Financial Literacy stories
Retail investors can now build and test rules-based strategies in plain English, as SoFi folds the platform into its app after buying Composer Securities.
Available first to premium members, the chat-based tool lets users manage spending, debt and savings inside the app as AI finance rivals multiply.
Users can now ask ChatGPT about their own spending and savings after OpenAI added a Plaid-linked finance preview for US Pro subscribers.
Players must pick out a mule hidden in crowded scenes as banks face rising pressure to curb fraud and recruit awareness.
More than 642,000 young people in eight countries will gain AI and financial literacy lessons as the partnership enters its second year.
Asia-based Xero users can now compare revenue growth, margins and cash metrics with local peers to spot problems earlier.
Customers can now quiz Starling's app before sending money, as UK fraud losses climb and romance scams hit savers hardest.
Teenagers at Stamford Bridge are learning budgeting through a football club simulation as FICO begins its first UK financial education push.
Eligible UK savers can now access tax-advantaged investing on Count's platform, as it tackles the advice gap for lower-balance customers.
Families in Singapore can now give children controlled access to overseas spending, with limits, monitoring and no foreign transaction fees.
More than a third of UK business decision-makers now use social media for tax guidance, risking errors that can inflate bills or cashflow.
Most Australian workers remain unaware of the new payday super rule, leaving employers to explain changes that affect payroll and retirement savings.
Fresh capital gives the Vancouver fintech a runway for expansion as it seeks federal bank status in Canada's tightly held market.
The UK tax overhaul is set to bring more self-employed workers and landlords online, creating demand for cheaper filing tools with human checks.
Australian investors gain a mobile crypto platform as IG bets rising demand and new rules will draw mainstream savers into digital assets.
Households and businesses could be spared more fraud losses as banks, telcos and platforms widen checks and scam-blocking codes.
Women in the UK are far less likely than men to buy crypto, with many saying they lack the confidence or know-how to start investing.
Only 5 per cent of 15-to-24-year-olds feel confident investing, as new research shows most young Australians want help starting.
Customers will soon be able to manage savings, spending and borrowing for family and business in one place as the firm broadens beyond investing.
Customers will spend less time hunting for bills and security settings as the bank rolls out a simpler mobile and online layout.