This Is What’s Next For The Market According To Fed Rate Cut History | Investing With IBD Podcast

preview_player
Показать описание
Is the market too exuberant about Fed rate cuts? David Saito-Chung, deputy markets editor at IBD, discusses why market expectations haven’t always matched the Fed’s actions — and what happened during past rate cuts. Learn more about Leaderboard stocks like Ensign Group (ENSG) and DoorDash (DASH), and why NVR (NVR) is an interest rate sensitive stock to watch.

The "Investing with IBD" podcast is hosted every Wednesday by IBD's Justin Nielsen.



Investor’s Business Daily has been helping people invest smarter results by providing exclusive stock lists, investing data, stock market research, education and the latest financial and business news to help investors make more money in the stock market.

#InvestorsBusinessDaily #IBD
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

The tightening was too aggressive to begin with. The rate hikes have broken an already fragile economy that would have worked out the inflation in the free market. The Fed chose to spark inflation buy napalming the public with stimulus right when the global supply chain was broken and production of good and service basically did not exist during Covid. It was gasoline on the perfect firestorm. Then, instead of letting the inflation work itself out… we hiked rates thousands of times higher than they were in the most massive pounding the Fed has ever given an economy. They chose to break the inflation they created over the backs of the middle class. Now they’re providing a little relief and everyone is acting like it’s going to bring back Covid level inflation and end the Anyone feeling the impact of these economic shifts should consider Crypto long-term trading strategies to protect their assets. My advice to anyone feeling the heat in this inflation, just trade long term more than ever, I have made over 540k from day trading with Patricia Theresa Wright in few weeks, this is one of the best medium to backup your assets incase it goes bearish….

JohnScott-gc