Advertisement
TipRanks
‘There Are Many Stocks That Are Already Reflecting a Recession’: Morgan Stanley Says It’s Time to Buy These 2 Beaten-Down Names
Those hoping for the fourth quarter to herald a stock market comeback have been disappointed so far. A late-year rally has yet to properly materialize with the market still factoring further turmoil as the fight against inflation continues and the specter of a recession remains. However, while the prospect of a recession looms, Morgan Stanley’s Investment Management Managing Director Andrew Slimmon points out that many stocks already appear to be taking for granted the likelihood of a recession.
TipRanks
Analysts Say Buy These 2 High-Yield Dividend Stocks — Including One With 16% Yield
Markets finished last week on a down note, with the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ falling 2.8% and 3.8%, respectively. The Friday collapse came in the wake of the September jobs report, which further fed into investor worries that the Federal Reserve will continue pushing interest rate hikes even at risk of a recession. The headline number, 263,000 new jobs in the month, came in below the forecast of 275,000, and was well below the August print of 315K. At the same time, the headline unemployment rate
TipRanks
Down More Than 60%: Analysts Say Buy These 3 Beaten-Down Stocks Before They Rebound
After the annus horribilis of 2022, with the final quarter now in play, investors will be hoping a late-year rally will materialize. According to Carson Group’s chief market strategist Ryan Detrick, that’s not such a far-fetched idea. “While October has a reputation for crashes, it is really a bear market killer,” Detrick recently wrote. “Of the past 17 bear (or near bear markets), stocks bottomed in October six times. Could it happen again? With sentiment this pessimistic and extremely positive
Benzinga
3 REITs With 10%+ Dividends Priced Under $20 Per Share
Income investors sometimes look for higher-dividend yields on low-priced stocks. But buying stocks below $10 can be a high-risk venture as these stocks are usually cheap for good reasons. Therefore, it is usually better to purchase stocks above $10. Funds from operation (FFO) is the best measure of operating performance because it is the cash flow used for dividend payouts. Dividends well covered by the FFO will usually be safer from cuts. Here are three real estate investment trust (REIT) stock
Investor’s Business Daily
9 Tempting Stocks Burn Overeager Dip Buyers Every Time
It’s understandable S&P 500 investors try to jump in early. But that dip-buying is only burning investors this year as the bottom falls out.
SmartAsset
Why Now May Be a Good Time to Invest in Dividend-Paying Stocks
The market is down and inflation is up – so what’s out there for an investor looking for growth, appreciation and stability? You can try dividend-paying stocks. Many companies that pay dividends are still profitable during a market downturn so … Continue reading → The post Why Now May Be a Good Time to Invest in Dividend-Paying Stocks appeared first on SmartAsset Blog.
Insider Monkey
10 Best Stocks to Buy According to Angela Aldrich’s Bayberry Capital Partners
In this article, we present the list of the top 10 stock picks Angela Aldrich’s Bayberry Capital Partners at the end of the second quarter. If you want to skip the fund’s history, recent performance and details about its overall portfolio, please go directly to 5 Best Stocks to Buy According to Angela Aldrich’s Bayberry […]
Reuters
WRAPUP 1-IMF warns of slowing growth, rising market risks as finance officials meet
The International Monetary Fund warned on Tuesday that colliding pressures from inflation, war-driven energy and food crises and sharply higher interest rates were pushing the world to the brink of recession and threatening financial market stability. In gloomy reports issued at the start of the first in-person International Monetary Fund and World Bank annual meetings in three years, the IMF urged central banks to keep up their fight against inflation despite the pain caused by monetary tightening and the rise in the U.S. dollar to a two-decade high, the two main drivers of a recent bout of financial market volatility. Cutting its 2023 global growth forecasts further, the IMF said in its World Economic Outlook that countries representing a third of world output could be in recession next year.
Motley Fool
If I Could Buy Only 1 Stock, This Would Be It
Stock indexes have slipped into a bear market, and companies are suffering from higher inflation. But the good news is that this is a temporary situation. There are still amazing stocks out there that could boost your portfolio over the long term.
Investor’s Business Daily
These Are The 5 Best Stocks To Buy And Watch Now
Buying a stock is easy, but buying the right stock without a time-tested strategy is incredibly hard. So what are the best stocks to buy now or put on a watchlist?
Motley Fool
2 Tech Monopoly Stocks That Could Help Make You a Fortune
If you find a company that has a dominant market share, especially in a large and growing market, it’s a good idea to put your money behind it. Airbnb (NASDAQ: ABNB) started as a fringe idea — using your home as a hotel to host strangers — but it’s resonated around the world, and the home-sharing platform now has more rooms available on its platform than even the largest hotel chains. While competition has sprung up in the home-sharing industry, namely from Expedia’s VRBO, Airbnb still dominates the industry with a 74.6% market share among home-sharing platforms, according to data analytics firm M Science.
Bloomberg
UK Gilts Fall as BOE Confirms End to Bond Buying: Markets Wrap
(Bloomberg) — Gilts fell and the pound trimmed gains after the Bank of England confirmed it will end its emergency bond-buying program on Friday.Most Read from BloombergHere’s How Weird Things Are Getting in the Housing MarketIntel Plans Thousands of Job Cuts in Face of PC SlowdownHome Flippers Get Burned by US Housing Market’s Sudden SlumpJamie Dimon’s S&P 500 Bear Market: Brutal, Far From Unimaginable It’s Official: The Fed’s in the RedThe emailed statement followed some confusion on Wednesda
The Wall Street Journal
Monday’s Bond ETF Trading Hinted at Tuesday Morning’s Moves in Yields
While bond markets were closed on Monday for the Columbus Day holiday, exchange-traded funds holding those securities continued to trade on stock exchanges. + The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF, which tracks long-term U.S. government bonds, fell 1.6%. + The iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF, which tracks short-term U.S. government bonds, was nearly unchanged, down less than one-tenth of a percent.
Reuters
Analysis-Global bonds move in lockstep, ramping up investors’ risk
Government bond prices around the world are moving in tandem, reducing investors’ ability to diversify their portfolios and raising concerns of being blindsided by market gyrations. Correlations between currency-adjusted returns on the government debt of countries such as the U.S., Japan, the U.K. and Germany are at their highest level in at least seven years, data from MSCI showed, as central banks around the world ramp up their fight against inflation. Increasingly, that means investors holding the debt of one country can see their portfolios slammed by market activity at the other end of the globe.