I also think hyper inflation could destroy most annuities value while diversified portfolios can
generally keep up with any inflation rate.
Stock dividends
generally keep up with inflation although not from one year to the next.
Even though dividend income
generally keeps up with inflation and usually surpasses it, there have been instances when dividends have fallen behind.
Not exact matches
Fundamentally, higher interest rates
generally mean greater
inflation, and because triple net lease contracts are locked in for
up to two decades, this means that the escalator rate (how much rent rises each year) may not
keep up with inflation.
In their 1998 book, Boomernomics: The Future of Your Money in the Upcoming Generational Warfare (published by the Library of Contemporary Thought), the two men say, «What's predictable is that the underlying trend in real estate prices will be
generally unfavorable, and that home prices may have trouble
keeping up with inflation after the boomers begin to retire in large numbers.»