BlackRock Chairman and CEO Larry Fink talks about ways to make sure Americans can retire with dignity. He says baby boomers need to step up and help the younger generations. He speaks to Bloomberg's David Westin.
I'm a 48-year-old doctor, burnt out from long hours and stress. Never invested in a retirement portfolio, fearing an economic collapse. Planning to retire soon, I wonder: If you had $1 million for safe stock investment over 4-5 years, how would you begin?
A healthy portfolio needs three essentials: ETFs for diversification, cash-flow assets like dividend stocks, and leading tech stocks such as NVDA, GOOGL, and AMD. While I can't provide personalized advice, consulting a reliable advisor is crucial for proper investment planning.
Opting for a financial advisor is currently the optimal approach for navigating the stock market, particularly for those nearing retirement. I've been consulting with one for a while, and my portfolio has grown by 85% since Q4 2022.
She goes by "Jill Marie Carroll" I suggest you look her up. To be honest, I almost didn't buy the idea of letting someone handle growing my finance, but so glad I did.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
I’ve been diligently working, saving and contributing towards financial freedom and early retirement, but the economy so far since the pandemic has eaten away most of my portfolio, what I want to know is this: Do I keep contributing to my portfolio in these unstable markets or do I look into alternative sectors.
My job doesn’t permit me the time to properly analyze my holdings/evaluate stocks myself, so I’ve had a fiduciary actively restructuring my portfolio for the past 7 years now to match the present market condition and that’s how I’ve been able to stay afloat, knowing when to buy and sell…maybe you should do the same.
I appreciate it. After searching her name online and reviewing her credentials, I'm quite impressed. I've contacted her as I could use all the help I can get. A call has been scheduled.
He's pushing 401k plans because he knows if we switch from Social Security to 401k, that means companies like his will get trillions more cash to play with and his company can make tons of money from "management fees."
Larry Fink: We need people to invest more in their retirement plans run by Blackrock for ESG purposes. And we need more private funding of infrastructure run by Blackrock for ESG purposes. GIVE MORE MONEY TO BLACKROCK FOR ESG PURPOSES!!!!!!
I'm a 52yrs Director in a Tech company and I consider myself a high income earner at $350,000 per annum, I have a retirement account account but i still want to explore opportunities for short term gains before i start working less in few years.
@@Aurierserge50 Yes true, I learnt that in 2020, when I lost almost everything. But I switched to using a financial advisor and I've been returning at least $98k every month so I’ve been sticking to investing via an Advisor.
Yes true, I learnt that in 2020, when I lost almost everything. But I switched to using a financial advisor and I've been returning at least $98k every month so I’ve been sticking to investing via an Advisor.
@@Aurierserge50 I think having an investment advisor is the way to go. I've been with one because I lack the expertise for the market. I made over $490K during the recent dip, highlighting that there's more to the market than we average folks know.
We have plenty of money to waste throughout the world. We can provide dignity to older Americans. Most of us don't have a job that provide us "purpose". We work to eat. This guy is an absolute prick.
Suggest reading, Capital Order by Clara Mattei. She is an economist who dug deep to understand austerity shortly after WW I. She clearly describes the playbook. Austerity and what she calls the "trinity" are designed to maintain capitalisms control over workers. Austerity, itself, is not an effective tool to manage debt as these folks as well as politicians promise. Best
The avg. American is having a tough time, I know I am not alone. There are others in same position as me. By certain statistics: 22% of americans have no retirement savings. 64% are worried that they will not have money in latter years while 47% of adults who are not yet retired think they have to work part-time in retirement. How can I best grow the 100k I have saved seperately outside retirement access which of course had depleted over the years?
I agree with the reply above. I also think you should think about steps you can take to start. Start somewhere. Anything is better than being frozen even.
Monica Mary Strigle’ is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
How can you expect him to live with only billions in wealth,14 vacation houses around the world and then fly to Davos on the same corporate jet he had last year? Show some compassion, man.
It does make my blood boil listening to him rattle on. It's incredibly difficult problem. As a physician I took care of a number of seniors and I feel that this issue bleeds into their health. There were people that needed to work longer just to survive. Then there were those who'd actually were able to save and they enjoyed themselves with their free time. The people I felt most sorry for were those who basically had saved however there children had made some poor decisions. Essentially they were helping raise their grandchildren. The people who were healthiest was the group in the middle, they had savings and weren't stressed with finances or raising their grandchildren. Frankly the world is changing fast it makes no sense for 70+ year old people to be running things as they can't phantom the disruptive forces that are hitting them.
He's trying to convince us to stay in the workforce so companies like his can keep wages as low as possible until they can get all the kinks out of A.I. to replace us. He compares us to other countries that save a lot but doesn't mention those countries are socialist with how they approach healthcare and housing. So the people there can afford to save more.
The current market/economy is unnecessarily tougher for boomers/senior citizens, I’m used to just buying and holding assets which doesn’t seem applicable to the current rollercoaster market plus inflation is catching up with my portfolio. I’m really worried about survival after retirement.
A lot of folks downplay the role of advlsors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember couple summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to help my business stay afloat, hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation, from $275k to $850k
I envy you, I’m still trying to recover from losses I incurred in 2021/2022, who is this advis0r you work with, I’m intrigued and I could use some quality guidance
I envy you, I’m still trying to recover from losses I incurred in 2021/2022, who is this advis0r you work with, I’m intrigued and I could use some quality guidance
I envy you, I’m still trying to recover from losses I incurred in 2021/2022, who is this advis0r you work with, I’m intrigued and I could use some quality guidance
I envy you, I’m still trying to recover from losses I incurred in 2021/2022, who is this investment adviser you work with, I’m intrigued and I could use some quality guidance
It's amazing that the reason why you feel poor is because of how uneducated you are. The problem is you are so uneducated you cannot comprehend your own ignorance. Good luck in life.
@@Hoser584No..he doesn't even have the money to buy up that much if he bought everything in the minnesota twin cities metro area, hedgefunds and billionaires and banks are investing in farmland for that explosive demographic growth and decrease in labor lmfao...larry has a 3 trillion invested into americans housing market...who the hell gave him that much money? community reinvestment act slippery willy put on steroids, deregulated the financial industry by repeal of glass stegal, sold out americas manufacturing to china via pntr with china, then left bankruptcy reform law on bush's desk..and the timer on that bubble collapse was magnificent, now we have the obamacare bubble, the boomers who are 50+% of the population retiring, and the pension crisis because all those companies that went out of business due to china trade dumping dumped their entire pensions onto we the tax payers, and we the tax payers are still paying for the FDIC, not to mention should THAT happen again we the tax payers are on the hook for the FDIC again... the FDIC should have been removed when the deregulation of the financial system was done, before bankruptcy reform was done....the entire financial industry would have stepped back and assessed their risk before rewriting bankruptcy reform under crack smoker brain dead bush jr. now we have retaliation for a 2nd term alzheimers reagan in office with dementia joe blow the schmo. get buffet on the phone how many trillions does he got? gates too
Retirement becomes truly fulfilling when you possess two essential elements: ample financial resources and a meaningful purpose in life. Make prudent investment choices to secure good returns and ensure a comfortable retirement.
Rising prices have affected my intention of retiring at 46, working part-time, and building my savings. I'm worried about whether individuals who weathered the 2008 financial crisis found it less challenging than my current situation. The stock market's volatility, coupled with a reduced income, is making me anxious about having enough for retirement.
I completely agree; I am 56 years old, recently retired, and have approximately $1,250,000 in external retirement funds. I am debt free and have very little money in retirement funds compared to the total value of my portfolio over the past three years. To be honest, having a portfolio-advisor for investing is genius!
g mind sharing details of your advisor pleas? i've started gaining more cash flow with my employment and looking at putting money into stocks towards retirement
'Melissa Rose Francks' covers things like investing, insurance, making sure retirement is well funded, going over tax benefits, ways to have a volatility buffer for investment risk. many things like that. Just take a look at her full name on the internet. She is well known so it shouldn't be hard to find he
As a 58-year-old laid-off person, I wish I could find work to continue paying my mortgage and contributing to retirement. Finding work is very difficult. Raising the age of retirement won't help if you can't find work.
@@jfdb59 age discrimination. I was stuck in a dead end toxic job in my 50s, applied to many jobs for which I was qualified. Many companies ghosted me, didn't even respond to let me know they received my resume'. Several said they hired from within. Others actually asked me why was I applying for the position as I was approaching retirement age. It was very disheartening.
@@jfdb59Not according to anyone I've talked to. Finding jobs right now is very hard, especially in the SF Bay Area. But yes, I believe it is an age thing as well. I know many in my age range who were laid off and can't find work. I just read an article today about older people (45-64) not being able to find work for years after being laid off-one guy sent in over 1000 resumes/applications. I still have hope and a lot of skills.
look at warren buffett, he is running a major conglomerate well into his 90s. im sure you also can be on the road driving your truck into your 80s atleast, lol
@@valdomero738 I have no clue what that means can you explain the comment, also is there an equivalent term for Christians and Muslims? who are all Abrahamic bothers and sisters.
So...work longer (for companies he profits from), invests Social Security funds in the equity markets (His company has over 10 TRILLION dollars under management in equity markets), use more drugs (from the companies he owns)... He's so distraught about the budget deficit that he pays damn near no taxes, fights against estate as well as inheritance taxes (paid by less than 0.26% of ALL Americans) and started the largest Bitcoin etf. He's focused on "HIS" grandchildren (not yours). Remeber folks, live to work, exchange your time and life energy for his profits. Seems like he really cares....did I miss something?
You missed the part where BlackRock et al want to turn Ukraine into a greater Israel and his ilk believe the useless eaters need to die off in huge numbers due to overpopulation.
sir, biggest joke is blackrock handles your pension money (401k) ? ofcourse nobody should retire so they can keep playing around with those moneys. tsars and kings of our time.
@@CobraPR893 This is way beyond any State or Deep State buddy...These Multi-National power brokers are larger and more influencial than MOST Nation states. It's just Math; No conspiracy required.
That's exactly what I heard, and 'people [not him, other people] will really be happier working into later and later old age.' This is a big problem, as you age you get MUCH less productive for a number of reasons, so just working another decade or more isn't going to work because you become so inefficient that you can't justify anything above minimum wage, if you can hold work at all.
This CEO is not to be listened to Right now there are people who work and can't get out of poverty. Most people cannot afford all these great medical breakthroughs. He is a pompous fool who does not know anything about working for a real person living a real life. Why should we need to work the last years of our life. Social security is not broke we just need all people to pay into the system for the full year on all of their earnings He is a believer in the foundation of slavery and personally disgusts me
It really is shocking how out of touch the people who manage our money are. These guys have zero grasp of reality for the ‘little people.’ French Revolution vibes. Just let us eat cake.. ey Larry?
Oh yeah, my favorite was Peter Schiff talking about how owning real estate wasn't a good place to put your money (speaking to the masses). For the VAST majority of people paying of their house is the first step they'll make toward any independence. It's that they're wildly out of touch. When you have 4 houses (or are pretending you do) just buying one more house isn't a great use of money. If you own ZERO houses paying off your house is definitely arguably the smartest thing you can do, or at least should be a heavy focus financially. I don't think these guys know how out of touch they are or how ridiculous they sound to the average person, or how horrifically idiotic some of their advice is from this side of the income spectrum. Schiff was just shilling though, he was selling a dream, probably has been for a while
For the past 25 years Gov & Corporations have created the conditions for the problem. Paper Ceiling, Mass layoffs, outsourcing overseas, low wages, ect,.
It only takes $200/month to be a millionaire by the time you retire, but you have to start early. That’s an AVERAGE, of course. As you get older you’ll likely be able to afford more per month.
Blame capital owners not government. Government is a machine/tool, the issue is that under our economic system it’s controlled by people like him. If working people were in control of the government, none of this would be happening.
@@truthsayer9534well, that shows you how dire the situation is. People don’t have $200 to spare every month. Also, it doesn’t work that way under macroeconomics. If stats came out that people were saving an additional $200 per month, landlords could increase prices, grocery stores would price gouge and inflation would skyrocket to correct such an aberration. Sound familiar? People like Fink control the valuation of the dollar, and wealth redistribution. They’d never allow the U.S. population to be economically independent, it would mean people wouldn’t have to put up with poor working conditions and pay-they’d be able to go on strike, and have more democratic control over society. They need the population to be desperate in order to maintain existing power dynamics.
@@xx133 $200/month is obviously an AVERAGE. When you’re young it’s lower, then you start making more money and it’s more than $200/month. The government already takes 6.2% of your check for social security. If they invested that in a market index fund instead of the measly
@@xx133 I don’t buy that people can’t find $200/month in their budget of cigarettes, Starbucks, iPhones and ten different streaming services. That’s about $6.67 per day. I don’t buy it. You have to want it or you’ll always be poor.
He's the guy that invests in Apple which pushes us to buy a new Iphone every 2 yrs. The rich are 2 faced as they need us to spend yet they want us to save. Well, which is it. If we don't spend the rich cut our jobs and find an engineer who can do the work without us. Its a catch-22.
People that sit on their a*s in climate-controlled comfort can work longer for sure BUT...those of us that worked physically in the skilled trades are worn out at 65. Yes, that was a choice I made because I enjoyed building the things that kept electricity flowing and the computer chips that allow Larry to "manage" money for others to his extreme benefit. He'd love to privatize social security and everything else so multi nationals can control it all.
65? You must be a peasant! Many government workers are retired around age 40! Bullying the public to steal fine money, shooting their dogs, and beating them where is you out you know! By the way, will need to increase your taxes again to pay for their relaxation....
Well, to be fair, think about how much better social security would look had it been privatized and every dollar of it been invested in the S&P 500 or a government employee pension fund since the day you started working. 20-50 years of gains and compounding interest. Millions of dollars. A Much better picture than what it looks like today....add 401k + match or Roth IRA funds to the same pot and everyone would be able to retire. The government ruined it for us and stole it.
@@plantsplantz2116 *Well, WE already DID that in the 1980's, and the reality, is that's the only way to pay for it!* *Average age of death was 60 years old in 1940* *But full retirement age was 65 THEN!* You would either need to double or triple the taxes paid for it, or raise the retirement age* *Math and Accounting are zero sum games*
@@fredschnerbert1238 "the years of man 70, and if for reasons of strength, 80." So no, retired workers died about the same age (75) as today, since forever, you corporate toady
Larry's net worth is $1.2 billion. I wonder when was the last time he mowed his front and back yard, did his own laundry, cooked his own meals & cleaned up afterwards, suffered through traffic to and from work, did any home or auto repair needed to keep things going. Stack all this on top of a 40-50 hour work week and then let's see what Larry say.
Hey Larry- you're so committed to solving the shortage, let's see you and others like you put your money where your mouth is. Raise the cap to where you and your brethen have to pay in more!
I disliked Blackrock decades ago when they destroyed the company I worked for in 2000. But, seeing Larry Fink reminds me of what garbage these fake "investors" are. Screw this guy.
Hey Mr. Fink, the miracles of science and medicine do not help much when you do physical work in cold/heat, hazardous environments all your life. How about letting people that work where there is no retirement, no 401K. let them contribute more than the $7000 per year IRA, or Roth or traditional. America is a shit show
Plus the gov can just take away your property rights as demonstrated during their manufactured plandemic and decided that tenants no longer were required to pay rent and the land lords couldn't evict them when they didn't pay. Who cares if the land lords can't pay their mortgage.
No, everyone has access to either a 401k, IRA or a Roth IRA. Why should taxpayers or corporations fund your retirement? I’ve NEVER relied on anyone else to fund my retirement. ESPECIALLY the government.
@@truthsayer9534because we live in a society, worked hard for decades and made said corporations massive profits. We all pay into social security, and we all can collect, by the way. It keeps 2/3rds of the elderly out of poverty-not to mention the disabled and infirmed. It would actually cost society more to not have social security. Also, good luck recovering from economic crashes if a large part of the population isn’t able to pay their rent because it’s tied up in the stock market. It’s for that reason that 401ks have been a failure. The people that need them the most can’t get them, or don’t make enough money to fund their retirement accounts because corporations don’t want to pay them for the work they do. Therefore, at very least, a corporation is required to pay into social security. The issue is, capital owners have redistributed wealth (tens of trillions) to themselves by methodically undoing laws which were enacted following the Great Depression. Also, there’s a tax cap on social security. So it’s wealth redistribution to the wealthiest that is to blame for social security not being adequately funded. People like Fink want to privatize social security, because that means they’d have access to trillions of dollars of your retirement funds to buy stocks in their corporations. Eliminating social security also means that you’re completely at the mercy of corporations-for life. I recommend watching what life was like during the great depression in order to understand why your great grandparents fought for it tooth and nail, and why every industrialized nation on the planet copied said model.
@@truthsayer9534because we live in a society, worked hard for decades and made said corporations massive profits. We all pay into social security, and we all can collect, by the way. It keeps 2/3rds of the elderly out of poverty-not to mention the disabled and infirmed. It would actually cost society more to not have social security. Also, good luck recovering from economic crashes if a large part of the population isn’t able to pay their rent because it’s tied up in the stock market. It’s for that reason that 401ks have been a failure. The people that need them the most can’t get them, or don’t make enough money to fund their retirement accounts because corporations don’t want to pay them for the work they do. Therefore, at very least, a corporation is required to pay into social security. The issue is, capital owners have redistributed wealth (tens of trillions) to themselves by methodically undoing laws which were enacted following the Great Depression. Also, there’s a tax cap on social security. So it’s wealth redistribution to the wealthiest that is to blame for social security not being adequately funded. People like Fink want to privatize social security, because that means they’d have access to trillions of dollars of your retirement funds to buy stocks in their corporations. Eliminating social security also means that you’re completely at the mercy of corporations-for life. I recommend watching what life was like during the great depression in order to understand why a strong labor movement demanded it in the 30s, and why every industrialized nation on the planet copied said model.
This is not a retirement crisis, it is an overspending crisis and Blackrock wants more AUM. Also most people will die at 80yrs (or earlier) and rich people need purpose because they have money.
Work a 40-60 hour a week, for 40-50 years, labor work, not sitting behind a desk, see how your body feels, majority of manual labor workers will not live to 90, when we retired at 66, less then ten years we have severe medical problems due to our working conditions, lose your pension plan because the company file bankruptcy yet the CEO, CFO, VPS walked away with millions. All we have left is our social security. We did not have the option of not paying into social security and saving that amount on our own, work in my shoes and then tell me how you feel, the problem is you CEOs screwed it to older workers, screwed senior citizens now, yes, because of you we are in the poverty level
These clowns are working on the problem now because if things continue, the only people with the money to fix the problem is them. This is pretty much a now issue.
after taxes and social security and food expense and water bill and rent and electric bill and car ins. and gas i cant save anything... its SS or die when i get old.
*Depends, after finally getting a job my degree was for, started making 60K in 2000.* *Employer paid a 5% match, so I had10% "pre tax" salary go to their 401K* *SO sending $600 a month(PLUS $300 from employer) to retirement, AND my TAKE HOME pay barely changed!* *I was single with no dependents and no house* *Lowers your tax bracket, and the amount taxed*
So his solution is we work until we're dead? Wow I really want to write things that would get me banned. I'm 50. My Union, that I was in to get a pension, froze pensions in 2008. By that time, l wanted to leave, but it was the better pay that kept me in. It was never enough to get ahead. I'm committed to working until I'm dead.
Most Americans find it hard to retire comfortably amid economy downtrend. Some have close to nothing going into retirement, my question is, will you pay off mortgage as a near-retiree, or spread money for cashflow, to afford lifestyle after retirement?
Agreed, the role of advisors can only be overlooked, but not denied. I remember in early 2020, during covid-outbreak, my portfolio worth around 300k took a slight fall, apparently due to the pandemic crash, at once I consulted an advisor in order to avoid panic-selling. As of today, my account has yielded big fat yields, and leverages on 7-figure, only cos I delegate my excesses right.
Monica Shawn Marti is the licensed coach I use. Just research the name. You'd find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
I appreciate it. After searching her name online and reviewing her credentials, I'm quite impressed. I've contacted her as I could use all the help I can get. A call has been scheduled.
I have worked hard for my wife and i to retire comfortably, however my projections based on inflation, the blow up in government spending and the cuts now and coming in benefits, the uncertainty of Social Security, I now think i will have to work as long as I possibly can.
I am a baby boomer in the financial services industry. While I can work longer if my health is good, and I will. Those in the construction field or manufacturing have had their bodies broken down by this type of work. We as a society must remember we need to take of these people they produce everything we enjoy, our homes, cars, food, etc., They may not be able to physically work longer.
His job is NOT to Solve the Retirement Problem, his job is to apply his Ethical Business appropriately for the benefits of the public communities and not just to Maximise profits at all costs, there had been many reports of his company's unethical business practices.
Sure, let us take the SS trust fund and gamble it all in the stock market casino LOL. There is a reason why the Japanese and the Europeans keep their savings outside the market ... Because it works!!! If your savings rate is high enough, you can AFFORD to take on lower risk and higher certainty. It's only when you are NOT saving enough that you need to put your savings into stocks in the hope that magically your meager 3-4% savings rate will balloon into a multi-million dollar retirement nest egg.
It has to go back into the Ponzi scheme deepak, so CEOs and stakeholders can continue cashing out their $100M yearly cash-outs and stimulate the economy and help companies to grow, allegedly. China has the highest savings rate which hinders their economy cause they don't recirculate it as much.
Working longer is much easier for white collar workers than it is for blue collar workers. Manual labor takes a toll on the body. It's the blue collar worker that really needs social security. Many white collar workers do not. So this idea that people who work hard manual labor jobs can keep doing them into their 70's and 80's is ridiculous. Yes, if you have a cushy white collar job wearing a suit sitting behind a desk, you can easily do that until you drop dead.
Since we're approaching April, one of the best months to buy stocks. I am currently holding north of $300k in a savings account waiting to invest in another huge opportunity.. Where would you invest this as of now?
Look for stocks that have paid steady, increasing dividends for years (or decades), and have not cut their dividends even during recessions. Alternatively speaking to a certified market strategist can help with strategies to hedge losses
Agreed, my portfolio is well-matched for every market season yielding 85% from early last year to date. I and my advisr are working on a 7 figure ballpark goal, tho this could take another year. IMO, financial advisors are the most sought-after professionals after doctors.
She goes by ‘’NICOLE DESIREE SIMON’ I suggest you look her up. To be honest, I almost didn't buy the idea of letting someone handle growing my finance, but so glad I did.
Rich city folk problems. At 57 years old, my body is worn out and failing from 40+ years of physical labor to allow other Americans to live their modern lives. This guy wants me to keep working another 20 years when I do not believe he could my chemical plant job for a week.
He talks about the $34 trillion dollar deficit, but he should have used the term 'debt'. The deficit is the annual difference between inflows and outflows, while the debt is the total accumulation of those deficits over time.
Social security is the problem not the answer. If people could invest the 12.4% paid as SS taxes into a private account and have that grow over their lifetime, there's their retirment savings. Instead, people are forced into a ponzi scheme and may get a pittance in SS payments
The fearmongers won't allow it. They've got that money rolling in and they use sunny projections to play up what the benefit is worth, and then scare tactics that any other alternative is so inherently unsafe that you'd be a fool to trust it. Buffet trusts it. EVERY remotely rich person I know trusts it. But not for us, we're the peasants who can't be given any choice. They should offer an opt out and put that Soc sec money into an IRA, 401k rollover, or something as an option. The little people are adult enough to be slammed in jail when we're bad, we're also adult enough to make our own decisions about what works for our future. But that all misses the point, it's a honeypot for government spending; that's why social security cannot be allowed to go away.
@@Stoneface_ my point was even if you saved that in cash deposits it would serve you better than it being in social security where it gets socialized in a pool of funds and they decide how much you get once you hit a certain age.
I know most of you on this thread may not like him but he's not wrong! we need to re-embrace our Capitalism and stop acting like we're a socialist country or acting like we're victims all the time. I understand you can't help it because it's your central tendency to do so (Millenials/Gen zs) but we need to recreate the greatest economic moment this nation had again for our children's sake and to preserve America as the #1 nation in the world.
So on one hand he’s saying let’s lower the national debt with inflation and on the other encouraging everyone to increase their savings. That’s the engine of wealth transfer right there folks.
*You can either inflate your way out of debt, OR Grow your way out* *But the GDP growth has to be 5+% plus* *The FED will get nervous and Raise rates to stifle the growth to AVOID inflation* *EVERY TIME* *They were at 0% for six years under Obama, but growth was still only 2% or lower* *After the 2017 tax cut, I don't think POWELL even WAITED to see any inflation, before he started jack the FED rate* *2021, he was asleep at the Wheel*
I completely understand that all of us as Americans should be putting money aside for retirement. How am I supposed to be super excited and optimistic, every time I look at my BLACKROCK ( lipix ) I get so discouraged and feel so defeated. I'm currently putting in 19%😢
This is what we need: prognostication on medical advances from someone with no medical expertise. Too many billionaires seem to fail to recognize much in the way of limits to their knowledge.
He is right if we live longer either we have to work longer or safe/invest better so we can retire early. As the youngsters now say FIRE Financially Independent Retire Early. Starts at kindergartens
If he thinks anyone above 60 should work and not retire - We should put Larry to work in a supermarket or logistics to deliver packages after 60! After a week - he would change his thought and will stop bull shitting ! 😂
So these older Americans won't retire but still collect their social security when they reach their Full Retirement Age. Plus, if older Americans don't retire, then that won't create job opportunities for the younger Americans. What a stupid plan!!
Action speak louder than words. His body language is revealing him. What glitters is not always gold. His choices in his actions are available for anyone to search. Of course a coin has 2 sides, which side is he pitching to sell. And what are you buying into. There is a saying, ask questions, lots of them, and that pit in your gut will never lead you wrong. The answer will reveal itself doing some introspection on what you want to buy into. And who is this "we* when he says, we have to have these conversations. Also the debt he speaks of. He never ask the tax payers if they wanted a say in paying back the reckless spending created by others in positions. Read between the lines, and ask what he is not saying. As his actions align for his benefit. Anyone watch? He sure did a few misdirects in his answers. Watch the movements of his body language. They say a lot. Most conversation is not the words, but the actions of the body. We're trained to listen, but we can learn to be keen observers to the subtleties within the conversation. What roars is not always the king of the jungle (or a lion).
@@jwbjpb1338 You won't understand what Bitcoin is. When it was $10000 then people were thinking it was a joke and today it is $70000 and in future it will be $100000 also.. keep thinking it is a joke..
@@jwbjpb1338 You won't understand what Bitcoin is. When it was $10000 then people were thinking it was a joke and today it is $70000 and in future it will be $100000 also.. keep thinking it is a joke..
At about 5:40 he talks about Japan doubling the contribution rate to 401Ks and it's no surprise that the equity markets went up 30%. Did the corporations suddenly become 30% more profitable? I think not.
We Millennials struggle to pay down mortgages, meanwhile China tries to artificially bump housing prices, and then Larry Fink tells us how liberal capitalism is the best economic system ever.