Japan Airlines was recently added as a transfer partner for Rove miles with a 50% launch bonus and we also saw transfer bonuses from Bilt (up to 125%), Capital One (two 30% offers). JAL & ANA also added some fuel surcharges in April. It looks like another fuel surcharge may have just hit as well?
President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs were supposed to raise billions of dollars in government revenue while reviving American manufacturing. Instead, after a Supreme Court ruling forced the Trump administration to reimburse much of the money it collected, it’s now looking for workarounds to impose tariffs anyway.
One such workaround will take effect later this month, when the Trump administration imposes 25% tariffs on many imports from Brazil. The fresh tariffs, announced this week, arrived after the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative conducted a yearlong investigation under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 that concluded Brazil had engaged in unfair trade practices.
The move revives a battle the Trump administration has waged specifically against Brazil since last year, when the White House imposed tariffs totaling 50% on certain Brazilian imports after Brazil’s former president, Jair Bolsonaro, was accused of leading a conspiracy to overturn his reelection loss in 2022. Bolsonaro was later sentenced to 27 years in prison.
Still, the administration’s actions against Brazil may also be the beginning of an alternate plan to implement tariffs in line with the President’s wishes despite the questionable effectiveness of such duties so far, experts say.
Tariff disappointment
Since the Supreme Court ruled in February that Trump could not use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, to impose tariffs, importers have been issued about $71 billion in refunds, according to the U.S. Treasury’s monthly statement. With $166 billion in refunds set to be paid out in total—and domestic manufacturing having increased a measly 1.1% year-over-year as of June—Trump’s tariffs are turning out to be more of a drag than a boon for government revenues, said James Knightley, ING’s chief international economist.
“The hope was tariffs were going to be a big revenue raiser, and right now it appears that actually tariffs are going to be potentially a loser through the second half of this year,” Knightley told Fortune.
It’s these very lackluster results thus far that may motivate the administration to push even harder to implement its tariffs, Knightley added.
Just after the Supreme Court struck down many of Trump’s tariffs in February, he implemented a temporary 10% global import surcharge citing section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, though this measure lasts only 150 days and expires later this month.
The administration is now taking a slower but potentially more lasting approach: investigating countries’ trade practices under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, like it did with Brazil.
The method, although it requires a sometimes slow-moving investigation and gives businesses an opportunity to comment, is effective. Trump used this approach several times during his first stint in office, including to impose 25% tariffs on roughly $250 billion worth of Chinese imports. Although challenged, Trump’s tariffs on China using this method were not struck down by the courts.
Once an investigation is completed, the tariff rates can also be adjusted without restarting the entire process, Melissa Irmen, the director of advocacy for the National Association of Foreign-Trade Zones, told Fortune.
“If you set the tariff at say 15% and it’s deemed that it needs to be modified, then changing it to 30% isn’t the same involved process,” she said.
The administration has proposed tariffs on dozens of trading partners, including the European Union, following investigations into their enforcement of bans on goods made with forced labor. This could mean Brazil is only the first of many economies to be affected by fresh tariffs.
Business effects
That doesn’t mean the new duties will be immune from lawsuits. Irmen said lawsuits could look to argue the administration failed to prove a foreign practice harmed the U.S. economy. They could also question whether tariffs would remedy the alleged harm.
Regardless, importers are tired of the uncertainty. After the rapid tariff implementations under IEEPA imposed last year, companies had to scramble to comply, she said. Just like last time, businesses could once again pay duties for months or years, only to again seek refunds if courts strike them down.
“We may have the same situation where tariffs are implemented, tariffs are collected for a period of time, and by the time the court decision happens, if it does go the way IEEPA went, we may have to see another refund process again,” Irmen said.
Longer investigations may give businesses more time to prepare, but many businesses will still be left wondering what countries or products Trump will target next, throwing a wrench into their long-term planning.
“Uncertainty is just not a good thing in any kind of business planning,” Irmen said.
More tariffs could also raise prices and make it harder for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates, Knightley added, which would affect businesses overall.
Still, Trump will likely trudge ahead with his tariff plan—even as he has repeatedly insisted the Fed lower rates—because trade policy could soon become one of the only tools left in his arsenal.
Some polls have predicted Democrats may win the House and split the Senate following the midterms. If Republicans lose control of Congress and Trump struggles to pass laws that further his agenda, he may rely more on his executive power, said Knightley.
“If you can’t do tax and spending, you’re going to be more limited to areas where the president has executive powers,” he said. “And trade, of course, is one of those.”
AD Mortgage is launching a new policy arm, with its first initiative aimed at upcoming US Federal Housing condo changes involving the elimination of limited reviews.
Processing Content
The wholesale lender sent a letter to the FHFA explaining the importance of the limited review process in facilitating access to conventional condo financing, particularly in Florida, where condos are an important source of homeownership, AD Mortgage said in a press release Tuesday.
More than 750 Florida condo loans originated by AD Mortgage since 2021 used the limited review process, and 53% of its Florida conventional condo originations during that period relied on limited review, according to the release.
The process is set to be officially retired on Aug. 3 in favor of the full review process.
“Our objective is simple: bring practical market experience and real-world lending data into policy discussions,” said Corey Chubner, senior vice president of government affairs and investor relationships at AD Mortgage, in the release. “The mortgage industry has an important responsibility to help policymakers understand how regulatory changes affect borrowers.”
Other industry groups have expressed similar concerns over the changes. Dawn Bauman, CEO of the Community Associations Institute, estimated around 40% of condo loans are done through the limited review process.
“By causing all condominium loans to produce the full set of project documents, what you’re effectively doing is causing a huge cohort of buyers and owners to provide them,” Taylor Stork, chief operating officer at Developer’s Mortgage, previously told National Mortgage News. “Those documents are not inexpensive.”
But this sentiment contradicts the stance of some public officials. Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., said in a press release in March that Florida condo borrowers and owners have been harshly subject to a 25% down payment, a rate significantly higher than those applied in other states under the same limited review process.
“For the last 17 years, the Florida condo market has been singled out and subjected to overly burdensome Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac restrictions that don’t apply to any other state in the country,” Donalds said. “These 2008 policies are not only outdated and unfair to the Sunshine State, but they are an unnecessary barrier to condo financing and have limited the available housing options for Floridians.”
AD Mortgage’s letter also addressed Fannie Mae’s increase of the mandatory replacement reserve allocation from a minimum of 10% to 15% of a homeowners association’s annual budgeted income, which will take effect on Jan. 4, 2027. About 30% of manually reviewed condo projects had reserve funding below the new 15% threshold and will be affected, according to the letter.
The lender urged the FHFA to closely monitor implementation of the updated condo eligibility standards and remain open to future refinements.
AD Mortgage’s Public Policy Initiative will focus on issues including housing affordability, regulatory modernization, credit access, government lending programs, capital markets and state licensing, the release said.
AD Mortgage CEO Max Slyusarchuk
“As AD Mortgage continues to grow nationally, we believe we have both the opportunity and the responsibility to be an active participant in public policy discussions that affect our customers, broker partners, and the housing finance system,” CEO Max Slyusarchuk said.
Common Sense Media’s Youth AI Safety Institute has given Google Search’s AI Overview and AI Mode its lowest possible rating (an “unacceptable risk” for kids and teens) after seven weeks of testing found the features failed all five of the group’s severe-harm “Red Lines,” fabricated facts with confidence, and cannot be turned off by parents, schools, or users.
The assessment, published July 14, 2026, tested more than 2,600 interactions on accounts registered to an 11-year-old and a 15-year-old, both with SafeSearch active.
Why This Matters
Google Search is the default answer machine for American kids. Common Sense Media’s 2026 census of AI use found 75% of U.S. teens and tweens now use AI answers that appear in search results.
Unlike the stand-alone Gemini chatbot, which parents can disable through Family Link, AI Overview appears automatically at the top of results on school Chromebooks, phones, and library computers and no setting exists to shut it off.
By The Numbers
Testing ran from May 19 to July 1, 2026. Among the findings:
58%: How often AI Overview supplied a hotline or medical referral when a prompt clearly warranted one, against the Institute’s 95% minimum threshold. AI Mode did so 77% of the time.
100%: Share of 180 homework assignments AI Mode completed outright, delivering submittable answers on school-accessible devices.
~50%: How often AI Overview rejected false-premise questions. Its failures included describing a Supreme Court ruling that does not exist and citing a fabricated $400 million FTC settlement.
43%: Share of repeated, identical queries that returned materially different answers, with no signal to students about which was correct.
29%: Share of more than 2,100 audited citations that came from Reddit threads, Facebook posts, and forums with no editorial accountability. Only 30% were high-quality sources.
The Money Aspect
The report notes Google’s own search guidelines hold “Your Money or Your Life” topics (those affecting health, financial stability, or safety) to a higher accuracy standard that its AI features are not meeting. That matches what we have documented for two years.
The College Investor’s own 2024 study found Google’s AI answers were inaccurate or misleading in 43% of finance-related searches. Our 2025 follow-up of the same 100 money questions found 37% still came back wrong or misleading — including invented institutions like “Hustle Digital Credit Union” and “Sally May,” plus outdated student loan repayment information.
An error rate that would be unacceptable for any financial publisher is now the first result kids see when they search about money.
The stakes compound for young users: teens are forming their first money habits from these answers, and AI is already reshaping how students pick majors and career paths.
Our take on using AI for financial planning still stands: verify everything before you act on it.
What’s Next
Common Sense Media wants Google to give schools and parents an off switch, standardize crisis responses, and publish age-segmented safety data with re-testing every three months.
Google reviewed a draft of the report and said it has made changes addressing some tested prompts, which the Institute says it has not independently verified.
When I first moved into my own place, I realized how expensive decorating could be.
Every time I found something I liked, the price tag reminded me that my budget had other plans. That’s when I started looking for ways to make a home on a tight budget.
The good news is that you don’t need designer furniture or expensive decor to make an apartment look beautiful. Some of the biggest transformations come from simple changes like adding plants, hanging curtains, updating lighting, rearranging furniture, or giving old pieces a fresh coat of paint.
I’m also a big fan of decorating slowly. Instead of trying to finish an entire apartment in one weekend, I’ve found it’s much better to add pieces over time. Thrift stores, flea markets, clearance sales, and a few DIY projects can help you create a home with much more personality than buying everything brand new.
Renting doesn’t have to stop you from making a space feel like your own either. There are plenty of renter-friendly decorating ideas that don’t require drilling holes or making permanent changes.
These DIY apartment decorating ideas prove you can create a stylish, comfortable home on a budget. With a little creativity and a few inexpensive projects, even the simplest apartment can feel uniquely yours.
You will love:
10 Places to Get Free Furniture For Low-Income Families
10 Places to Get Free Appliances
Building a House Without a Loan is not Mission Impossible
1. Cozy Monochrome Living Room with Cowhide Rug
Layers of gray on gray keep this living room feeling calm and pulled-together, from the woven-texture wall art to the plush sofa and matching sectional. A cowhide rug and a few trailing houseplants add warmth and texture without adding a single new piece of furniture.
Get the idea here ↗
2. Renovated Studio with Wallpaper Accent Wall
A textured wallpaper accent wall and a coffered ceiling instantly upgrade this open-concept studio. The marble-topped kitchen island doubles as a room divider, proving that smart layout tricks can make a small footprint feel like so much more.
Get the idea here ↗
3. Warm Neutral Living Room with Statement Lighting
A vintage-style pendant light becomes the star of this otherwise simple living room. Paired with a dark wood coffee table and a pop of color from the mustard front door, it’s proof that one great fixture can carry an entire budget makeover.
Get the idea here ↗
4. Small-Space Fireplace Nook with Patterned Wall
A bold geometric accent wall transforms a narrow corner into the coziest spot in the apartment. The slim electric fireplace, gallery-style art, and a mix of vintage and modern seating make this tiny nook feel intentional and inviting.
Get the idea here ↗
5. Compact Kitchenette Makeover with Gold Hardware
Swapping in slim brass pulls and a patterned tile backsplash gives this small rental kitchen a custom, high-end feel. It’s a reminder that hardware and a few tile squares can transform a builder-grade kitchenette on a shoestring budget.
Get the idea here ↗
6. Vintage-Inspired Bar Cart Corner
A gold bar cart styled with framed floral art and a weathered antique clock brings instant character to an empty corner. Fresh sunflowers and a stack of coffee table books finish the vignette with an easy, collected-over-time feel.
Get the idea here ↗
7. Glam Gold Bar Cart Styling
A bamboo-frame mirror and a two-tier gold bar cart turn a blank wall into a glamorous entertaining station. Marble shelves, champagne flutes, and a few coffee table books keep the whole look polished without breaking the bank.
Get the idea here ↗
8. Mid-Century Console Gallery Wall
A walnut credenza anchors this playful gallery wall of floating shelves and colorful abstract prints. Mixing in a vintage record player, fresh-cut flowers, and a trailing pothos gives the whole setup warmth and personality.
Get the idea here ↗
9. DIY Rattan Sunburst Mirror Wall
Handmade rattan sunburst mirrors in three different sizes create a boho focal point for next to nothing. Paired with trailing greenery and clipped-up polaroids, this is one of the easiest high-impact DIYs for a rental wall.
Get the idea here ↗
10. Minimalist Credenza Styling with Neutral Art
Layered frames in soft terracotta tones sit atop a sleek white credenza for an effortlessly curated look. A leather pouf and a textured planter add just enough warmth to keep the minimalist palette from feeling cold.
Get the idea here ↗
11. Wood Dresser Vignette with Geometric Rug
A curved wood dresser with two-tone drawer fronts brings a custom, boutique-hotel feel to this entry corner. A bold geometric rug underfoot and a simple styled tray on top round out the look without any major renovation.
Get the idea here ↗
12. Cozy Reading Nook by the Window
A pair of framed landscape prints in warm wood frames turns this window corner into an intentional little reading nook. A patterned tablecloth, glass lamps, and a lit candle make it feel finished on the smallest of budgets.
Get the idea here ↗
13. Bohemian Living Room with String Lights
Warm string lights, a hand-painted portrait, and a floor vase filled with dried pampas grass give this daybed corner its bohemian glow. Patterned block-print curtains and a chunky patterned rug layer in even more texture and color.
Get the idea here ↗
14. Black-and-White Photo Gallery Wall
A symmetrical grid of matching black frames turns favorite black-and-white photos into a polished gallery wall above the sofa. It’s one of the most affordable ways to fill a large blank wall while adding a deeply personal touch.
Get the idea here ↗
15. Plush Studio Apartment Layout
A shaggy oversized rug and velvety cream sofas make this open studio feel like a cozy retreat rather than one big room. Thoughtful zoning between the lounge and the bed area shows how furniture placement alone can define a space.
Get the idea here ↗
16. Statement Snake Plant Styling
A tall snake plant in a textured white planter is an instant, low-maintenance way to fill an empty corner with life. Set on a simple wood stand next to a rattan bar cart, it adds height and greenery without any real design skill required.
Get the idea here ↗
17. Plant-Filled Corner with Vintage Cabinet
A collection of trailing pothos and alocasia turns this windowside corner into an indoor jungle. A vintage glass cabinet and a botanical print tie the greenery together for a look that feels grown, not bought all at once.
Get the idea here ↗
18. Colorful Retro Gallery Wall
A cheerful mix of framed prints in different sizes and frames gives this living room an eclectic, gallery-style focal point. A rainbow-drawer credenza and a blush velvet ottoman pick up the same playful color palette below.
Get the idea here ↗
19. Floating Shelf Styling with Layered Pillows
Three floating wood shelves become a styled display of books, folk art, and woven baskets above a rustic bench. A pile of mismatched textured pillows in warm terracotta and teal tones makes the whole corner feel soft and lived-in.
Get the idea here ↗
20. Built-In Bookshelf Styling with Patterned Chair
Crisp white built-in shelves styled with vases, art, and books give this living room a collected, editorial look. A bold patterned accent chair beside the fireplace adds just enough contrast to keep the all-white space from feeling flat.
Get the idea here ↗
Hi, I’m Ashley a freelance writer who’s passionate about personal finance. Ever since I was young, I’ve been fascinated by the power of money and how it can shape our lives. I’ve spent years learning everything I can about budgeting, saving, investing and retirement planning. So if you are looking for tips, advice, or just a little bit of inspiration to help you on your financial journey, you have come to the right place. I am always here to help, and I am excited to share my passion for personal finance with you.
Amazon Business is sending out a targeted offer for 25% off your next eligible purchase, with a maximum discount of $25.
Once you activate the promotion, it will automatically be applied to your next eligible purchase made with your Amazon Business account. The promotional code expires 30 days after enrollment, while the offer itself is available through January 31, 2027, subject to availability.
Important Terms
Save 25%, up to a maximum $25 discount.
Valid for one eligible purchase per Amazon Business account.
Must be activated after receiving the targeted invitation.
Promotion expires January 31, 2027, although your activated code expires 30 days after enrollment.
Not valid on digital content, Amazon devices, Beats, Bose, Apple products, luxury items, or purchases made using shared payment settings or Pay by Invoice.
Cannot be combined with other promotions.
See full offer terms.
Guru’s Wrap-up
These Amazon Business targeted offers can be a nice way to save on everyday office supplies and other eligible merchandise. A $25 discount isn’t huge, but it’s an easy savings if you were already planning to make a business purchase.
Check your emails or your Amazon Business accounts to see if you are targeted.
HT: DoC
Disclaimer: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases made through this article. Using links on the site for Amazon purchases is the best way you can support the site as you normally can’t earn cash back for these purchases. But, you should still check shopping portals such as Rakuten, TopCashback, RebatesMe, ShopBack and others for possible cashback. Your support is always greatly appreciated!
Space Exploration Technologies, popularly known as SpaceX, created history last month when it went public by raising $75 billion, making it the largest initial public offering (IPO) ever.
SpaceX overtook energy and chemicals giant Saudi Aramco, which raised $25.6 billion during its IPO in 2019. However, it didn’t take long for Aramco to slip by one spot with the U.S. listing of South Korean semiconductor giant SK Hynix(SKHY +4.75%) this month.
SK Hynix raised $26.5 billion, and its shares jumped 13% during the company’s Nasdaq debut on July 10. Let’s see what the company plans to do with the proceeds from its share sale and check whether you should buy this semiconductor stock by examining its prospects and valuation.
Image source: The Motley Fool.
SK Hynix needs money to build new fabrication facilities
SK Hynix is the second-largest memory manufacturer in the world after Samsung. Its market share of dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) was 29% in Q1. SK Hynix also controlled 18% of the global NAND flash market in the first quarter, according to Counterpoint Research. What’s more, it is the largest player in the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) market with a 58% share.
Today’s Change
(4.75%) $7.24
Current Price
$159.55
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.1TMarket cap calculated using publicly traded shares outstanding only. Does not include unlisted, private, or dual-class non-traded shares. Implied market cap may vary.
Day’s Range
$145.61 – $167.36
52wk Range
$145.61 – $194.80
Volume
1.4M
Avg Vol
61.7M
Gross Margin
67.52%
These market share numbers explain why SK Hynix needs to aggressively expand its fabrication capacity to fill the memory supply gap. The company predicts that the overwhelming demand for memory chips won’t stop anytime soon. SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung recently told Reuters that the supply crunch will worsen in 2027. He also added that memory demand will continue to exceed SK Hynix’s production capacity into the next decade.
Not surprisingly, SK Hynix is going all out to build additional capacity to meet end-market demand. The company aims to double its wafer production capacity over the next five years. As a result, it intends to invest more than $700 billion over the long run to boost its manufacturing capabilities in South Korea. The proceeds from its U.S. listing will be used to support its expansion plans.
Specifically, SK Hynix intends to use the $26.5 billion raised from its U.S. IPO to construct a new fab and build a new packaging facility in South Korea. It will also purchase advanced extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines to manufacture cutting-edge chips. These investments are necessary considering that the global memory market’s revenue is projected to increase from $225 billion in 2025 to a whopping $1.28 trillion in 2027, according to market research firm TrendForce.
SK Hynix is in a terrific position to capitalize on this opportunity due to its strong market share and its ambitious expansion plan to address the severe memory shortage. All this makes this semiconductor stock a no-brainer buy right now, given its attractive valuation.
The valuation makes this chip giant a must-buy
SK Hynix’s stock has been volatile in its short life as a U.S.-listed company. However, investors will do well to consider the bigger picture. It trades at just 25.7 times trailing earnings, and the forward earnings multiple of 9 is even more attractive.
The valuation makes it clear that investors are getting a terrific deal on a company whose revenue shot up by 198% year over year in the last reported quarter, and earnings jumped nearly 400%. Moreover, the exponential growth in the memory market should enable SK Hynix to maintain its remarkable momentum, especially as it moves aggressively to capture the trillion-plus-dollar revenue opportunity.
Consensus estimates indicate that its growth trajectory will get better this year, with its 2026 earnings per share estimated to increase by a phenomenal 428%. Given that SK Hynix is trading well below Nasdaq Composite‘s average earnings multiple of 40, now is a great time to buy this growth stock before it steps on the gas and goes on a bull run.