The inventory gluts caused by inflationary conditions aren’t going to be worked off quickly, according to an exclusive CNBC Supply Chain Survey.
While the early part of the pandemic saw an unprecedented online shopping boom, eager shoppers have been returning to reopened stores.
Young moviegoers don’t mind paying extra fees to see films on the big screen, if it means they get to sit in the best seats in the house, a new survey says.
Consumers in China plan to pay up when it comes to hotels, a Morgan Stanley survey found in late January.
Nearly 40% of CEOs think their companies won’t be “economically viable” within the next decade without major changes, PwC’s annual global CEO survey found.
One-third of couples don’t talk about finances until after marriage. Still, people do have financial deal breakers when it comes to dating.
When it comes to financial resolutions for 2023, there’s one goal at the top of many people’s lists — building an emergency fund.
CFOs expect the Dow Jones Industrial Average to fall below 30,000 and the economy to enter a recession next year, according to a CNBC survey.
A survey indicated that consumers see one-year inflation running at a 5.2% pace, down 0.7 percentage point from the October reading.
The survey found 61% of the public think Trump should not seek the presidency, compared with 30% who believe he should.
A survey of over 2,000 retail investors found that over 80% think the worst of the stock market rout will be over within six months.
49% of survey respondents said they have fallen in love with someone they weren’t initially physically attracted to.
The University of Michigan Survey of Consumers posted a 54.7 reading for November, down 8.7% from the previous month’s reading.