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Check out this open source SS strategy calculator that take all these various permutations into account: https://opensocialsecurity.com/
There’s some confusion here: this is a list of the fifty top Mutual Fund Families, not top brokerage houses.baron list is bogus! out of fifty top brokerage houses, no listing at all for the very best: charles schwab!
do you know how you become best doc in NJ. you buy the plaque each year. failure to purchase and you are delisted next year.
us news and world reports lists the best colleges in america. one of the top five is REED in portland oregon. they are listed as 60th. why? simple, no payola. baron's list should not be considered for guidance.
CBDC...the moves of multiple countries, most prominently China, in the central bank digital currency (CBDC) space has intensified talk about how aggressively the Fed should move. China’s progress has stirred worries that it could undermine the dollar’s position as the global reserve currency.
Powell referenced the growing popularity of digital currencies like bitcoin, though he said they remain inefficient payment mechanisms. Stablecoins, which are tied to specific currencies, offer other advantages.
“Technological advances also offer new possibilities to central banks — including the Fed,” Powell said. “While various structures and technologies might be used, a CBDC could be designed for use by the general public.”
>> Barrons List of 50 Best Mutual Fund Families in 2020 (From February, 2021)baron list is bogus! out of fifty top brokerage houses, no listing at all for the very best: charles schwab!
[...] baron's list should not be considered for guidance.
Absent COLA adjustments, the real value of waiting would be substantially less, and could even be negative. To take an extreme example, suppose prices doubled in a year. Then your 108% of benefits would be worth 54% of what your base benefit was worth a year before. That is, rather than getting an 8% return, one would suffer a 46% loss.>> This idea that SS increases at 8% per year strikes me as fallacious. In "dollars," sure, but not in purchasing power ... the rate at which SS benefits are adjusted for inflation is only a fraction of the rate of inflation actually experienced by most people, especially seniors. Rerun those numbers with annual benefit increases that account for 4.0 to 4.5% inflation, a number more people are actually likely to face
Huh? The 8% figure is for delaying.
Not CoLA.
You might as well say that CPI of course does not take into account the cost of buying or financing a home. That's because homes are capital goods, and CPI measures consumables (services are considered consumables). So instead, CPI considers rent equivalent (what you'd have to pay in rent for the shelter you own).
CPI of course does not take into account (e.g.) property tax increases, or only very indirectly.
That's the key question, because all we have here is a bald assertion about costs people are likely to face. Spot checking a few numbers ...
But on what bases do you state what you state?
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