• Quotes
  • Shortcuts
The Executive's Internet
Sat, Oct 11th
icon
GoogleAmazonWikipedia


spacerspacer

 

 BUSINESS/FINANCE NEWS
Setup News Ticker
   BUSINESS/FINANCE NEWS
Searching for 'Money'. (Return)

Washington Post BusinessOct 11, 2025
Trump orders Defense Dept. to issue military paychecks during shutdown
Trump said that the Pentagon would repurpose money to make payroll, as military service members were poised to miss paychecks on Wednesday. Most other government workers will not be paid.

Entrepreneur.comOct 10, 2025
You're Growing Fast — But Is Your Money Keeping Up? Here's the Capital Strategy You Need.
A common challenge many fast-growing companies face isn't a lack of opportunity but capital misalignment. Here's how to stay on track.

RELATED ARTICLES
This Is the New Expansion Strategy You Might Not Know About — and It Can Make You Serious Money (Entrepreneur.com)
‘I can't stop thinking about money': I'm struggling with guilt over my $135K in financial mistakes. How do I move on? (MarketWatch)

KiplingerSep 26, 2022
Tax-Savvy Charitable Giving With QCDs Can Benefit Both Giver and Receiver
Plenty of retirees like to give back to their communities through charitable donations, but questions often arise over the best way to do that.

What approach is efficient, provides the tax benefits you're after, and also is advantageous for the charity that's on the receiving end?

SEE MORE Ever Dream of Having a Building Named After Yourself? One possibility is a qualified charitable distribution (QCD), a tax-savvy way to reduce your taxable income and maximize your donations whether you itemize deductions on your tax return or not. An added bonus is that the benefits can be large for both the donor and the charity.

Here's How QCDs Work A QCD is a distribution from an IRA that is paid directly from that retirement account to a qualified charity.  QCDs lower your adjusted gross income (AGI) and therefore lower your tax bill.  They can also offset required minimum distributions (RMDs), those withdrawals you must take from your IRA each year once you reach age 72.  An RMD adds to your income, raising the amount of taxes you pay, but a QCD is excluded from your income. So, for example, if you withdrew $50,000 from your IRA as an RMD, you would pay taxes on that money. But if that same $50,000 was used as a QCD instead, you avoid the taxes while helping a charity at the same time.

SEE MORE Every Dollar Counts: How to Evaluate a Nonprofit Taxpayers can benefit from QCDs even when they take the standard deduction and do not itemize their deductions. Meanwhile, even though a QCD doesn't count as an itemized deduction, tax


KiplingerSep 24, 2022
5 Ways Charitable Giving Can Star in Your Financial Strategy
When professional baseball player Austin Barnes extended his contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers for another two years, he specifically included in the agreement a commitment on his part to make charitable donations.

That was a generous move and a financially savvy one all at the same time. He can put his money to work helping causes he believes in, while also enjoying tax advantages.

SEE MORE Which Type of Donor-Advised Fund Is Right for You? Most of us don't have multimillion-dollar professional sports contracts like Barnes, but there are ways to increase your own donations and, at the same time, reduce your tax bill.

After all, you probably have a cherished cause — a church, an animal rescue organization, a homeless shelter or some other nonprofit — that you want to help. With charitable donations, you can choose specifically how your money is put to use, which isn't the case with your tax dollars, which just go into the big tax pot in Washington.

Think of it this way: If you were told that you aren't going to be able to keep $10,000 anyway, wouldn't you prefer to have a say in exactly how it is spent?

With that in mind, here are five ways to make charitable giving a key part of your financial plan:

1. Set up a donor-advised fund (DAF) This is a strategy that isn't put into play often enough, in part because many people don't know about it. A donor-advised fund allows you to make a sizable charitable donation that you can claim immediately as a tax deduction. The money isn't donated immediately, though. Inste

TRENDING TAGS
TrumpChina Tariffs Shutdown Stocks deal
ChinaTrump Tariffs Stocks Tariff Threat
ShutdownTrump government during Despite these
StocksTrump China Tariffs Buy tariff
DealTrump AstraZeneca drug lower prices
Here Know Gold Were Will
TariffsTrump China Threatens Stocks Chinese
CryptoMorgan Stanley clients Just Solana
PricesTrump AstraZeneca lower drug deal
MoneyHow Strategy Wealth About

NEWS SOURCES
Top News (Business News)
Accounting Today
AdWeek News
Banking Business Review
Barron's This Week Magazine
Barron's Up and Down Wall Street Daily
Brad Ideas
Chicago Tribune Business News
CNBC Business
CNBC Economy
CNBC Finance
CNN/Money
CNN/Money Real Estate News
Dismal.com: Analysis
Dismal.com: Indicators
Enterprise Application News
Entrepreneur.com
Forbes Headlines
Forbes Social Media News
FT.com - China, Economy & Trade
FT.com - Financial Markets
FT.com - Hedge Funds
FT.com - Telecoms
FT.com - US
Google Business News
Google Market News
HBS Working Knowledge
Inc.com
INSEAD Knowledge
International Tax Review
Kiplinger
Knowledge@Wharton
L.S. Starrett News
MarketWatch
MarketWatch Breaking News
MarketWatch MarketPulse
McKinsey Quarterly
MSNBC.com: Business
Nielsen Trends
NonProfit Times
NPR Topics: Business
NYTimes Business
OpinionJournal.com
Private Equity Breaking News
Reuters Business
Reuters Company News
Reuters Money
SEC.gov Updates: News Digest
SHRM HR News
Tax Policy News
The Economist International News
The Motley Fool
USA Today Money
Wall Street Journal US Business
Wall Street Transcript
Washington Post Business
WSJ Asia
WSJ Europe
WSJ MoneyBeat
WSJ Opinion
WSJ US News
WSJ World Markets
Yahoo Business
  • CEOExpress
  • c/o CommunityScape | 200 Anderson Avenue
    Rochester, NY 14607
  • Contact
  • As an Amazon Associate
    CEOExpress earns from
    qualifying purchases.

©1999-2025 CEOExpress Company LLC