What 1968 Can Teach Investors About Retiring Today
- MyTimeEquity
- May 4
- 2 min read
1968 was the worst possible time to retire. Not because stocks crashed overnight. Not because one catastrophic event wiped out a generation of savers.
But because inflation showed up — and didn’t leave.
That’s the part most people get wrong. They think the big risk is a crash, a sudden drawdown, something obvious. It’s not. The real risk is slow. It grinds. It sits there year after year, quietly destroying your purchasing power while your portfolio looks “fine” on the surface.
S&P 500 — Good vs. Bad Retirement Timing

The Signal Chain
Gold has already broken out to new highs. Copper is confirming. Oil is starting to move. That’s the cycle:

When that sequence plays out, it tells you one thing: inflation is not going away.
What Traditional Portfolios Get Wrong
Traditional allocations — heavy stocks and long-duration bonds — get exposed in this environment.
Bonds get crushed as yields rise. The 60/40 hedge becomes the liability.
Dollars get crushed through debasement — no real protection against inflation.
Stocks struggle to keep up with rising costs and tightening conditions.
The Live Rotation — 2026 YTD
If inflation is the problem, your portfolio needs assets that benefit from it. The data below shows the rotation is already happening.


Energy. Metals. International equities. Real assets tied to the global economy. These are the areas that outperform when inflation trends higher. This isn’t theory — it’s history.
How We’re Positioned
We’re not guessing. We’re following the playbook that has worked in every inflationary cycle before this one. Investing isn’t about chasing returns — it’s about protecting your purchasing power first and growing it second.
Three Key Takeaways

Ready to Review Your Allocation?
We can walk you through how MyTimeEquity is positioning client portfolios for this inflation regime. Get smarter about your money, starting today.
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Email us at wealth@mytimeequity.com



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