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Happy Election Day MarketWatchers. Don’t miss these top stories:
What time do the polls close? Here’s the latest you can vote in all 50 states
Reminder: If you’re in line to vote when the polling place closes, you are still allowed to vote.
Karens could tip the scales in favor of Biden, according to this New York Times chart
The New York Times sorted polling data in battleground states by voters’ first names. Here’s what it found.
I have nearly $600,000 in student debt after getting four college degrees. Can I still buy a home?
The coronavirus pandemic has complicated the process mortgage lenders use to underwrite home loans for people with student debt.
Stress-eating through Election Day? Grab freebies from McDonald’s, Wendy’s and Krispy Kreme
Election Day comfort food discounts abound as American anxiety peaks over the 2020 vote
Nearly 15 million Americans lost employer-based health insurance. Here’s how to get health coverage again
‘No matter what the Court does, people who sign up for insurance now will get insurance and likely will keep it for a while,’ said Stan Dorn, a health policy expert at Families USA.
‘Diverse perspectives lead to better decision making’: Ariel Investments’ John Rogers Jr. pushes corporate boards to have their own ‘Jackie Robinson moment’
Black households are almost twice as likely not to have any stock-market investments, one recent study shows.
‘We’ve been living in a state of confusion’: In Wisconsin, a battleground state, coronavirus cases surge ahead of presidential election
‘If you are afraid of getting sick from COVID-19, you are a Democrat. But if you are afraid of a lockdown that will ruin your business, well, then you are a Republican’
Homeowners in Republican areas are more likely to be underwater on their mortgage
The average home price in areas represented in Congress by Democrats is nearly double the price of homes in Republican parts of the country, a new study finds.
Trump and Biden voters tell MarketWatch the money worries behind their choice for president
‘One day I was working and the next day I found out I could never work again.’
‘Au revoir, bon courage!’ Parisians begin Lockdown 2.0 with somber resignation
‘Renewed debate around secularism and separatism’ stirred up this fall, have added to social tensions, and coincided with multiple violent attacks.’
Elsewhere on MarketWatch
Over 100 million Americans voted early in the 2020 election
Election Day is Tuesday, but over 100 million Americans already have cast their ballots, surpassing an estimated early-votes total of about 58 million for the 2016 election.
Americans line up to decide between Trump, Biden after historic election showdown
Voters around the U.S. were going to polls Tuesday to make their choice for President Donald Trump or his challenger former Vice President Joe Biden, after a bitter election campaign fought over the damage wrought to the economy by the coronavirus pandemic.
Historian who has accurately called every election since 1984 says Biden will beat Trump in 2020 race
The historian who is known affectionately as the granddaddy of presidential prediction models says Democratic presumptive nominee Joe Biden is a shoo-in to win the 2020 presidential race.
This single-country stock picker has beaten the S&P 500 over the past 10 years. His strategy can help you diversify
“You can still find great investment ideas” in Japan, says Masa Takeda of the Hennessy Japan Fund.
U.S. election brings win-lose scenarios to the oil and energy sector
Whether Republican Donald Trump is re-elected as president of the United States or Democrat Joe Biden wins the election, neither candidate is expected to bring a complete win-win for the energy market. What’s good for the energy sector — including oil producers — isn’t necessarily good for oil prices.
You shouldn’t believe all this talk about a stock-market bubble about to burst — here’s why
The S&P 500 doesn’t come close, according to this formula. But there is at least one individual stock that does: Tesla.