Red-Hot Inflation has CEOs 'Crowing' and Consumers Crying (Sort of)
Key to understanding our current moment is that inflation, as dicey as it can be for the average citizen, can work to the benefit of big companies.
Key to understanding our current moment is that inflation, as dicey as it can be for the average citizen, can work to the benefit of big companies.
The consensus on Wall Street has reached a roar: U.S. interest rates have nowhere to go but up.
Fund managers are at least thinking a "recession scare" could emerge in the market this year.
“It’s not just geopolitical risk -- you’ve got this spike in inflation to 40-year highs,” Philip Orlando, in a Bloomberg Television interview.
Markets have been on edge for weeks, an actual conflict could drive energy and food prices even higher, and push Europe into a major supply crisis.
Goldman Sachs has tempered its outlook for the S&P 500 index, expecting it to stay below the 5,000 mark this year.
Investors have to realize that this is going to be a very choppy market and they have to be cautious with their position.