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{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq. {"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-heres-why-assumption-could-backfire","as_of":"2026-04-08T09:32:58.864102+00:00","canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/08/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-h/","enrichment":{"aggregator_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-heres-why-assumption-could-backfire","article_chars":5000,"article_truncated":true,"blocked_reason":null,"candidate_id":"sc_6dc1f76ac4d752f6","canonical_host":"fool.com","canonical_is_aggregator":false,"canonical_url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/08/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-h/","content_type":"text/html; charset=utf-8","enriched_at":"2026-04-08T09:36:16.002960+00:00","extraction_method":"heuristic","fetched_description":"Key PointsIt's not uncommon for seniors to fall back on Social Security for retirement income.","fetched_title":"Think Social Security Will Cover Your Retirement? Here's Why That Assumption Could Backfire. | Nasdaq","final_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-heres-why-assumption-could-backfire","html_truncated":false,"paywall_likely":false,"publisher_domain":"fool.com","publisher_resolution":"canonical_url","requested_url":"https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-heres-why-assumption-could-backfire","source_event_id":"evt_3ed1d6bc33db","source_quality":"high","status_code":200,"version":"signal_enrichment_v2"},"fp":"107b0ac5c17f702c","kind":"unusual_volume","published_at":"2026-04-08T08:09:00+00:00","publisher_domain":"fool.com","signal_understanding":{"analysis_basis":"article","claim_confidence":0.72,"dates_mentioned":["April 08, 2026"],"entities":[{"asset_class":"media","name":"The Motley Fool","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"publisher"},{"asset_class":"macro/social_program","name":"Social Security","relevance":"high","symbol":"","type":"program"},{"asset_class":"retirement_account","name":"IRA","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"account"},{"asset_class":"retirement_account","name":"401(k)","relevance":"medium","symbol":"","type":"account"},{"asset_class":"etf","name":"S&P 500 ETFs","relevance":"low","symbol":"","type":"instrument_type"}],"event_type":"other","information_gaps":["No unusual trading volume data (baseline volume, volume ratio, or ticker-specific volume delta) is provided in the text; the signal type 'discovery_unusual_volume_delta' is not evidenced by the article content.","The article does not identify any specific market catalyst tied to unusual volume; it is a personal-finance/retirement planning piece.","The $23,760 figure is mentioned but the article text provided does not explain the calculation or conditions for that amount."],"key_facts":["The article states it is a misconception to expect Social Security to fully replace workers\u2019 paychecks in retirement.","It says Social Security benefits should replace about 40% of former earnings for a typical salary.","It states that housing, groceries, transportation, and healthcare may still be significant expenses in retirement.","It recommends using savings (e.g., funding an IRA or 401(k) consistently) to bridge the gap between Social Security and pre-retirement income.","It provides an example of saving $300 per month for 25 years with 8% annual growth to reach about $263,000 (as stated in the article).","It claims Social Security may play an important role but should not be the entire income plan."],"numeric_claims":[{"label":"income replacement rate (typical)","value":"~40% of former earnings"},{"label":"retiree paycheck replacement assumption (article framing)","value":"not full replacement"},{"label":"example savings growth outcome","value":"~$263,000 from $300/month over 25 years at 8% annual growth"},{"label":"Social Security 'bonus' amount mentioned","value":"$23,760 per year (as claimed in article title/section)"}],"primary_claim":"Social Security benefits are expected to replace only about 40% of a typical retiree\u2019s former earnings, so retirees need savings to cover the remainder.","relevance_score":0.18,"sentiment":"neutral","source_quality":"high","summary":"The Motley Fool article argues that Social Security typically replaces only about 40% of pre-retirement earnings and should not be relied on as a complete retirement income plan.","topics":["retirement planning","Social Security benefits","income replacement rate","personal finance","IRA/401(k)","investment strategy"]},"source":"Nasdaq Markets","source_domain":"fool.com","summary":"Key PointsIt's not uncommon for seniors to fall back on Social Security for retirement income.","tickers":[],"title":"Think Social Security Will Cover Your Retirement? Here's Why That Assumption Could Backfire.","url":"https://www.fool.com/retirement/2026/04/08/think-social-security-will-cover-your-retirement-h/"}... |