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Americans weigh in on whether a comfortable retirement is possible in today’s economy

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Americans weighed in on whether a comfortable retirement is out of reach as experts warn of a blooming crisis. 

Florida residents gathered at the Flying Biscuit Café in The Villages on Friday and shared their thoughts on the cost of living and whether a stable retirement is unattainable amid the country’s raging inflation.

One Florida resident by the name of Lisa said that she sees herself “working and working” due to “everything” being “expensive.”

“You have to work harder, longer hours, more shifts just to cover everything,” she stressed to FOX Business’ Ashley Webster.

She went on to add that there’s “zero” ability to save. 

COST OF LIVING HINDERS YOUNGER GENERATIONS FROM SAVING FOR RETIREMENT: FIDELITY

Findings from the Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America show that U.S. households are draining their retirement savings, taking on debt and reducing the amount that they are setting aside for the future to maintain their present-day finances.

Another resident, Roger, who recently retired at the age of 80 after owning his business, said that he sees a lot of people working longer even though they may not want to.

“I see people here who are cashiers and who are working as waitresses, and people all over to get an odd job just to supplement their income,” he told Webster.

That is not the case for all Americans, as one woman who retired at 55 detailed her experience.

“I did a lot of planning to set a goal to retire early, and I was lucky to work for a good company and was able to do it,” she explained.

RETIREMENT CRISIS: GREAT RECESSION TAKES ITS TOLL ON YOUNGER BOOMERS

“We bought our house in The Villages fairly young, so that when we retired, it was paid off. So that helps,” she said.

The Village resident mentioned that her husband continuing to work allowed her to retire earlier. 

“Life is good,” she added.

Concerns regarding retirement savings have grown in recent years.

A recent survey by Northwestern Mutual suggested it would take $1.46 million to comfortably retire. 

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FOX Business’ Megan Henney contributed to this report

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Conservative cable channel Newsmax shares plunge more than 70% after a dizzying 2-day surge

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A Newsmax booth broadcasts as attendees try out the guns on display at the National Rifle Association (NRA) annual convention in Houston, Texas, U.S. May 29, 2022. 

Callaghan O’hare | Reuters

Shares of conservative news channel Newsmax plunged more than 70% on Wednesday as its meteoric rise as a new public company proved to be short-lived.

The stock tumbled a whopping 72% in afternoon trading, following a 2,230% surge in Newsmax’s first two days of trading after debuting on the New York Stock Exchange. At one point, the rally gave the company a market capitalization of nearly $30 billion — surpassing the market cap of legacy media companies like Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox Corp.

Newsmax was listed on the NYSE via a so-called Regulation A offering, instead of a traditional IPO. Such an offering allows small companies to raise capital without undergoing the full SEC registration process. The primary focus is to sell to retail investors, in this case It was sold to approximately 30,000 retail investors. 

The public offering indeed garnered the attention from retail traders, some of whom touted the stock as the “New GME” in online chatrooms. GME refers to the meme stock GameStop, which made Wall Street history in 2021 by its speculative trading boom.

Newsmax has a small “float,” or shares available for trading. Less than 6% of Newsmax shares, or 7.5 million shares out of a total of 128 million fully diluted shares, are available for public trading.

The conservative TV news outlet has seen its ratings rise with the election of President Donald Trump and other prominent Republicans — although it still falls behind the dominant Fox News. Overall, Newsmax ranks in the top 20 among cable network average viewership in both prime time and daytime, Nielsen said.

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Stocks making the biggest moves midday: TSLA, DJT, AMZN, RIVN

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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Tesla, Newsmax, nCino and more

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These are the stocks posting the largest moves in premarket trading.

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