Cutler Financial Group cherishes personal ties to Oregon | business

Financial planning can be daunting, but Levi Cutler believes his Oregon connection means something to his clients and makes the ongoing, lifelong process a little less stressful. After graduating from Wartburg College in 2006, Cutler eventually founded and became the CEO of Cutler Financial Group in 2008. He decided to find office space for his company in the heart of the city where he grew up “There is… power in person,” he said. “It’s definitely a strength, kind of a reassurance for people to know that we’re here in Central Oregon … to know that they have a place to…

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EU news: ‘Euro like the Titanic!’ The EU accused of “falling on its feet” as the crisis approaches | World | news

Europe is desperately fighting the dangerous prospect of a major gas shortage heading into the frigid winter months as fears soar that Vladimir Putin will cut off supplies to the continent entirely. The European Union has accused Russia of resorting to energy blackmail and said the move is “politically motivated”, with gas supplies flowing through the huge Nord Stream 1 pipeline from Russia to Europe plummeting in only a fifth of its capacity. Eurozone inflation rose again to 8.9 percent in July, compared with 8.6 percent in June and 8.1 percent in May, while earlier this month, the struggling euro…

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EU News: ‘Suicide!’ Russia sanctions doing ‘MORE damage’ to Europe – financial crash fears | World | news

Brussels has responded fiercely to Vladimir Putin’s war plan by hammering Russia with a series of sanctions aimed at crippling the war-torn country’s economy and derailing its war effort altogether. But Putin has not been deterred by all this so far, and there are now fears that he may soon wage his own political war against the European Union as part of a cruel revenge plot. Hundreds of millions of Europeans are facing a bitterly cold winter and have been urged to ration gas as Putin faces the possibility of cutting off supplies to the continent entirely. The EU has…

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'My heart is crying': Singapore speeds up the pace of executions

‘My heart is crying’: Singapore speeds up the pace of executions

Kalwant Singh’s death sentence was settled with a Zoom call. The Malaysian watched from prison as his appeal was virtually argued by three judges in Singapore this month. For Singh, convicted of smuggling about 120 grams of heroin, it was his last chance for isolation after spending more than six years on death row. He listened in silence as a translator interpreted the discussion. Despite agreeing to give evidence to the police, Singh’s appeal was dismissed. He was hanged the next day. After two years without a gallows, Singapore has carried out six executions in 2022, the highest level since…

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Live News: Leave ballots for Conservative Party members

This week, the bandwagon in the Conservative leadership contest moves from parliament to members of the country. Ballots are expected to go to the polls of 150,000 Conservative party members in the coming days, with finalists Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak facing off in another televised debate on Sky News at 8pm on Thursday. But have Conservative members already made up their minds? Polls have shown Truss pulling ahead of the former chancellor among the grassroots. Stephen Bush, who runs the Inside Politics newsletter, warns that Sunak has limited time to close the gap with Truss as “most Tory members…

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Rising inflation threatens more than possible recession

Neel Kashkari, Minneapolis Federal Reserve Brendan McDermid | Reuters If you’re debating whether or not the U.S. is in a recession, you’re asking the wrong question, according to a senior Federal Reserve official. “Whether we’re technically in a recession or not doesn’t change my analysis,” Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, told CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “I’m focused on the inflation data. I’m focused on the wage data. And so far, inflation continues to surprise us on the upside. Wages continue to grow.” Last month, US inflation jumped to a four-decade high, rising 9.1%…

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Stock futures fall slightly to start trading in August, with market coming off best month since 2020

Stock futures fell slightly after the market’s best month since 2020 as investors await another week of key earnings reports and economic data. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 67 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures were down about 0.2% and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.3%. Friday, all major indexes gained, posting winning weeks and capping the best month of the year so far and then some. The Dow gained 6.7% in July, while the S&P 500 rose 9.1%. The Nasdaq Composite rose 12.4% as investors rushed to the tech stocks that took the biggest hit during this bear…

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Consumers not catching up amid 'pay cut recession': finance expert

Consumers not catching up amid ‘pay cut recession’: finance expert

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Financial expert Daniel Roccato argued that consumers can’t keep up amid what he called a “recession of pay cuts.” Roccato made the argument on “Fox & Friends Weekend” Sunday, three days after it was revealed that the The US economy contracted in the spring for the second quarter in a row, meeting the criteria for a recession as record inflation and higher interest rates forced consumers and businesses to cut spending. Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced across the economy, shrank 0.9% on an annualized basis in…

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