in Bitcoin). And it is not an attempt to convince you to give up portfolio diversification or multi-crypto ETFs when investing in cryptocurrency.

But to paraphrase a popular Wall Street maxim, this is not a crypto market, but a market of cryptos. It’s up to you to identify the standout winners, especially during extreme market volatility. There are no easy shortcuts by simply owning the entire market. For now, I’m sticking with Bitcoin and waiting for it to pull the entire market higher.

Why brokers should leverage construction lending to capture investor business


Davis said that because a growing percentage of all mortgage loans are done by investor clients, having access to these construction products allows a broker to get multiple loans for the same project.

“Last year, 30% of the transactions were investor transactions,” he said. “I think it’s a must-have product because it allows you to further work upstream. Because if you can help the builder-developer build a home, then when it’s time to do the takeout financing, you could actually do the end loan, and you can get two deals on one project.”

Not only can brokers close multiple loans on the same project, but because so many investors are constantly coming back for financing, you might be able to fill your pipeline with limited customer outreach.

“Unlike a consumer who might buy a house every five years, an average investor across the United States is doing five deals a year. If you don’t have access to fix-and-flip and ground-up construction, then investors in the marketplace, the savvy, professional investors, they’re not going to take you seriously.”

A hard deficit to make up

Davis noted that even if the large builders aren’t capped in how many homes they can build, even if they increase production, it still won’t be enough to close the gap on the housing shortage.

Analysis Exposes a Relentless Layoff Trend Across American Tech Companies


OlhaTsiplyar / Shutterstock.com

Layoffs in recent years often didn’t end after the first round. Drawing on publicly reported data from Layoffs.fyi, Zety’s latest Repeat Layoff Index tracked U.S.-based tech companies that announced job cuts between 2023 and 2025 and revealed that a significant share returned for additional rounds of layoffs, in many cases within months of their first reduction. What began as post-pandemic…

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Zillow’s #1 Ranked Market is Ripe For Cash Flow—Should You Invest?


If Hartford, Connecticut, were a movie character, it would be Keyser Söze from The Usual Suspects. The once-unassuming city, known as the insurance capital of the world, has, for many years, masked a darker alter ego, only recently revealed: America’s most cutthroat real estate market.

In all fairness, even veteran real estate investors likely never knew their hometown would become Zillow’s hottest housing market of 2026, prompting bidding wars with all-cash offers like it was 2021 and driving prices up by 70% over the last six years. 

So how did Hartford go from mild to wild? It’s a plot twist transformation that serves as a good case study for small investors chasing the latest rental hot spot and knowing when to turn or risk getting burned.

Why Hartford Earned Zillow’s Coveted Top Housing Market Spot

Hartford’s win wasn’t merely clickbait. The combination of expected home price growth this year, based on last year’s numbers, which saw 66% of houses sell for over list price and sit on the market for only a week, combined with low inventory—still 63% below pre-pandemic levels—earmarked Hartford for an intense year of price hikes and bidding wars.

Zillow senior economist Orphe Divounguy said that in Hartford, “buyers must compete to elbow their way to the front of the line, which creates hot conditions that elevate a market to the top of the list.”

Investors Flood In

Zillow also noted that many of its top markets were in the Northeast and California, close to large job centers, but where new housing construction has been slow. According to The Wall Street Journal, the pandemic was a game-changer for Hartford, which sits halfway between New York and Boston—a two-and-a-half-hour drive to both. As prices started to increase, investors from surrounding big cities began flooding in, looking for flips or rentals.

“Right now, houses don’t last more than a day on the market if they’re priced correctly,” Kristen Duchene, a Connecticut real estate agent and broker, told the Journal

The key for investors looking at cities like Hartford is to try to see what’s around the corner. Its proximity to densely packed urban centers means it has always had the potential to be a rental hot spot. However, its housing market was decimated after the 2008 financial crash, with job growth in dire shape and homebuyers able to negotiate prices lower at will.

“There was no competition,” investor Eben Busa, who bought his first home in the area in 2017, told the Journal. “I would come in and say, ‘I want your grill,’ or ‘I want this wall repainted,’ and then I would still come in with an underbid.”

Stable Industries and Affordable Prices

Recovery hit Hartford’s leafy suburbs first, with stately older homes housing employees in the state’s main industries in insurance, healthcare, education, and aerospace. The older housing stock made it a haven for flippers. The lack of inventory meant that flippers who could find deals made tidy profits in record time when they listed their projects.

However, despite the increase in house prices, Hartford is still relatively affordable, with the average home in the city costing $189,744 and the average rent $1,529 as of January 2026, according to local newspaper The Bulletin, meaning that it is still possible to cash flow or at least break even.

The city’s low supply means those prices will surely increase. For now, with low prices and assuming the neighborhood is not treacherous, the numbers make sense.

Good and Bad Neighborhoods

That’s a big assumption, because just because a market is deemed to be “hot” doesn’t mean it’s a good investment, like many cities. Hartford has its good and bad areas. 

Many investors fail to realize this as they rush in from pricey cities like New York and Boston to cash in on the hype around Hartford and its low prices. Last year, WalletHub ranked Hartford among the worst state capitals to live in, based on cost of living, affordability, education, economic well-being, and crime, among other factors.

Chip Lupo, WalletHub analyst, said in the report:

“A state’s capital city is more than just the seat of its government—it’s also often the center of its economic activity. Some state capitals boast incredible job markets, high average salaries, world-class universities, and an abundance of attractions. Unfortunately, others have populations that are struggling financially, failing public education systems, and poor public health systems. States should aim to make their capital city a shining example of the best they have to offer.”

In Hartford’s defense, a slate of new development projects and housing will have a major impact on the city’s complexion, which is why, with a still surprisingly reasonably priced housing market, Hartford is attracting the kind of buyer interest it is.

That’s reflected in Realtor.com‘s projected 17.1% median price growth for Hartford in 2026, with the listing site’s economists citing “chronically tight inventory” as the driver. The pricier areas of Hartford are pushing buyers to look elsewhere in the city, where they can get more bang for their buck, and driving price growth outward.

“People are saying, ‘OK—I can either continue to search in West Hartford and go for a small home, or I can get a larger home [elsewhere],” Alexa Kebalo, Connecticut Realtors president and a broker in the West Hartford office of ENRG Realty, told CT Insider. “I think a lot of people are realizing that you can have a dream list…but then you have a ‘what can I actually afford list’—the real list, in that your finances are what your finances are.”

Final Thoughts: Lessons From Hartford, Connecticut, for Investors Eyeing Cutthroat Markets

For investors looking to buy in similar “sleeper” markets like Hartford, recent data offers a few practical pointers. 

First, the combination of low inventory and short days on market, highlighted by Zillow, means that financing and underwriting need to be in place before making any offers in Hartford. In this market, 2021 rules apply—no contingencies, over-asking-price offers, and all-cash buyers jump to the front of the line.

Secondly—of particular interest to buy-and-hold investors—rents are still rising year over year while the rest of the market cools, which augurs well for cash flow. 

Finally, and this is a biggie: The limited concentration of older homes, especially in the city, means that single-family or small multifamily rentals are the prevalent type, favoring small landlords.

However, a large number of tenants (55%) are cost-burdened, and many of the city’s landlords were recently cited for violations of poor living standards. Much of the rental population is working-class and financially strapped, and the real estate is often in poor condition. This rental market is not easy to navigate if you want a stress-free life as a landlord.

Yes, the housing is relatively affordable and increasing in price, but you will need good property management, cash on the sidelines to handle repairs, and you will have to work for every penny of cash flow and equity. There is money to be made, but don’t believe the hype; it won’t come easy.

American Express Launches Platinum Member Airfares


American Express has launched ‘Platinum Member Airfares‘. This offers reduced fares for personal and business Platinum cardholders across 30 airlines. From what I can tell this is just combining the ‘International Airline Program’ and ‘Recommended Flights’ programs. 

Court allows White House ballroom construction to continue for now




Court allows White House ballroom construction to continue for now

Over a third of Ireland’s fuel stations are empty and truck and tractor drivers are protesting nationwide



Protests over the soaring cost of fuel spread disruption across Ireland on Saturday with many gas stations running dry as truck and tractor drivers staged a fifth day of blockades at the country’s sole fuel refinery and several depots.

Vehicles blocking traffic led to closures of the main highway around the capital, Dublin, as well as six other major roadways.

More than a third of the 1,500 service stations in the republic are out of fuel and that number is expected to grow dramatically if the roadblocks remain, Fuels for Ireland chief executive Kevin McPartlan said.

Irish police put all its officers on notice they could be called to duty over the weekend and the military was on standby to help remove the vehicles as the government was due to renew talks Saturday to resolve the dispute.

Frustration over the soaring cost of fuel led to the protests that began Tuesday and have continued to grow as word spread on social media.

Government officials, who had already introduced measures to ease the burden of price rises, have been baffled over the rationale behind the protests because the price spike is global and due to the conflict in the Middle East that has restricted oil exports.

Prime Minister Micheál Martin said Friday that the country was on the brink of turning tankers away during a global shortage and was in jeopardy of losing its oil supply.

“It is unconscionable, it’s illogical, it is difficult to comprehend,” Martin told the national broadcaster RTE.

Truckers, farmers, and taxi and bus operators are among those who have staged the blockages and called for caps in fuel prices or cuts to excise or carbon taxes.

The government approved a range of measures two weeks ago to cut fuel prices, including a temporary reduction in excise taxes on motor fuels, expansion of a rebate for truckers and bus operators that use diesel fuel, and extension of a program that helps low-income people with their heating costs.

But those reductions were quickly overtaken as international prices continued to rise.

Protests began with slow-moving convoys that restricted access to some of the busiest streets in Dublin and blocked fuel depots that supply half the country. Some protesters slept in their vehicles overnight, demanding that the government speak with them.

Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan said Thursday that outsiders were manipulating the demonstrators to advance their own agendas or “really want to damage our country.”