Fortune’s most popular stories of the month
From the women business founders breaking the billionaire boys club to the cryptocurrencies to be on the watch for in 2022, here are our top stories you might have missed from November. As the women who created Bumble, Spanx, and 23andMe achieve new levels of wealth and success, can they open the door for the female entrepreneurs coming behind them?
Shiba Inu's bull run has minted a new class of millionaire and billionaire investors, like Rob, a 35-year-old former supermarket warehouse manager who earlier this year began researching cryptocurrencies at his home in northern England.
Dr. Mark Dybul has been accurately predicting COVID-19 trends for a while. He's now predicting three potential scenarios the U.S. can find itself in as the country pushes through the second winter of the global COVID pandemic.
With the worst of the pandemic seemingly behind the U.S., where have all the workers gone? The answer has a lot to do with shifting attitudes among Americans coming out of the pandemic and the restrictions some workers are still facing.
Tesla is either the future of cars or the ultimate meme stock. There's only one scenario where the stock's trillion-dollar valuation pans out, and it's a long shot.
As we enter 2022, all eyes are looking to see what’s next in crypto. Luckily for them, there is no shortage of alt-coins—cryptocurrencies other than Bitcoin—that may break out and become the next household name.
The work of a Nobel Prize-winning physicist is helping investing pros understand the science behind "stonks."
Not only does a housing crash in 2022 look very unlikely, prices could actually go up even higher. At least that’s according to Redfin’s 2022 real estate outlook.
A prominent international economist predicts China will experience a disaster that mirrors the dynamics of the U.S. meltdown, but promises worse.
While inconsistent quarterly earnings are part and parcel of running an investment brokerage that operates at the whims of the wider market, Robinhood’s results further backed a sentiment that the company is far too dependent on crypto, in particular. But anyone who thought that might have prompted an internal rethink of the company’s crypto strategy would have been sorely mistaken; if anything, it is only doubling down on the asset class as a key part of its approach.
$1 for first month! *New subscribers only
This email was sent to newsletter@gmail.com Unsubscribe from these messages here. Fortune Media (USA) Corporation 40 Fulton Street New York, NY 10038 |
From: Fortune Editors - Wednesday Dec 01, 2021 03:33 pm