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Cost Of Living Can Make Or Break Your Retirement

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investingchannel.com

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TheJuice@news.investingchannel.com

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Wed, Feb 7, 2024 07:31 PM

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So, start planning now Brought to you by You've likely heard a million different warnings about the

So, start planning now [View in browser]( [The Juice Logo] Proprietary Data Insights Top Stock Searches This Month Rank Name Searches #1 Tesla 569,548 #2 Nvidia 457,451 #3 Apple 32,506 #4 Amazon.com 32,259 #5 Microsoft 27,650 #ad [Top Stock Picks for Massive Profits]( Brought to you by [Stansberry Research]( [Banks trigger dollar shakeup]( [ Stansberry Research - Banks trigger dollar shakeup]( You've likely heard a million different warnings about the changes taking place in America's financial system right now... How the White House plans to take the dollar fully digital... Track and monitor every transaction you make... or ban cash forever. You may even have heard our rivals abroad – now known as the BRICS+ group – are preparing to launch a rival currency to "destroy the dollar." The problem is... those wild predictions all miss the real story unfolding in the US financial system today. It involves the US dollar... and a scheme backed by the Federal Reserve, US Treasury, and 41 major banks. This huge shift is bigger than a digital dollar or anything like that... and it could have seismic implications not just for our currency, but for our savings, retirement, and whole way of life. The problem is, I haven't seen anyone out there properly explain what's really going on – and what you need to do to prepare for it. Today I'm stepping forward to change all that. I just posted everything you need to know about it online, including the three steps I recommend you take to prepare, 100% free of charge. [Just click here now for the full story](. Cost Of Living Can Make Or Break Your Retirement There’s not much we can write about within or on the periphery of The Juice’s wheelhouse that doesn’t have something to do with retirement. Because whether you’re aiming for traditional retirement or you know you’ll never retire, everything from [discussions around ETF investing]( to today’s concern — cost of living — has a retirement angle. This is part of the reason why we made it our focus for 2024. Because it’s so all-encompassing, not to mention important. We have plans to go deeper into not only how to invest for retirement, but on what to do once you’re there. Or what to do if maybe you just want to pull back. Of course, the best strategy is to make more money and watch it grow, but most of us have limitations in this area. So, at some point, we have to look at cost of living. However, it’s better to do that sooner rather than later. If you can manage to live in a place that helps you right-size your budget now, you can save more for when you need it without having to scramble and go through a move later in life. In tomorrow’s Juice, we focus on housing with a look at the latest price trends. (Preview: we’re already looking right on [our housing prediction]( for the year). Today, overall cost of living thanks to a very good annual study Numbeo puts out on global cost of living. The [study]( is different in presentation and methodology for several key factors: - It considers not only housing (using rent as the metric), but also groceries and restaurant prices. - It calculates a local purchasing power number which quantifies “the relative purchasing power in a given city based on the average net salary. A domestic purchasing power of 40 means that residents with an average salary can afford, on average, 60% less goods and services compared to residents of New York City with an average salary.” - And, as introduced in the last bullet point, it uses New York City as the baseline. So, on the cost of living metrics, New York City is set at 100. If a city scores 120, it’s 20% more expensive than NYC. if a city scores 50, it’s 50% less expensive than NYC. Some fun — and some useful — takeaways. First, it’s more expensive to live in the following cities than New York City, based on the metrics Numbeo uses. You’ll see the baseline comparison number in parenthesis. - Hamilton, Bermuda (137). Largely because of the relatively high cost of groceries and restaurants. Rent actually scores at 89, so it’s 11% less expensive than in NYC. - Zurich, Switzerland (122.2). - Basel, Switzerland (121.8). - Lausanne, Switzerland (117.9). - Geneva, Switzerland (109.6). - Bern, Switzerland (107.6). In all of these Swiss cities, rent is considerably lower. Again, it’s the high cost of food there that, to be honest, we didn’t know was a thing. - San Jose, CA (114.8). - San Francisco, CA (109.3). - Washington, DC (102.6). Here again, housing is less expensive in all of the U.S. places that rank costlier than NYC. It’s the cost of groceries and, more so, going to restaurants that gets you. Plus, these overall cost of living numbers are all adjusted with local purchasing power (discussed above) factored into the equation. As we noted the other day, forgoing an extra bedroom you don’t actually need can [save you several hundred, if not around $1,000]( in most decent size cities. So, your actual on-the-ground cost of living in a big city varies widely based on your preferences and subsequent decisions. That said, people who can’t afford to buy in, say, The Bay Area, DC, NYC or the U.S. cities that come in after, including Seattle (99.7), Atlanta (95.3), Honolulu (95.0), Los Angeles (92.5), probably also don’t like the prospects of $2,000-plus rent headed into retirement. As such, you need to find a place where you can buy now or eventually or rent for relatively less now and, hopefully not, forever. This brings us to a drum we haven’t beat in a while. But that doesn’t mean it still isn’t relevant. We have written a lot about [the places where your money goes furthest](. It can make sense to consider these places as you make the connections between your financial present and future. Numbeo didn’t rank all of these small cities. But that’s okay. We know you can get a lot more for your money in those places as long as you’re able to maintain an above average salary. Here again, local purchasing power — the relationship between the typical income and costs in a place — matters big time. This is a thing, for example, when we discuss [home ownership among Generation Z](. What good is it to move to a lower cost of living area if there aren’t good-paying jobs? You might lower your expenses, but if your income goes down by the same amount — or close to it — it might not be worth the hassle. Even with an eye on the future. Because higher income today can mean heftier savings down the road. So the key is making more than people make, on average, in a low cost of living area and saving as much of that surplus as possible. The least expensive U.S. city on Numbeo’s list is Cincinnati (63.7) with a rent score of 31.4 and relatively low grocery and restaurant numbers. Cincinnati is a good example of a place to consider, especially for younger people. The local purchasing power number there is 126, meaning residents of Cincinnati can afford 26% more goods and services on the average salary than NYC residents can on the average salary there. Not too shabby at all. However, make above the average and you’re looking even better. Especially when you consider that the median price of a home in Cincinnati, as of December 2023, was $260,000. However, that’s up 11.4% year over year and houses in Cincinnati receive three offers and sell within 14 days, on average. What does this tell The Juice? That the migration to less expensive places is on, which, over time, will make them more, if not outright expensive. You remember when everybody fled to Oakland, Brooklyn, Portland, Austin and even Las Vegas? Those cities aren’t cheap anymore. Cincinnati is but one example of a competitively hot housing market in a medium-size city. As implicit as it might be … as ignored by the media as it is … this illustration makes the connection between the nation’s housing and retirement crisis. Fix your own housing situation today and you might just improve your retirement situation tomorrow. The Bottom Line: In tomorrow’s Juice, we update the landscape on housing. Newsflash: It’s not getting any less expensive. Frankly, we’ve never seen an ongoing story bungled so badly by the major media. They act like we’re in a cooled-off market. The numbers say otherwise. Anyhow, housing. It really can be the pulp of your retirement. Skim a little off of the top of your budget on housing and the savings can add up to wealth you can eventually use to lighten your workload or get rid of it altogether. [-facebook-share]( [-twitter-share]( [-linkedin-share]( [-email-share](mailto:?body= https%3A%2F%2Finvestingchannel.com%2F%3Fp%3D605183?utm_medium=ic-nl&utm_source=115897 ) News & Insights Freshly Squeezed - [2 Mega-Cap Pharma Stocks to Buy for More Upside]( - [All eyes are on Real Estate & Private Equity as investors hedge against inflation]( - [Need To Find A Good ETF? Go Here Now]( - [Light Street Capital Returned 46% in 2023: Top 15 Picks]( [News & Insights-facebook-share]( [News & Insights-twitter-share]( [News & Insights-linkedin-share]( [News & Insights-email-share](mailto:?body= https%3A%2F%2Finvestingchannel.com%2F%3Fp%3D605183?utm_medium=ic-nl&utm_source=115897 ) [We want to hear from you. Let us know your thoughts by clicking here]( [Pixel] [InvestingChannel Logo](#) Follow us on: [Facebook Logo]( [LinkedIn Logo]( [Twitter Logo]( [Instagram Logo]( To ensure delivery of all emails, [allow us on your list](. Manage your subscriptions with our [preference center](. [Unsubscribe here.]( View our privacy policy [here](. Copyright ©2024 InvestingChannel. All rights reserved. 1325 Avenue of the Americas, Floor 27 & 28 New York, New York 10019 Disclaimer: This is not investment advice. This InvestingChannel, Inc., newsletter is for information purposes only and is based on opinion. Futures, forex, stock, and options trading are not appropriate for all investors. There is a substantial risk of loss associated with trading these markets. Losses can and will occur. No system or methodology has ever been developed that can ensure returns or eliminate losses. InvestingChannel, Inc., makes no representation or implication that using any of the methodologies or systems in this newsletter will generate returns or insure against losses. Investors should be cautious about any and all investments and are advised to conduct their own due diligence prior to making any investment decisions. [Link](

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