Personal Finance
How much money is enough to retire

The Magic Number

Giving up your full-time job for good obviously comes at a cost, but for many Americans, the price of retirement has never been higher: the average US adult now expects to need $1.46 million to afford a comfortable one-way ticket out of the working world.

That’s according to a new survey of 4,588 American adults commissioned by financial planning company Northwestern Mutual. The latest figures also revealed that the average respondent has $88.4k saved towards retirement in 2024 — some way off the updated “magic number”, which has risen 53% since 2020, far outstripping inflation.

As is to be expected, the amount of money we feel we need to live comfortably in our post-work years massively depends on our proximity to the ~65-year mark. However, external concerns like ever-rising healthcare costs and the actions of previous generations (at least according to BlackRock CEO Larry Fink last week) have perhaps compounded worries for younger workers.

Such factors, when taken with a pinch of the realism that only aging and first-hand experience with the realities of retirement can harness, see generations diverge widely on their necessary savings expectations. Gen Z and millennials, for example, now expect to need some $1.63m and $1.65m, respectively, up from $890k and $970k just 4 years ago, while boomers and older Americans say they need just $990k in the bank to live out a comfortable retirement.

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Wall Street bonuses hit a new record last year, edging toward $250,000 average

2025 was a pretty good year for US stocks... and new data suggests it was an even better one for workers on Wall Street itself.

In a year that saw pretax profits on the Street rise more than 30% to a record $65 billion, dealmakers, traders, and wealth managers raked in ~$246,900 in bonuses on average — an all-time high — per a new report from New York State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli published on Thursday.

Wall street bonuses chart
Sherwood News

According to DiNapoli, last year’s record $49.2 billion bonus pool (estimated using income tax data without including stock options or other deferred compensation) reflects Wall Street’s “strong performance for much of last year, despite all of the ongoing domestic and international upheavals.”

Standing desk advantage

Americans are spending more of the workday sitting — the jobs driving the trend often come with more money

Software developers sit nearly all day and make six figures. Fast-food workers are on their feet almost nonstop, and earn about $30,000 a year.

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