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    Inflation According To Ron Baron

    Did you know that the price of most goods and services doubles every 14 years?

    Inflation, a general increase in prices over time, has a significant impact on the purchasing power of our money. One effective way to outpace inflation and preserve or even grow our wealth is by investing in assets that have the potential to generate returns higher than the rate of inflation.

    As of 3/31/2026

    Year

    Cost

    March 2026

    Multiple

    CAGR

    Ron’s Home 1948-1955

    1122 Grassmere Avenue, Wanamassa, NJ (Asbury Park, NJ “suburb”)

    1948

    $5,000

    $633,6001

    126.7x

    6.5%

    Ron’s Home 1955-1975

    542 DealParkway, West Allenhurst, NJ (Asbury Park, NJ “suburb”)

    1955

    $20,000

    $1,391,1001

    69.6x

    6.2%

    Minimum Wage (New York)

    1957

    $1 hour

    $16.002

    hour

    16.0x

    4.2%

    Golf Caddy Fees

    1957

    $4

    18 holes

    $160

    18 holes

    40.0x

    5.6%

    Gallon of Gasoline

    1960

    $0.31

    gallon

    $3.993

    gallon

    12.9x

    4.0%

    Ron’s Annual Tuition at Bucknell University

    1965

    $3,500

    $72,6004

    20.7x

    5.2%

    Ron’s U.S.Patent Examiner AnnualSalary

    1966

    $7,729

    $138,7285

    17.9x

    5.0%

    Ford Mustang (starting price)

    1966

    $2,500

    $32,6406

    13.1x

    4.4%

    Sirloin Steak

    1966

    $0.67

    pound

    $14.127

    pound

    21.1x

    5.3%

    NYC TopLaw Firm – First YearAssociate Annual Salary

    1970

    $15,000

    $225,0008

    15.0x

    5.0%

    Gold

    1974

    $188

    ounce

    $4,7009

    ounce

    25.0x

    6.5%

    Dow Jones Industrial Average

    1982

    795

    $46,34210

    58.3x*

    9.7%*

    S&P 500 Index

    1982

    107

    $6,52910

    60.8x*

    9.8%*

    Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

    1968

    $968

    billion

    $31,42311

    billion

    32.5x

    6.3%

    Gross Domestic Product (GDP) information is as of December 31, 2025.

    *Returns for indexes listed do not include dividends which add an estimated 1.5% to 2.0% annually to such returns.

    Sources:

    (1) www.zillow.com
    (2) https://dol.ny.gov/minimum-wage-0
    (3) www.energy.gov/eere/vehicles/fact-741-august-20-2012-historical-gasoline-prices-1929-2011 fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GASREGW
    (4) www.bucknell.edu/admissions-aid/tuition-fees-financial-aid/information-about-tuition-fees
    (5) www.federalpay.org/employees/occupations/patent-examining
    (6) www.ford.com/cars/mustang/
    (7) https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/APU0000703613
    (8) https://www.reuters.com/legal/legalindustry/cravath-announces-raises-upping-pay-ante-large-law-firms-2023-11-28/
    (9) https://www.macrotrends.net/1333/historical-gold-prices-100-year-chart
    (10) FactSet.
    (11) https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GDP

    Risk: All investments are subject to risk and may lose value.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted measure of 30 U.S. blue-chip companies. It covers all industries with the exception of Transportation and Utilities. The S&P 500 Index measures the performance of 500 widely held large-cap U.S. companies. The indexes include reinvestment of dividends which positively impact the performance results. The indexes are unmanaged. Index performance is not Fund performance. Investors cannot invest directly in an index.