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Social Security's retirement trust fund faces shortfall

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 · 6h · on MSN
Social Security retirement trust fund will run dry in 2032 unless Congress acts
Tens of millions of retirees and other Americans could see smaller monthly Social Security checks in six years if lawmakers don’t act to shore up the program’s finances, according to an annual report ...

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 · 12h · on MSN
Social Security’s retirement trust fund faces a funding shortfall a year earlier than expected
 · 12h
Social Security retirement trust fund depletion date 2032
 · 10h
Social Security shortfall expected to accelerate, with funds at critical low in 2032
The shortfall will be driven in part by a drop in immigration and Trump’s tax cuts, trustees say, resulting in trimmed benefits.

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 · 12h
Social Security funds could run short by 2032, program's Trustees warn
 · 6h
Social Security shortfall looms
 · 6h
New report shows Social Security checks could drop by hundreds in 2032
At that point, Social Security would only be able to pay 78% of scheduled retirement benefits — a cut that would lower monthly checks by hundreds of dollars for the average retiree, Newsnation reports...

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 · 10h
Social Security retirement fund expected to fall short sooner, in 2032
 · 11h
US Social Security trust fund set for 2032 insolvency, report finds
2h

A Young Person Has 'Mixed Feelings' About Retirement Accounts. Says, In 40 Years, Things Will Either Be So Bad Or So Good That It Won't Matter

The idea of locking money away for retirement can feel difficult for young people who are looking decades into an uncertain future. One Gen Z investor said in a recent Reddit post that they have “mixed feelings” about retirement
10h

Here's What Gen X Should Know About Retirement

Gen X workers can take penalty-free withdrawals from tax-advantaged retirement accounts at age 59 1/2 and can begin Social Security at 62. Creating a budget, changing investment strategies and revisiting estate plans are all tasks Gen X should consider.
10hon MSN

Here's the retirement challenge nobody talks about

Many Americans spend decades saving for retirement, but lack a plan for using that money once they stop working, a new survey finds. Here's what to know.
13hon MSN

This is the most underrated retirement savings move you should know about, says the head of Citizens Wealth Management

A retirement Q&A with Michael Cherny
2don MSN

Americans change retirement expectations as costs climb

Nearly half of Americans do not expect to be financially prepared for retirement, and many worry their savings may not last.
4h

The Average American Has Worked for 6 Employers and 23% Still Have Multiple Old Retirement Accounts, Fidelity’s 2026 Study Finds

The typical American worker now passes through six employers over a career, and each job change leaves behind a retirement account to keep track of. Fidelity’s 2026 study found that 23% of Americans with retirement accounts still have multiple balances sitting in old or current workplace plans.
7d

The Typical Couple's Cost of Retirement in Every State—And the Nest Egg You'll Need to Afford It

A comfortable retirement can come with very different price tags depending on where you choose to live. A new Investopedia study compares the costs in all 50 states.
1d

QQQI: A Good Retirement Investment

NEOS Nasdaq-100 High-Income Fund offers a stable NAV, high monthly income, and tracks the Nasdaq-100. See why I rate QQQI ETF a buy now.
MSN on MSN
8h

Retirement Reality Check: The Average 49-Year-Olds 401(k) May Surprise You Are You Keeping Up Financially?

As retirement draws closer, many Americans in their late 40s are taking a closer look at their long-term savings.
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