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American workers fall short of retirement savings targets, study shows
BlackRock Global Head of Retirement Solutions Nick Nefouse announces a new plan to expand retirement investment options on Varney & Co.
A new study finds that the median American worker has just $955 saved for retirement through a defined contribution plan like a 401(k) account, with most falling well short of recommended retirement savings targets for their ages.
The study by the National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS) found that among all workers between the ages of 21 and 64, including those who haven’t saved anything for retirement, the median amount saved in a defined contribution plan was just $955 as of 2023.
By contrast, among those who have positive retirement plan wealth — or at least $1 saved in a defined contribution (DC) plan — the median savings were much higher at $40,000.
The report found that the average account balance among workers aged 21 to 64, including those with no savings, was $93,229. However, among those who have saved at least $1 in a DC plan, the average savings was $179,082.

A woman talks on her phone while using a laptop in her home. (Getty Images / Getty Images)
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NIRS’ study also compared Americans’ retirement savings balances against the targets used by Fidelity, which developed guidelines based on age and income levels.
Fidelity recommends Americans save their annual income in retirement by age 30, have three-times their income saved by age 40, six-times their income by age 50, eight-times their income at age 60 and 10-times their income when they reach the normal retirement age of 67.
NIRS found that for all the median respondents analyzed in the study across age, race, education and gender groups – none have retirement savings or net worth that’s at or above their age-based savings target.
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The NIRS study showed most Americans were well behind their age-based savings targets. (Istock)
Across all respondents, the median amount of DC retirement savings as a percentage of their savings targets is 4%. When using net worth instead of DC retirement savings, the median percentage of all respondents hitting their savings target is 41%.
Among those who have positive DC retirement balances, the median percentage of all respondents who hit the savings target was 18%.
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The median American in all demographic groups lagged behind the savings targets. (iStock / iStock)
The median amount of DC retirement savings as a share of the savings target was 19% for men and 17% for women, while among racial groups, Asian (23%) and White (20%) workers saved more than Black and Hispanic workers (11% each).
The amount saved rises with higher levels of education from 10% for workers whose highest education was high school or less, to 15% for those holding associates degrees, 21% with bachelor’s degrees and 26% for those with master’s, doctorate or professional degrees.
Across age groups, the most successful savers were the youngest cohort of workers between 21 and 34, with 21% saved as a share of the target, followed by 19% of workers between the ages of 55 and 64.
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“As expected, those with some amount of savings is closer to their savings target than those with no savings. But even for those with savings, these amounts are quite low if the expectation is that retirement savings in a DC plan will constitute an important source of retirement income,” NIRS said.
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China buying sanctioned oil from Iran, Russia and Venezuela, report finds
Gatestone Institute senior fellow Gordon Chang joins ‘Mornings with Maria’ to warn China’s support for Iran could escalate the conflict and raise risks of a broader global war ahead of President Donald Trump’s Beijing trip.
A new investigation by Congress detailed how China is buying sanctioned oil from rogue regimes around the world at a discount.
The House Select Committee on China released its report on how China is evading sanctions to purchase tens of millions of barrels of oil from countries like Iran, Russia and Venezuela that are the subject of U.S. sanctions, using a “shadow fleet” of tankers to transport sanctioned oil.
It found that sanctioned oil accounted for one-fifth of China’s total oil imports after the country became the buyer of last resort for those rogue regimes, which allowed it to stockpile a large strategic reserve of oil while buying at below market rates.
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Selling oil is a key component of the economies of Iran, Russia and Venezuela, and the report noted that energy exports yielded roughly $120 billion in revenue for Russia in 2024, about 30% of its total revenue.
Iran’s oil revenue is projected at more than $50 billion in 2025, which represents about 35% of its budget. Similarly, crude oil sales were Venezuela’s main source of hard currency.

China has been a key consumer of sanctioned oil from countries like Iran, Russia and Venezuela. (Reuters)
“From this sanctioned crude, China assembled a massive strategic petroleum reserve – roughly 1.2 billion barrels by early 2026, equal to approximately 109 days of seaborne import cover – at well below market cost from the very barrels Western sanctions were designed to strand,” the committee wrote.
The select committee said China relies on foreign suppliers for about 70% of its oil, much of which is delivered by sea routes that could be blockaded by U.S. and allied naval forces during a crisis, such as one stemming from a Taiwan contingency. That vulnerability prompted Chinese leaders to declare energy security an “urgent requirement in great-power competition” and build its massive reserve.
The report detailed how China uses a shadow fleet of tankers, which are generally older tankers that operate through opaque ownership structures under foreign flags with non-Western insurance that allow them to avoid complying with Western maritime laws.
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China has built a substantial oil reserve in part through shipments conveyed by shadow fleet tankers. (Stefan Sauer/picture alliance via Getty Images)
The panel cited data from commodity data and analytics firm Kpler, which tracks vessel movements and trade patterns using satellite imagery, that found shadow fleet and sanctioned tankers moved about 10.3 million barrels of crude oil per day last year, with about one-third going to China.
Additionally, it moved 2.2 million barrels per day of heavy refined products like fuel oil and crude residuals, with China receiving about 10.3%; while China also received about 45.8% of the shadow fleet’s chemical and biological cargo.
“China is the buyer of oil from desperate, rogue regimes through illicit, hard-to-track channels involving shell companies, Chinese refineries and a shadow fleet of oil tankers,” said Select Committee on China Chairman John Moolenaar, R-Mich.
“This investigation brings to light key information on how the Chinese Communist Party keeps the economies of Iran and Russia afloat while fueling its own authoritarian agenda.”
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Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin have deepened the relationship between the two countries, with the energy trade a key component of their partnership. (Contributor/Getty Images)
China’s oil sources have been under pressure after U.S. action to detain Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and enforcement activities targeting Venezuelan oil, as well as the war in Iran, which has slowed the flow of oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.
Before the war, China imported 3.4 million barrels per day of oil from Gulf producers via the Strait. While Iran’s shadow fleet continues to make deliveries at near pre-war levels, shipments from other countries in the region have slowed to a halt, prompting China to ban fuel exports and raise retail prices to mitigate the impact of the oil disruption.
The committee’s investigation led to several policy recommendations for lawmakers to consider as they look to counter the flow of sanctioned oil that benefits rogue regimes.
Those suggestions include authorizing sanctions on ports, terminal operators and similar businesses that receive cargo transported by shadow fleet vessels and establishing a whistleblower reward program for reporting sanctions evasion – particularly in transshipment hubs like Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Dubai.
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They also include having financial regulators probe potential commodity market manipulation and transactions by entities involved in systematically purchasing and routing steeply discounted Russian crude by foreign refiners.
The panel also called for creating a contingency framework with major oil producers like Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Iraq to expand supply because sustained lower prices would reduce the discount available on sanctioned crude oil from Iran and Russia.
Business
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Apple retires Mac Pro after 20 years as it shifts pro desktop strategy
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Apple is scrapping its high-end Mac Pro desktop after two decades, signaling a shift in how the tech giant targets professional users, according to reports.
The company has quietly removed the Mac Pro from its website, according to Bloomberg and 9to5Mac, marking the end of a product line that once served as a “halo” device for video editors and developers. The machine, known for its modularity and “cheese grater” design, carried a starting price of $6,999.
The move underscores Apple’s pivot toward more scalable devices powered by its proprietary silicon. By streamlining its lineup, Apple is prioritizing higher-margin, integrated hardware like the Mac Studio – a compact desktop that offers comparable performance to the Mac Pro at a significantly lower entry cost.
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A customer looks at a Mac Pro workstation at Apple’s flagship store on Nanjing Road in Shanghai, China, June 2, 2021. (Costfoto/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
The decision comes as Apple marks its 50th anniversary, highlighting its evolution from a niche enthusiast hardware maker into a global company built on mass-market, tightly integrated ecosystems.

Apple employees help customers at the Fifth Avenue Apple Store on new product launch day on Sept. 19, 2025 in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
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Apple has been selling through remaining inventory in retail stores. The company confirmed to 9to5Mac that it has no plans for future updates to the Mac Pro line, effectively ending the era of the internally expandable Apple desktop.

Apple’s new Mac Pro sits on display in the showroom during Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) in San Jose, California on June 3, 2019. (Brittany Hosea-Small /AFP via Getty Images)
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The shift reflects Apple’s broader strategy to consolidate its desktop lineup around fewer, more scalable products aligned with its in-house chip roadmap.
Apple shares are up fractionally in afternoon trade and are down about 6.2% year to date.
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AAPL | APPLE INC. | 255.27 | +1.48 | +0.58% |
FOX Business has reached out to Apple for further comment.
Business
New York Auto Show reveals gap between EV ambitions and what buyers want
FOX Business correspondent Jeff Flock joins ‘Varney & Co.’ to break down the surge in SUV and truck sales, the slowdown in electric vehicle demand and how billions in tariffs are reshaping the auto industry.
A shift in the auto market is becoming harder to ignore as consumer demand tilts back toward larger, gas-powered vehicles, even as electric vehicles struggle to maintain momentum.
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FOX Business correspondent Jeff Flock joined FOX Business’ Stuart Varney on “Varney & Co.” to report from the New York Auto Show, where automakers are leaning into SUVs and trucks amid changing buyer preferences.
Nissan Americas Chairman Christian Meunier discusses the debut of the 2027 Z Nismo at the New York Auto Show, highlighting performance upgrades and the brand’s next-generation sports car vision on ‘Mornings with Maria.’
Recent sales data underscores that pivot. Midsize SUVs and trucks are seeing notable gains, while smaller cars and electric vehicles are losing ground, highlighting a widening gap between industry ambitions and what consumers are actually buying.
According to Cox Automotive and Kelley Blue Book, midsize SUV sales are up 15%, midsize truck sales are up 14%, while compact car sales are down 8% and EVs are down 26% in February compared to the same time last year. EV momentum has become increasingly uneven. Electric vehicles reached 10.5% of U.S. new-vehicle sales in the third quarter of 2025 but fell to 5.8% in the fourth quarter as incentives faded, highlighting a sharp pullback after earlier gains.
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Nissan Americas Chairman Christian Meunier pointed to another pressure shaping the market: tariffs. Automakers and suppliers have absorbed billions of dollars in added costs, limiting their ability to pass those expenses on to buyers.

A vehicle frame moves down the assembly line at the Nissan Motor Co. manufacturing facility in Tennessee. (Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg / Getty Images)
“It’s a lot of money, but it’s a lot less than the exposure we had a year ago when it was implemented,” Meunier said.
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He added that the company has worked to reduce that burden while increasing domestic production.
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“At the very beginning, we had an exposure of $4 billion. We took it down to $1.5 billion in 25, and we’re going to get it down to zero. That’s our mission to build as many cars in the U.S. as we can,” Meunier said.
Business
India’s IndiGo Appoints Head of IATA as New CEO
IndiGo, India’s largest airline by fleet size, has named the head of the International Air Transport Association as its new chief executive, as it emerges from a turbulent period of flight disruptions that shaved billions off its market value.
The board of IndiGo, which trades as InterGlobe Aviation 539448 6.01%increase; green up pointing triangle, said William Walsh is set to come on board as CEO by Aug. 3 after his tenure as director-general of the aviation industry body comes to an end.
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Andrew Hecht is a 35-year Wall Street veteran covering commodities and precious metals.
He runs the investing group The Hecht Commodity Report, one of the most comprehensive commodities services available. It covers the market movements of 20 different commodities and provides bullish, bearish and neutral calls; directional trading recommendations, and actionable ideas for traders. Learn more.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
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