Monday's Personal Finance Stories
By MarketWatch
Don't miss these top stories: After the housing bust and stalled recovery, 69% of 18- to 35-year-olds say they're more knowledgable about homeownership than their parents were at their age, according to survey results released early Monday. After all, they've watched this housing downturn play out over the years — and what they've learned has made them more cautious about buying a home of their own. Read the latest Home Economics column for the whole story. Plus, learn how to pick a credit card based on the rewards that will benefit you the most, and read why uncertainty is rattling Virginia's economy in the day's Personal Finance pages.—Amy Hoak , assistant editorKids of boomers are smarter about housing
A benefit of the housing bust: It has created a generation of young Americans who are more knowledgeable about homeownership than their baby-boomer parents were at their age.
Kids of boomers are smarter about housing. Earn more with credit-card rewards that fit you
Consumers looking to get the most of their credit-card rewards should pick a card for the lifestyle they lead.
Earn more with credit-card rewards that fit you. Behind Vanguard's ETF change of heart
Reversing earlier plans, the mutual-fund giant introduced a new TIPS exchange-traded fund. Should Bogleheads be worried?
Behind Vanguard's ETF change of heart. What Lance Armstrong lost: 6 deals gone bad
Lance Armstrong is the latest in a line of celebrities who lost big endorsements when scandal struck.
What Lance Armstrong lost: 6 deals gone bad ECONOMY AND POLITICS
Uncertainty is rattling one swing state's economy
While recent national jobs and retail-sales data have come in better than forecast, swing-state Virginia has been hurt in large part due to political uncertainty.
Uncertainty is rattling one swing state's economy. INVESTING
Caterpillar looks past the fiscal cliff
Heavy-equipment maker (CAT) trims its earnings outlook but offers some solace: Things won't get worse in 2013.
Caterpillar looks past the fiscal cliff. Poles won't reject euro, but won't rush to join
Although it's suffering like everyone else from the European downturn, Poland is certainly not turning its back on joining the euro, writes David Marsh.
Poles won't reject euro, but won't rush to join.
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