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Coping with the Retirement Killer: Inflation

Retirees should use diversified tools like Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities and real estate investment trusts to preserve buying power against 2.9% inflation in 2025.

  • Soon, retirees should diversify their retirement portfolios to preserve buying power, as a dollar today will likely lose value in 20 or 30 years due to inflation, Current advises.
  • The American dollar's recent slide in 2025 has pushed up import prices, while shelter rose 0.4% in August and this administration's tariffs are raising consumer prices.
  • These options include Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, which rise with CPI, real estate investment trusts paying at least 90% dividends, and online banks offering 4% or more on savings.
  • Adjust retirement calculations now, Morningstar advises, which may mean delaying retirement, trimming spending, and revising withdrawal rates annually to match inflation.
  • Amid longer-term risk, retirees must weigh conservative safety against the need for growth, as failing to invest savvily could erode savings’ buying power after post-pandemic inflation.
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Helena Independent RecordHelena Independent Record
+23 Reposted by 23 other sources
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Coping with the retirement killer: Inflation

Current reports inflation erodes savings over time. To combat this, consider hard assets, TIPS, or high-yield accounts to protect your portfolio.

·Helena, United States
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The income of the employed and retired porteños earned again to the inflation in the second trimester of 2025 but grew the number of households that ask for loans and use savings, according to a report from the Institute of Statistics and Censuses of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (IDECBA). The report reflected that “labour and non-labour income expands well above prices (48.3%)” when it states that “the first ones increase 90.5% in relatio…

Half of the families in Argentina resort to their savings, sell belongings or become indebted in order to reach the end of the month. This is revealed by a new report by the National Institute of Statistics and Censuses (Indec), which shows how households must implement alternative strategies to cover expenses. The study, entitled “Sustaining Strategies: How do Argentine households organize their economy?” details that during the first semester …

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The Eagle broke the news in Bryan, United States on Wednesday, November 12, 2025.
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