Personal income and consumption: Impact on retirement planning

Core price inflation has stalled for the past three months at 2.6 percent. How will this impact retirees and those saving for retirement?

Robert 'Bob' Powell, and Mitlin Financial founder and wealth advisor Lawrence Sprung break down the most recent Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE) report, including a note from First Trust Chief Economist Brian S. Wesbury.

Powell and Sprung discussed how future fiscal policy might impact retirees, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), the current housing market, how small business owners can plan for retirement, "finfluencers" and AI's impact on personal finance, and much more.

Inflation-protected securities and role in retirees' portfolios (02:20)

Sprung provided his thoughts on inflation-protected securities and their role in retirement portfolios. "It's important to understand what those goals and objectives are, what your time horizon is and what investment vehicles are going to work best for you," Sprung explained. "Now it's going to be important as we start entering potentially a lower interest rate environment to start putting (together) that game plan and being prepared for that lower rate environment."

How small business owners can plan for retirement (14:35)

Planning for small businesses gets more and more complicated every day. Sprung discussed the challenges of being a small business owner and how they can improve their financial security. "There are other things that business owners really should be thinking about in terms of their own retirement, setting up potentially a retirement plan," Sprung said. "Trying to think outside of the box of just what needs to be done for the day-to-day of the business is helpful and could help their retirement as well as the financial future of their employees."

Social media misinformation – Are 'Finfluencers' and AI a problem? (18:35)

Powell and Sprung broke down misinformation on social media and whether you should trust AI with personal finance questions.

'Finfluencers' are individuals who leverage social media platforms—like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube—to share advice and information about personal finance, investing, budgeting, and other financial topics. "When you're scrolling and looking at some of these folks that are giving the advice, you have to be very careful about who you're taking the advice from," Sprung explained. "We've seen in recent years people giving out and espousing this advice, and people following it, and two weeks later, their TikTok handle is gone, evaporated, because the information they gave was wrong or hurtful to those followers. So you have to be careful."