
Imani Moise
Personal Economics Reporter and Writer at The Wall Street Journal
Grew up riding the subway, running with people up in Harlem down on Broadway. Writing about money, technology and people for @WSJ. 2% troll.
Articles
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1 day ago |
wsj.com | Imani Moise |Hannah Lang
Some of the biggest winners of the market’s wild ride this year are those stock investors who stood their groundWhen the trade war tanked the market last month and left even seasoned Wall Street pros scrambling, Andrew Skillman kept his cool. Skillman, a Santa Fe, N.M., resident whose portfolio is split between stocks and bonds, stood pat throughout the market gyrations of early 2025. “I never panicked,” the 60-year-old investor said. “Timing the market is fruitless.
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1 day ago |
fnlondon.com | Imani Moise |Hannah Lang
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1 day ago |
flipboard.com | Imani Moise |Hannah Lang
15 hours agoU.S. and China agree to slash tariffs for 90 days in major trade breakthroughThe U.S. and China on Monday agreed to temporarily suspend most tariffs on each other's goods in a move that shows a major thawing of trade tensions …13 hours agoXi Defiance Pays Off as Trump Meets Most China Trade DemandsXi Jinping’s decision to stand his ground against Donald Trump could hardly have gone any better for the Chinese leader.
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1 week ago |
wsj.com | Imani Moise
Auto lenders tightened lending in recent years after the pandemic car-buying frenzyPeople are rushing to dealerships to buy cars before tariff price increases, but that doesn’t mean they can get financing. Large auto lenders such as Wells Fargo and Capital One have tightened their standards over the past few years, meaning more people are getting rejected as demand rises. And some firms have tightened further in the past few months. Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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3 weeks ago |
wsj.com | Imani Moise
Americans are still spending, but firms are putting away money to cover potential losses and tightening lendingThe largest credit card companies are preparing for the economy to get worse. An economic downturn could mean more customers can’t pay their bills, and banks and credit card companies are trying to get ahead of it, according to their latest earnings reports. Already, delinquencies are rising and are now in line with levels from before the pandemic. Copyright ©2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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