Sorry, I haven’t been that active with carnivals lately
but that hasn’t stopped me from visiting them and catching a few articles of interest.
I really should get back to joining the carnival crowd at some point but I’ve been pretty short on time lately. We’ll see how it goes!
Anyway, here are some great picks from just a few of the finance carnivals this week.
The Carnival of Personal Finance #136 is at the Green Panda Treehouse:
- Getting Organized: Monitoring Your Credit Report @ My Dollar Plan
- Signaling Wealth @ My Wealth Builder
- Stranger In A Strange Land @ Early Retirement Extreme
The Festival of Frugality 109 was hosted by On Financial Success:
- A Trick To Become More Frugal: Will I Regret It? @ The Financial Blogger
- 10 Things that Bring Success in Personal Finance: #8 Live a Frugal Life @ PT Money
- Penny Pinching for College Students @ Campus Grotto
- Stock trades: Free stock trades from Zecco, Cheap stock trades from TradeKing, Stock news and Investment info at INO TV Free, No cost Trend Analysis for stocks
- Earn top returns: FNBO Direct [1.90%], HSBC Direct [1.65%], WTDirect [1.76%], E*Trade Bank [0.95%], ING Direct [.25% to 1.65%]
- Cash bonus: Discover More [$50], American Express [$25], Lending Club [$25]
If you enjoyed this post, you can get free regular updates through our RSS Feed, or you can have our latest posts delivered to your email inbox by supplying your address here. Your address will only be used for this purpose, and you can unsubscribe anytime.
{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }
Thanks for choosing me. I kinda liked that one myself and was surprised that it did not get more response when it passed through pfblogs. Maybe I just suck at creating catchy titles :O) The Honest Dollar caught the Strangeland post too and there might be a follow up.
Green Panda really did a fantastic job. Great carnival!
thx for the mention!
The penny pinching for college students article seems like it’s written by someone who hasn’t been in college either for awhile, or ever. Get the free stuff that banks hand out? Nothing like a hard pull on the credit history.
Thanks for the mention!