Post-Election Market Trajectory: Rocky at First, Then Steady
Strategists think the prospect of a gridlocked Congress will ultimately be good for stocks, with a couple of big exceptions.
Strategists think the prospect of a gridlocked Congress will ultimately be good for stocks, with a couple of big exceptions.
Using methods other than market value should give superior performance amid slow economic growth and rapid inflation, respondents believe.
Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Tesla make up a core portion of both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.
Gregory Davis predicts that a U.S. economic slump, when it occurs, will be mild.
After regular trading hours is when equities increase the most, a Bespoke study finds.
At a 4.5% benchmark interest rate, economic growth will start to suffer, hedge fund guru says.
Governor Ron DeSantis and other GOP pols seek to stamp out sustainability-minded investing, charging that it delivers poor results.
Over the past three-quarters of a century, the market has lost an average 0.56% during the upcoming month, CFRA data show.
While hedge operators were always stats-oriented, he took data gathering to a whole new level.
Despite rising inflation and falling markets, savings remain high among 401(k), 403(b) and IRA participants.
Projected S&P 500 profits rose just 6.7% in the second quarter, and even slower results are ahead. Not good for stocks, the firm contends.
Inflation, Fed rate hikes and an inverted yield curve are all undermining what seems like a new bull market, says Comerica’s Lynch.
After lagging during the stock bull market, the asset class now scores decent returns, says Morningstar.