Below is a copy of the latest Daily Wrap email from Marketplace.
Sign up for the Marketplace Daily Wrap to receive updates directly in your inbox each weekday evening.
Plus: We’re half way through 2026, what’s your money doing? 
We hope you enjoy today's briefing from Marketplace. Subscribe to more Marketplace newsletters here.
Happy Friday! We’ve got a whole bunch of fascinating personal finance stories for you in today’s newsletter — retirement, student debt, housing and more. My goal is that it’s an empowering read, not a stressful one, as you head into the weekend. First up: While your electric bill has likely risen in recent years, but the cause might not be what you think. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
Seen from above: Several of suburban homes on a cul-de-sac back up to data centers.
Nathan Howard/Getty Images
Data centers lowered electric bills in some places. Can it last?
A recent study found data centers actually drove down average electric bills nationwide through 2024. Marketplace’s Henry Epp explains how that happened.
Two-thirds of Americans think new data centers will increase electricity costs, according to a Harvard poll conducted last year. There’s a logic to that belief: Data centers use tons of power, and average electricity prices have risen 39% nationally over the past five years, according to economic data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

But a recent study from the Electric Power Research Institute, a non-profit research organization funded by government, academia, utilities, and the private sector, finds that new data centers weren’t the main cause of that increase. Replacing aging grid infrastructure, recovering from natural disasters like wildfires and hurricanes, and fluctuating natural gas prices drove electricity prices higher, according to additional research from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and The Brattle Group.

In fact, facilities powering AI and other digital platforms put downward pressure on electricity prices. But as data centers continue to grow, that trend may be starting to reverse.

To explain how a power-hungry data center can actually lower electricity prices, we’ll use an analogy: Say you’re throwing a party, and you’re buying a big spread of food for your guests. You ask each of your guests to chip in an equal amount for their share of the food.

“You know that your buffet is going to cost you $1,000, let's say, and if you have 10 people show up, your cost is much higher per person,” said Robin Millican, director of research programs and strategic partnerships at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy.

That comes out to $100 each, a pretty pricey buffet. But then, you find out your cousin and four of her friends are in town. They want to come to the party, too. That’s five more guests, and they’ll pay their share. So, the price of that buffet goes down for everybody, to $66 per person.

To translate this to power prices and data centers, the “buffet” is the fixed cost of running the power grid: Building and maintaining all the power plants, poles, wires, and substations. The guests are electricity consumers. Your cousin and her friends are a new data center hooking up to the grid.

“You're taking the fixed costs of managing the grid, and you're able to essentially have more customers pay for those fixed costs,” Millican said.

This is partly how data centers pushed down electricity prices in recent years, according to the EPRI study: They helped spread out those fixed costs of providing electricity to more customers.

“Average residential retail rates in the average state would have been about 6% higher without the data centers built from 2019 to 2024,” said Asa Watten, a researcher at EPRI and the co-author of the study.

One big caveat there: It’s a national average.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street wants to believe in AI, so today’s Nasdaq debut from a successful South Korean chipmaker boosted stocks overall. The S&P 500 closed up 0.4%, and both the Dow and Nasdaq rose 0.3%.

  • Brent crude fell today to $76.01 a barrel, but it’s still up on the week as the industry watches a fraying ceasefire in Iran. The average price of gas rose again to $3.88 a gallon.

Government
  • President Donald Trump is still refusing to sign a huge bipartisan bill meant to make housing more affordable. It’s set to become law at midnight anyway.

  • The FTC and several state attorneys general reached a settlement this week enshrining the right of John Deere equipment owners to do their own repairs.
Your money
  • What if income tax followed the cost of living? Academics have proposed it, but the idea has serious political challenges.

  • We’re halfway through the year. Here are 10 things experts say you should do with your finances before back-to-school and holiday shopping throws things out of whack.

  • One last thing on electric bills: Check out this interactive map that shows how your neighbors' electricity bills have changed since 2020.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“The first order of business was to learn, in Italian, construction terms. I didn't want to end up with bright purple floors and green walls that weren't supposed to be.”
— Kiki Leigh, an American renovating a 600-year-old home in Sicily
The Association of Americans Resident Overseas estimates 5.5 million Americans live abroad. Leigh toured 20 homes before she found her 27,000-euro fixer-upper. She’s been documenting the project on TikTok and Instagram, and hopes to move in this summer. She came on our show to talk about it. 
LISTEN NOW
Trump poses on a Trump Shuttle plane in 1989.
Astrid Riecken For The Washington Post via Getty Images
Final note
I guess this is growing up
We’ll leave you with two stories, both paywall-free links from the Wall Street Journal, about how economic forces are shifting key milestones in American life.

First, the Federal Reserve reported nearly half of U.S. adults under 30 live with a parent, up 12 points from before the pandemic. Caveat: the Fed survey doesn’t distinguish between parents who move in with their kids and vice-versa. Still, the cost of housing and student debt are clearly delaying independent living.

At the other end of the milestone spectrum, student debt is delaying retirement, too. The Department of Education reports 3 million borrowers are over 62, nearly double the number in 2018.
Take the Marketplace news quiz!
Listen to “Marketplace,” test your knowledge, brag to your friends.
LET'S GO
 
Thanks for reading! If you enjoyed this newsletter, forward it to a friend. If this newsletter was forwarded to you, subscribe to Marketplace newsletters here.

 Got feedback for us? Just reply to this email. We can't get back to everyone, but we read it all.
Terms of use | Your privacy rights | Contact Us | Donate

© 2025 American Public Media Group. All rights reserved.

Terms of use | Your privacy rights | Contact Us

© 2026 American Public Media Group. All rights reserved.