Why Social Security Recipients Should Be Excited About Oil's Recent Rally

This has certainly been a year of firsts for investors. We've witnessed the largest single-day point decline in history for the Dow Jones Industrial Average and observed a marijuana stock uplist from the over-the-counter exchange to the Nasdaq. More recently, we've watched as West Texas Intermediate crude pushed to its highest levels since November 2014, hitting more than $68 per barrel as of Friday, April 20, 2018.

This latter figure is especially intriguing as it could encourage an uptick in domestic and offshore drilling demand, which has been substantially curtailed since oil prices fell off a cliff in 2014 and subsequently plunged around 75% from peak-to-trough over a one-and-a-half-year span.

But this steady rise in oil prices shouldn't just be exciting to oil companies and investors. It should also put smiles on the faces of Social Security recipients.

Two oil pumps operating at sunset.
Two oil pumps operating at sunset.

Image source: Getty Images.

Annual cost-of-living adjustments are very important to Social Security recipients

Social Security is a program that, according to the Social Security Administration (SSA), provides a guaranteed benefit to 62.2 million people each month, as of March 2018. Almost 69% of these recipients (42.8 million) are retired workers, and of them, 62% lean on Social Security to account for at least half of their monthly income. In other words, it's a vital program that many would struggle to live without.

Since most retired workers rely on Social Security for a large portion of their income, the SSA's announcement in mid-October regarding the following year's cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, is a highly anticipated event. COLA is the "raise" that beneficiaries receive each year, and Social Security recipients want to know how much extra they'll be receiving each month the following year compared to the current year.

COLA is determined by examining Social Security's inflationary tether, the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). The average reading from the third quarter (July through September) of the previous year serves as the baseline, while the average reading from the third quarter of the current year is the comparison. If the average price of the goods and services measured by the CPI-W has increased, then Social Security recipients receive that difference, expressed as a percentage and rounded to the nearest 0.1%, as a raise the following year. Deflation, thankfully, won't cause a decline in benefits -- if prices have fallen, benefits remain static from one year to the next.