Amazon (AMZN) Prime Video users will be facing higher prices if they want ad-free viewing. Starting January 29, customers will have to pay an additional $2.99 per month if they want to watch Prime Video content without ads. Yahoo Finance Senior Reporter Alexandra Canal reports the details in the video above. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live. Editor's note: This article was written by Stephanie Mikulich
Amazon (AMZN) Prime Video users will be facing higher prices if they want ad-free viewing. Starting January 29, customers will have to pay an additional $2.99 per month if they want to watch Prime Video content without ads.
Yahoo Finance Senior Reporter Alexandra Canal reports the details in the video above.
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.
Editor's note: This article was written by Stephanie Mikulich

Zacks
According to the average brokerage recommendation (ABR), one should invest in Amazon (AMZN). It is debatable whether this highly sought-after metric is effective because Wall Street analysts' recommendations tend to be overly optimistic. Would it be worth investing in the stock?

Associated Press Finance
An 18th century British painting stolen by mobsters in 1969 has been returned more than a half-century later to the family that bought the painting for $7,500 during the Great Depression, the FBI’s Salt Lake City field office announced Friday. The 40-inch-by-50-inch (102-cm-by-127-cm) John Opie painting — titled “The Schoolmistress” —is the sister painting of a similar work housed in the Tate Britain art gallery in London. Authorities believe the Opie piece was stolen with the help of a former New Jersey lawmaker then passed among organized crime members for years before it ended up in the southern Utah city of St. George.

Reuters
Inflation is cooling, but not quite quick enough to allow the U.S. central bank to deliver its first interest-rate reduction by March, with traders betting on Friday that May is the more likely kickoff to a round of Fed rate cuts this year. A Commerce Department report on Friday showed inflation by the Federal Reserve's targeted measure rose 2.6% in December from a year earlier. Underlying core inflation, which strips out food and energy prices and which the Fed views as a good gauge for where price pressures are heading, was running at below 2% on a three-month and a six-month basis, the data showed.
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