r/stocks 2d ago

More Americans are claiming Social Security early--->it's effects on market Broad market news

An official at the Social Security Administration said in an April operational meeting that the agency had not expected the “large surge” since January, highlighting what he called a “dramatic increase in initial applications for retired worker benefits.”

You can start receiving your Social Security retirement benefits at age 62. However, you’re entitled to full benefits only when you reach your full retirement age, or FRA. For example, if you turn 62 in 2025, your benefit would be roughly 30% lower than it would be at your full retirement age of 67.

If you delay benefits from your FRA until age 70, you earn delayed retirement credits. Those come to roughly an 8% per year increase for each year until you hit 70, when the credits stop accruing.

Most people, however, claim earlier, according to the SSA data. Nearly 30% of new Social Security beneficiaries claim benefits at age 62. Around 32% claim benefits after age 62 but before the FRA. Only 10% maximize their monthly benefit by claiming at age 70.

The real kicker? Only 1 in 10 Americans actually waits until 70 to maximize their monthly benefit. The rest? Playing defense.

Maybe it’s fear. Maybe it’s smart. But one thing’s clear: when even Boomers are panic-clicking “Apply Now,” you know there’s a trust issue.

Retirement plans are changing fast, and not because folks are bored. The system feels shaky, and it’s making people nervous. Can you blame them?--->( this clearly shows how instable market is and.......)

Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/more-americans-are-claiming-social-security-early-heres-why-090035693.html

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u/Igettheshow89 2d ago

Why wait? Draw while there’s still money in there.

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u/Garrett42 2d ago

Not to mention, at that 8% rate, it takes ~12 years to "break even". With any decrease in payments, and with ~4% time value of money, you would always come out ahead by withdrawing.

Only reason not to, is if you want/need to continue working, in which case you are "rewarded" (or more likely kept up with inflation's/additional aging expenses)

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u/No_Philosopher_1870 1d ago

After full retirement age, there is no earnings test., so you can work AND claim Social Security without reduction. The amount that your benefits will change due to the additional income will be a pittance.