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{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq. {"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-2026-heres-what-data-says","as_of":"2026-04-10T17:21:18.772571+00:00","canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/10/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-in/","enrichment":{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-2026-heres-what-data-says","article_chars":4999,"article_truncated":true,"blocked_reason":null,"candidate_id":"sc_69cee810083d2c96","canonical_host":"fool.com","canonical_is_aggregator":false,"canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/10/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-in/","content_type":"text/html; charset=utf-8","enriched_at":"2026-04-10T19:21:38.567153+00:00","extraction_method":"heuristic","fetched_description":"Key PointsYour claiming age will affect your monthly retirement income for the rest of your life.","fetched_title":"Should You Really Start Taking Social Security in 2026? Here's What the Data Says | Nasdaq","final_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-2026-heres-what-data-says","html_truncated":false,"paywall_likely":false,"publisher_domain":"fool.com","publisher_resolution":"canonical_url","requested_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-2026-heres-what-data-says","source_event_id":"evt_33cf33fcb260","source_quality":"high","status_code":200,"version":"signal_enrichment_v2"},"fp":"960e0febe3732717","kind":"unusual_volume","published_at":"2026-04-10T16:20:00+00:00","publisher_domain":"fool.com","signal_understanding":{"analysis_basis":"article","claim_confidence":0.72,"dates_mentioned":["2019","2010","2024","2034","April 10, 2026"],"entities":[{"asset_class":"macro_policy","name":"Social Security","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"program"},{"asset_class":"macro_policy","name":"Social Security Administration Board of Trustees","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"organization"},{"asset_class":"research","name":"United Income","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"organization"},{"asset_class":"research","name":"The Senior Citizens League","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"organization"},{"asset_class":"media","name":"The Motley Fool","relevance":"low","symbol":"","type":"publisher"}],"event_type":"macro_policy","information_gaps":["No unusual trading volume ratio vs average is provided in the text; the signal type 'discovery_unusual_volume_delta' is not evidenced by any volume metrics here.","No ticker-specific volume information is provided; the repeated tickers (AAPL, TSLA, etc.) appear in the cleaned text but are not tied to any volume delta or catalyst in the article content.","The article\u2019s content is about Social Security claiming strategy and policy risk, not market volume events; therefore the most likely catalyst hypothesis for the 'unusual volume' signal cannot be grounded in the provided text."],"key_facts":["Claiming age affects monthly Social Security income for the rest of a retiree\u2019s life.","Filing at full retirement age yields 100% of the benefit based on work history; filing before reduces monthly payment; delaying increases checks.","The article cites a 2019 United Income study: 57% of retirees could accumulate more wealth by filing at age 70, and the average household would forgo about $111,000 in lifetime income by claiming at a suboptimal age.","The article states Social Security is not projected to go bankrupt, but trust funds could be depleted by 2034.","The article cites an estimate that after trust fund depletion, income sources would cover about 81% of scheduled benefits.","The article states that unless Congress acts before 2034, benefits could be slashed by nearly 20%.","The article states benefits have lost around 20% of buying power between 2010 and 2024 despite annual cost-of-living adjustments, citing The Senior Citizens League."],"numeric_claims":[{"label":"lifetime income foregone (average)","value":"$111,000"},{"label":"share of retirees benefiting from age 70 claiming","value":"57%"},{"label":"trust funds depleted by","value":"2034"},{"label":"scheduled benefits covered after depletion","value":"81%"},{"label":"potential benefit cut magnitude","value":"nearly 20%"},{"label":"buying power loss (2010-2024)","value":"~20%"}],"primary_claim":"Research cited in the article suggests that waiting until age 70 to claim Social Security could be more financially lucrative for many retirees than claiming earlier.","relevance_score":0.35,"sentiment":"mixed","source_quality":"high","summary":"The Motley Fool article argues that the age at which someone claims Social Security in 2026 (relative to full retirement age) materially affects lifetime monthly benefits, and it highlights concerns about Social Security\u2019s future solvency and purchasing power.","topics":["Social Security claiming age","full retirement age","lifetime income optimization","trust fund depletion","benefit cuts risk","cost-of-living adjustments","purchasing power"]},"source":"Nasdaq Markets","source_domain":"fool.com","summary":"Key PointsYour claiming age will affect your monthly retirement income for the rest of your life.","tickers":[],"title":"Should You Really Start Taking Social Security in 2026? Here's What the Data Says","url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/10/should-you-really-start-taking-social-security-in/"}... |