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    Americans believe real estate, gold are the best long-term investments. They’re wrong, advisors say

    FA Playbook

    More than a third of surveyed Americans view real estate as the best long-term investment, according to a new report by Gallup, a global analytics and advisory firm.
    Others are more bullish on gold as a long-term investment, the report found. 
    Here’s what advisors have to say.

    Brendon Thorne | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Some Americans believe real estate and gold are the best long-term investments. Advisors think that’s misguided.
    About 37% of surveyed U.S. adults view real estate as the best investment for the long haul, according to a new report by Gallup, a global analytics and advisory firm. That figure is roughly unchanged from 36% last year. 

    Gold was the second-most-popular choice, with 23% of surveyed respondents. That’s five points higher than last year. 
    To compare, just 16% put their faith in stocks or mutual funds as the best long-term investment — a decline of six percentage points from 2024’s report, Gallup found.
    The firm polled 1,006 adults in early April.

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    Here’s a look at other stories impacting the financial advisor business.

    Financial advisors caution that this preference is likely more about buzz than fundamentals. Be careful about getting caught up in the hype, said certified financial planner Lee Baker, the founder, owner and president of Claris Financial Advisors in Atlanta.
    Carolyn McClanahan, a CFP and founder of Life Planning Partners in Jacksonville, Florida, agreed: “People are always chasing what’s hot, and that’s the stupidest thing you could do.”

    Here’s what investors need to know about gold and real estate, and how to incorporate them in your portfolio.

    Why gold and real estate are alluring

    Baker understands why people like the idea of real estate and gold: Both are tangible objects versus stocks. 
    “You buy a house, you can see it, feel it, touch it. Your investment in stocks perhaps doesn’t feel real,” said Baker, a member of CNBC’s Financial Advisor Council.
    While the preference for gold grew this year, the share of Gallup respondents who think it’s the best long-term investment is still below the record high of 34% in 2011. Back then, gold investors sought refuge amid high unemployment, a crippled housing market and volatile stocks, Gallup noted.
    Gold prices have been trending upward this spring. Spot gold prices hit an all-time high of above $3,500 per ounce in late April. One year ago, prices were about $2,200 to $2,300 an ounce.

    Real estate has also drawn more interest in recent years amid high demand from buyers and accelerating prices. The median sale price for an existing home in the U.S. in March was $403,700, according to Bankrate. That is down from the record high of $426,900 in June.

    Why stocks are the better bet

    While real estate and gold are two assets that can appreciate in value over time, the stock market will generally grow at a much higher rate, experts say.
    The annualized total return of S&P 500 stocks is 10.29% over the 30-year period ending in April, per Morningstar Direct data. Over the same time frame, the annualized total return for real estate is 8.78% and for gold, 7.38%.
    McClanahan also points out that unlike gold and real estate, stocks are diversified assets, meaning you’re spreading out your cash versus concentrating it into one investment.

    “When you talk about stocks, you’re not talking about one big asset,” she said. “You’re talking about thousands and thousands of companies that do different things.” McClanahan is also a member of the CNBC FA Council.
    While the tangibility of gold and real estate may provide a sense of comfort, it also makes them illiquid, or difficult to cash out, McClanahan said.

    How to include gold, real estate into your portfolio

    If you are among the Americans that want exposure to real estate or gold, there are different ways to do it wisely, experts say.
    For real estate, financial advisors say investors might look into real estate investment trusts, also known as REITs, or consider investments that bundle real estate stocks, like exchange-traded funds.
    An REIT is a publicly traded company that invests in different types of income-producing residential or commercial real estate, such as apartments or office buildings.
    In many cases, you can buy shares of publicly traded REITs like you would a stock, or shares of a REIT mutual fund or exchange-traded fund. REIT investors typically make money through dividend payments.

    Real estate mutual funds and exchange-traded funds will typically invest in multiple REITs and in the real estate market broadly. It’s even more diversified than investing in a single REIT.
    Either way, you’re exposed to real estate without concentrating into a single property, and it will help diversify your portfolio, McClanahan said. 
    Similar to gold — instead of stocking up on gold bullions, consider investing in gold through ETFs.
    That way you avoid having to deal with finding a place to store or hide physical gold, you wash off the stress of it getting stolen or making sure it’s covered by your home insurance policy, experts say. 
    “With the ETF, you actually get the value of the return of gold, but you don’t actually own it,” McClanahan said. More

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    Trump tariffs sparked ‘noticeable uptick’ in I bond interest, advisor says. How they fit into your strategy

    FA Playbook

    If you’re worried about higher inflation amid President Donald Trump’s tariffs, Series I bonds could be one option to hedge against rising prices.
    Currently, newly purchased I bonds pay 3.98% annual interest through October 31.
    However, there are some I bond downsides to consider, experts say.

    Kate_sept2004 | E+ | Getty Images

    As investors worry about future inflation amid President Donald Trump’s tariff policy, some experts say assets like Series I bonds could help hedge against rising prices.  
    Currently, newly purchased I bonds pay 3.98% annual interest through October 31, which is up from the 3.11% yield offered the previous six months. Tied to inflation, the I bond rate adjusts twice yearly in part based on the consumer price index.

    Certified financial planner Nathan Sebesta, owner of Access Wealth Strategies in Artesia, New Mexico, said there’s been a “noticeable uptick” in client interest for assets like I bonds and Treasury inflation-protected securities. 
    “While inflation has moderated, the memory of recent spikes is still fresh, and tariff talk reignites those concerns,” he said.

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    Here’s a look at other stories impacting the financial advisor business.

    I bonds can be a ‘sound strategy’

    Buying I bonds can be a “sound strategy” to complement a well-rounded bond portfolio of various fixed-income assets, said CFP Dean Tsantes with VLP Financial Advisors in Vienna, Virginia.
    But some investors have preferred high-yield savings accounts, certificates of deposit or Treasury bills amid higher interest rates, experts say.

    As of May 7, the top 1% average high-yield savings accounts currently pay 4.23%, while the best one-year CDs offer 4.78%, according to DepositAccounts. Meanwhile, Treasury bills still offer yields above 4%.

    Of course, these could change, depending on future moves from the Federal Reserve.
    If you’re worried about higher future inflation and considering I bonds, here are some key things to know.

    How I bonds work

    I bond rates combine a variable and fixed rate portion, which the Treasury adjusts every May and November.
    The variable portion is based on inflation and stays the same for six months after your purchase date. By contrast, the fixed rate portion stays the same after buying. You can see the history of both parts here.
    Currently, the variable portion is 2.86%, which could increase if future inflation rises. Meanwhile, the fixed portion is currently 1.10%, which could be “very attractive” for long-term investors, Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAccounts.com, recently told CNBC.
    Before November 2023, I bonds hadn’t offered a fixed rate above 1% since November 2007, according to Treasury data.

    The downsides of I bonds

    Despite the higher fixed rate and inflation protection, there are I bond downsides to consider, experts say.
    You can’t access the money for at least one year after purchase, and there’s a three-month interest penalty if you tap the funds within five years. 
    There are also purchase limits. You can buy I bonds online through TreasuryDirect, with a $10,000 per calendar year limit for individuals. However, there are ways to purchase more.
    “There’s also the tax consequences,” Tsantes said.
    I bond interest is subject to regular federal income taxes. You can defer taxes until redemption or report interest yearly. More

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    Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady: What that means for credit cards, auto loans, mortgages and more

    The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at the end of its two-day meeting Wednesday.
    The Fed’s decision to remain on the sidelines still has far-reaching implications for almost all forms of borrowing as well as the returns you earn on your savings.
    From credit cards and mortgage rates to auto loans and savings accounts, here’s a look at how your wallet is impacted.

    When the Fed hiked rates in 2022 and 2023, the interest rates on most consumer loans quickly followed suit. Even though the central bank lowered its benchmark rate three times in 2024, those consumer rates are still elevated, and are mostly staying high, for now.

    Five ways the Fed affects your wallet

    1. Credit cards
    Many credit cards have a variable rate, so there’s a direct connection to the Fed’s benchmark.
    With a rate cut likely postponed until July, the average credit card annual percentage rate has stayed just over 20% this year, according to Bankrate — not far from 2024’s all-time high. Last year, banks raised credit card interest rates to record levels and some issuers said they are keeping those higher rates in place.
    At the same time, “more people are carrying debt because of higher prices,” said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate. Total credit card debt and average balances are also at record highs.
    2. Mortgages

    Prospective home buyers leave a property for sale during an Open House in a neighborhood in Clarksburg, Maryland.
    Roberto Schmidt | AFP | Getty Images

    Mortgage rates don’t directly track the Fed, but are largely tied to Treasury yields and the economy. As a result, uncertainty over tariffs and worries about a possible recession are dragging those rates down slightly.
    The average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is 6.91% as of May 6, while the 15-year, fixed-rate is 6.22%, according to Mortgage News Daily. 
    Mortgage rates “are showing signs of life after a slow couple of years,” said Michele Raneri, vice president and head of U.S. research and consulting at TransUnion. 
    But for potential home buyers, that’s not enough of a decline to give the housing market a boost. “Many borrowers are reluctant to take on a loan at today’s rates, particularly if they currently have a loan at a significantly lower rate,” Raneri said.
    3. Auto loans
    Auto loan rates are tied to several factors, but the Fed is one of the most significant.
    With the Fed’s benchmark holding steady, the average rate on a five-year new car loan was 7.1% in April, while the average auto loan rate for used cars is 10.9%, according to Edmunds. At the end of 2024, those rates were 6.6% and 10.8%, respectively.
    With interest rates near historic highs and car prices rising — along with pressure from Trump’s 25% tariffs on imported vehicles — new-car shoppers are facing bigger monthly payments and an affordability crunch, according to Joseph Yoon, Edmunds’ consumer insights analyst.
    “Consumers continue to face a challenging market, now with added uncertainty of the tariff impact on their next vehicle purchase,” Yoon said. “Prices and interest rates remain elevated, and there’s no fast or easy answer as to how the tariffs will affect inventory levels — and therefore pricing — as buyers try to make sense of an increasingly complex shopping journey.” 
    4. Student loans
    Federal student loan rates are fixed for the life of the loan, so most borrowers are somewhat shielded from Fed moves and recent economic turmoil.
    Interest rates for the upcoming school year will be based in part on the May auction of the 10-year Treasury note, and are expected to drop slightly, according to higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz. Undergraduate students who took out direct federal student loans for the 2024-25 academic year are paying 6.53%, up from 5.50% in 2023-24.

    Borrowers with existing federal student debt balances won’t see their rates change, adding to the other headwinds some now face along with fewer federal loan forgiveness options.
    5. Savings
    While the central bank has no direct influence on deposit rates, the yields tend to be correlated to changes in the target federal funds rate.
    “Continued high interest rates are discouraging for those with debt but awesome for savers,” said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. 
    Yields for CDs and high-yield savings accounts may not be as high as they were a year ago, but the Fed’s rate cut pause has left them well above the annual rate of inflation, Schulz said. Top-yielding online savings accounts currently pay 4.5%, on average, according to Bankrate.
    “With all of the uncertainty in the economy right now, it makes sense for people to act now to lock in CD rates and take advantage of current high-yield savings account returns while they still can,” Schulz said.
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    Here’s what federal student loan interest rates may be for 2025-2026: higher education expert

    Federal student loans may come with slightly lower interest rates in the 2025-2026 academic year, according to an estimate by higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.
    The drop in interest rates could provide some very modest relief to families trying to cover college costs.

    Skynesher | E+ | Getty Images

    Expected student loan interest rates for 2025-2026

    The interest rate on federal direct undergraduate loans could be 6.39% in the 2025-2026 academic year, estimates Kantrowitz. The undergraduate rate for the 2024-2025 year is 6.53%.
    At those new undergraduate rates, every $10,000 a family borrowed would lead to a $113 monthly student loan payment after graduation, assuming the student enrolled in a standard 10-year repayment plan. With interest, the borrower would repay $13,559.87 over that decade.
    For graduate students, loans will likely come with an 7.94% interest rate, compared with the current 8.08%, Kantrowitz finds.

    PLUS loans for graduate students and parents may have a 8.94% interest rate, a decrease from 9.08% now.

    The government sets interest rates on its education loans once a year. The rates, which run from July 1 to June 30 of the following year, are based in part on the May auction of the 10-year Treasury note.
    Kantrowitz based his calculations on the Treasury Department’s announced high-yield rate on Tuesday of 4.34%.

    Which borrowers face lower rates 

    Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO More

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    IRS loses nearly 1 in 3 tax auditors in DOGE cuts, watchdog report finds

    As of March 2025, the IRS workforce had fallen by more than 11,000 employees, or 11%, according to a Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration report.
    The percentage of separated employees was higher for “revenue agents,” who conduct audits. As of March, the agency lost 3,623 revenue agents, or 31%.
    However, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Tuesday said “collections” are still a priority for the agency.

    A traffic light is red outside the U.S. Internal Revenue Service building in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 20, 2025.
    Kent Nishimura | Reuters

    The IRS has lost nearly one-third of tax auditors amid sweeping cuts from Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency, a watchdog report found.
    As of March 2025, the agency’s workforce had fallen by more than 11,000 employees, or 11%, due to probationary terminations and the deferred resignation program, according to a May 2 report from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.

    The percentage of separated employees was significantly higher for certain departments — including so-called “revenue agents,” who conduct audits for the IRS. As of March, the agency lost 3,623 revenue agents, or 31%, according to the report.
    More from Personal Finance:   What the Fed’s upcoming interest rate decision means for youSome prices are falling. ‘They’re not here to stay,’ economist saysYour Social Security card will soon be available digitally
    The TIGTA report came the same day as President Donald Trump’s fiscal year 2026 discretionary budget request, which called for a nearly $2.5 billion IRS budget cut to end the “weaponization of IRS enforcement.”
    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Tuesday defended the reduced spending request in a House of Representatives Appropriations subcommittee hearing. He said the federal government has cut $2 billion from the agency’s information technology budget “without any operational disruptions.”
    As of April 25, the IRS processed more than 140 million returns during the 2025 filing season, slightly more than the previous year, according to agency data.

    The Treasury did not respond to CNBC’s request for comment about the TIGTA report.

    IRS cuts could help ‘wealthy tax dodgers’

    In a March letter to former acting IRS commissioner Melanie Krause, more than 130 House Democrats warned that cutting compliance staff could limit the agency’s ability to collect unpaid taxes from “wealthy tax dodgers.” The lawmakers were responding to IRS staffing cuts that began in late February.
    Those cuts hurt the agency’s ability to “improve collections, crack down on complex tax avoidance and evasion by high-income taxpayers and large businesses,” the lawmakers wrote.

    Audits of the top 0.1% of taxpayers returned more than $6 in revenue for every dollar spent in resources, according to a 2023 working paper from researchers at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Wharton School and University of Sydney.
    At the House Appropriations subcommittee hearing on Tuesday, Bessent said “collections” were among his IRS priorities. But he expects to meet revenue goals via “smarter IT” and the “AI boom” rather than via “unseasoned collections agents.”
    “I would expect that collection would continue to be very robust,” he said. More

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    Senate confirms Trump pick Bisignano to lead Social Security Administration. What that may mean for benefits

    Newly confirmed Social Security commissioner Frank Bisignano has faced a series of questions on his involvements with the Department of Government Efficiency.
    Among Bisignano’s priorities for Social Security: reducing its error rate, which would help eliminate overpayment issues that leave beneficiaries owing the agency money.
    Here’s what we know about Bisignano’s views on the future of Social Security benefits.

    Frank Bisignano testifies before the Senate Finance Committee on his nomination to be Commissioner of the Social Security Administration, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, March 25, 2025. 
    Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

    The Senate has voted to confirm Frank Bisignano as the new commissioner of the Social Security Administration, ushering in new leadership at a federal agency that has already undergone many changes this year under the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency.
    Bisignano, the chairman and CEO of payments and financial technology company Fiserv Inc., was nominated to serve as Social Security commissioner in December by then President-elect Donald Trump. Trump started his second term on Jan. 20.

    The Social Security Administration, which provides monthly benefit checks to more than 73 million beneficiaries, is currently operating under temporary leadership. Acting commissioner Leland Dudek took the helm in February, replacing Michelle King, who stepped down from the temporary role due to concerns about DOGE’s access to sensitive data.
    A federal judge has since granted a preliminary injunction that prevents DOGE from accessing personally identifiable information including Social Security numbers, medical records, addresses, bank records, tax information and other sensitive data.
    Bisignano’s confirmation vote on Tuesday was divided by party lines. Prior to the vote, Republicans had expressed support for Trump’s nominee, while Democrats raised concerns about Bisignano’s prospective leadership and his alleged ties to DOGE.
    More from Personal Finance:Social Security reduces benefit clawback rateTrump administration restarts student loan collectionsWhat experts say about claiming Social Security benefits early
    On the eve of the Senate confirmation vote, Democrats including Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Ron Wyden of Oregon held a rally outside the Senate building to oppose Bisignano’s nomination.

    “We want Donald Trump to stand with working families and seniors and stop the attack on Social Security once and for all,” Wyden, ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, said at the Monday event.
    Following the Tuesday Senate vote, advocacy groups expressed concern about the new agency leadership.
    “This vote was an opportunity for the Senate to reject the decimation of Social Security, and demand that Trump nominate a commissioner who will stop the bleeding,” Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, said in a statement. “Instead, every Senate Republican just signed off on the DOGE destruction of Social Security.”
    Neither Fiserv nor the White House responded to CNBC’s requests for comment by press time.

    Who is Frank Bisignano?

    Bisignano currently serves as chairman and CEO of Fiserv, which processes more than $2.5 trillion in payments per day, according to his Senate testimony.
    Bisignano came to that role after serving as chairman and CEO of First Data Corp., which went public in 2015 and combined with Fiserv in 2019.
    Before that, Bisignano was co-chief operating officer for JPMorgan Chase and CEO of its mortgage banking unit. Prior to JPMorgan Chase, he held several roles at Citigroup.
    Bisignano was raised in a working class, multigenerational immigrant household in Brooklyn, New York, according to his Senate testimony. Bisignano’s father was a 46-year Department of Treasury employee who worked in customs enforcement.
    “He was the hardest working person I’ve known,” Bisignano said in his Senate testimony. “I view federal workers from that vantage point.”

    What lawmakers said about Bisignano’s nomination

    During the consideration of Bisignano’s nomination, Democrats repeatedly raised concerns about his viability to lead the agency.
    Warren and Wyden sent a letter to Bisignano ahead of his March confirmation hearing to ask about his views on privatizing the agency. The efforts by DOGE to “hollow out” the agency and “deprive Americans of Social Security benefits they earned and need” may pave the way for a “private sector fix,” the Democratic leaders said.
    In his Senate testimony, Bisignano said he did not intend to privatize the agency.
    “I’ve never thought about privatizing,” Bisignano said. “It’s not a word that anybody’s ever talked to me about. I don’t see this institution as anything other than a government agency that gets run for the American public.”

    During the Senate hearing, Bisignano also faced questions about his involvement with recent changes at the Social Security Administration and with DOGE.
    Wyden introduced an anonymous whistleblower letter from a “senior Social Security Administration employee who recently left the agency,” who said Bisignano had been briefed on “key SSA operations, personnel and management decisions.”
    In response to a question about whether he would “lock DOGE out,” Bisignano promised to protect personally identifiable information.
    “I am going to do whatever is required to protect the information that is private,” Bisignano said.
    However, during a February CNBC interview, Bisignano said he is “fundamentally a DOGE person.”
    While Democrats have cast doubt on Bisignano’s nomination, the Fiserv CEO has received praise from Republicans and former Citigroup CEO Sandy Weill.
    In a March CNBC interview, Weill praised Bisignano as a “great manager” and “terrific person.”
    “He used to work for me, and I think he’s the best operations person I’ve ever met in my life,” Weill said, adding we would be “very lucky to have him in that job.”

    What Bisignano has said about Social Security

    During a March Senate confirmation hearing, as he fielded questions from senators on a host of issues facing the Social Security Administration, Bisignano said it will be important to “put the beneficiaries first.”
    “The ability to receive payments on time and accurately is job one,” Bisignano said.
    Among the priorities Bisignano said he would emphasize if confirmed include bringing the Social Security’s error rate down, citing an Office of the Inspector General report that put it at around 1%.
    “That’s a very high payment processing error rate,” Bisignano said, calling it “five decimal places too high.”
    Reducing the agency’s error rate will help eliminate overpayment issues, where beneficiaries receive too much money in their benefit checks. Those errors, which may take months or years to catch, typically leave beneficiaries owing large sums to the Social Security Administration.
    From fiscal years 2015 through 2022, the Social Security Administration paid about $71.8 billion in improper payments out of almost $8.6 trillion in benefits, representing about 0.84%, according to a 2024 Office of the Inspector General report.
    The agency is currently in the process of adjusting the default withholding rate to 50% for certain benefits affected by overpayments, such as retirement, survivors and disability insurance. Under President Joe Biden, the default rate had been lowered to 10% of monthly benefits or $10, whichever was greater.
    “I’m going to make sure that we recover all the money we should recover, but on the other hand we have to be humans in the process, too,” Bisignano told the Senate about overpayment clawbacks.

    Bisignano also said he planned to reduce the chronically long wait times Americans face when seeking help from the agency, including when calling its 800 number or when applying for disability benefits.
    Having to wait for more than 20 minutes on the phone is not acceptable, Bisignano said. Social Security Administration data shows only about 46% of calls get answered, likely because people get discouraged and hang up, he said.
    “I think we could get that to under a minute,” Bisignano said of the agency’s phone wait times, in part by making AI available to people answering the phones to more quickly prompt them with the information they need to answer individuals’ queries.
    Bisignano also promised to investigate why it takes so much time to process disability applications. Initial eligibility determinations currently take around seven months, a wait time that has doubled since prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the Urban Institute. More

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    Small investors rushed into Berkshire shares during dip even after their hero Buffett set exit

    Warren Buffett and Greg Abel walkthrough the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 3, 2025.
    David A. Grogen | CNBC

    Retail investors poured more than $24 million into Berkshire Hathaway’s Class B stock on Monday, proving it’s not just a Warren Buffett cult stock and providing a vote of confidence in incoming CEO Greg Abel.
    Everyday traders sent about $24.4 million on balance into Berkshire’s B stock during the session, marking the stock’s highest sum of net inflows since 2016, according to Vanda Research.

    The shares declined more than 5% on Monday for their third worst session in the last half-decade, as Buffett shocked the investing world on Saturday with his announcement that he intends to leave the chief executive role at year-end, and Abel set to take the reins.

    Buffett’s initial announcement came as tens of thousands of shareholders flocked to Omaha for the yearly gathering, which has become a tradition over Buffett’s six decades helming the sprawling conglomerate. Shareholders idolize the “Oracle of Omaha,” with meeting attendees sporting apparel featuring his likeness and waiting in long lines to purchase a plush toy of him.
    “I think the time has arrived where Greg should become the chief executive officer of the company at year end,” Buffett said near the end of Saturday’s question-and-answer event with shareholders.
    Buffett is seen as one of the most successful advocates of investing — specifically through a disciplined and value-focused lens — to everyday people. Monday’s inflows may surprise some market observers, as conventional wisdom would suggest mom-and-pop traders would be uneasy with the longtime company leader stepping away.
    Yet Monday’s net inflows were more than three times to size of what was seen the previous Friday, underscoring the surge of interest in the stock following the news. It was also the fourth-largest one-day net haul for the stock going back to when Vanda began collecting data in 2014.

    Berkshire’s biggest one-day net flows since 2014

    Date
    Net flows (in U.S. dollars)

    6/24/2016
    41543725

    8/24/2015
    26606101

    12/9/2014
    25732006

    5/5/2025
    24356196

    1/4/2016
    22001366

    Source: Vanda Research

    Now, investors are wondering what’s next for Berkshire under Abel, who hasn’t shown an ability to pick stocks exceptionally well, the trait that made Buffett a rock star to the regular Joe investor. But they may be appeased by Buffett’s comment that he plans to “hang around” and after the board voted to keep him on as chairman.
    Buffett, who is Berkshire’s largest investor with more than $160 billion worth of stock, also said he wouldn’t sell a single share of the company he built from a failing textile company into a $1.2 trillion titan. He showered Abel with praise during the meeting, which may have helped ease jitters among attendees about the path forward.

    Warren Buffett does a walkthrough of the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting in Omaha, Nebraska on May 3, 2025.
    David A. Grogen | CNBC

    “The decision to keep every share is an economic decision because I think the prospects of Berkshire will be better under Greg’s management than mine,” the 94-year-old said.
    Buffett’s future has loomed particularly large over shareholders since the passing of longtime friend and business partner Charlie Munger in 2023. He announced in a shareholder letter released in February that he began walking with a cane and that it “won’t be long” before Abel would take over writing the annual memo.
    Despite Monday’s downturn, shares are still up more than 13% in 2025. The S&P 500, which Berkshire has run circles around over the last 60 years under Buffett, has fallen more than 4% this year.

    Stock chart icon

    Berkshire Hathaway, Class B shares

    Retail investors, who helped bid the stock up to a record the Friday before the meeting, may also be banking on Berkshire being a safe haven if tough economic times are ahead. Berkshire has more than $330 billion in cash on hand, enough to buy all but 23 members of the S&P 500 outright.
    And perhaps the little guy is betting Buffett, who in the past has done his biggest buying when others are the most fearful, has one last bargain deal in him before he hangs it up. More

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    Trump administration to garnish wages of 5.3 million defaulted student loan borrowers this summer

    The Trump administration is set to garnish the wages of the 5.3 million federal student loan borrowers in default in just a few months.
    Meanwhile, it began this week alerting around 195,000 defaulted borrowers that their federal benefits will be subject to garnishment in 30 days.

    US President Donald Trump signs executive orders relating to higher education institutions, alongside US Secretary of Education Linda McMahon (R), in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, on April 23, 2025.
    Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images

    The Trump administration resumed collection efforts on defaulted student loans Monday after a roughly five-year hiatus — and affected borrowers could begin feeling the financial consequences sooner than experts expected.
    The U.S. Department of Education released new details on what actions it plans to take, when.

    Here’s what to know.

    Federal benefits could be garnished by June

    Wages at risk over the summer

    The Treasury Department will send notices to 5.3 million defaulted borrowers about the collection activity of their wages “later this summer,” the Education Department wrote in the Monday press release.

    How student loan collection efforts have changed

    Since the pandemic began in March 2020, collection activity on federal student loans has mostly been paused. The Biden administration focused on extending relief measures to struggling borrowers in the wake of the Covid pandemic and helping them to get current.
    The Trump administration’s aggressive collection activity is a sharp turn away from that strategy, experts say.
    “Borrowers should pay back the debts they take on,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon in a video posted on X on April 22.

    The U.S. government has extraordinary collection powers on federal debts and it can seize borrowers’ federal tax refunds, wages, and Social Security retirement and disability benefits.
    But in the past, student loan borrowers were usually given 65 days’ notice before the garnishment of their federal benefits, said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.
    “Odd that they say a 30-day notice,” Kantrowitz said.
    Historically, the offsets to people’s retirement and disability benefits were also “a last resort,” Kantrowitz said, “occurring a year after wage garnishment and other attempts at collection had failed.”
    “Given the timing, it sounds like they are not pursuing the normal due diligence schedule for collecting defaulted federal student loans,” Kantrowitz added.
    The U.S. Department of Education did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Social Security garnishments may hurt retirees

    Carolina Rodriguez, director of the Education Debt Consumer Assistance Program in New York, recently told CNBC that she was especially concerned about the consequences of resumed collections on retirees.
    “Losing a portion of their Social Security benefits to repay student loans could mean not having enough for food, transportation to medical appointments or other basic necessities,” Rodriguez said in an April interview.

    There are some 2.9 million people ages 62 and older with federal student loans, as of the first quarter of 2025, according to Education Department data. That’s a 71% increase from 2017, when there were 1.7 million such borrowers.

    How to avoid collection activity

    Borrowers in default will receive emails making them aware of the new policy, the Education Department said. You can contact the government’s Default Resolution Group and pursue a number of different avenues to get current on your loans, including enrolling in an income-driven repayment plan or signing up for loan rehabilitation. 
    Some borrowers may also be eligible for deferments or a forbearance, which are different ways to pause your payments, Rodriguez said.
    “We’re advising clients to request a retroactive forbearance to cover missed payments, and a temporary forbearance until they can get enrolled in an income-driven repayment plan,” she said.
    Are you at risk of collection activity because you’re behind on your student loans? If you’re willing to share your experience for an upcoming story, please email me at [email protected]

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