Top Wall Street analysts are bullish on these stocks heading into the end of the

Started by OZER, Dec 12, 2021, 04:21 PM

Previous topic - Next topic
The market volatility in recent weeks is enough to make even the most experienced investors worried, particularly as they contend with the omicron Covid variant and the prospect of tighter monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.

Wall Street's top analysts are looking past the short-term tumult. These five stocks are potential long-term winners, according to TipRanks, which tracks the best-performing stock pickers.

Marvell
Rivian
Alphabet
SentinelOne
Waste Connections
All content is for education purpose only, not financial advices.




Biggest bubble is the government printing money like there is value in it. The money is simply going to many of these investments as a way to keep up with inflation. Rich get richer no matter what.

Why not get a group of educated economists that know what they are talking about to use in a major news story? Thanks for nothing.

It could have been, but JFK was targeted by the banking industry


Notice the Federal Reverse Note is above the United States on every bill. It's the same as state flags have to fly lower than the US flag. Subliminal message that the non-government private bank the Federal Reserve is above the United States government.



Raising taxes, fees, interest rates and turning off the money printer. Just a few things from the top of my head.

Consumer spending power has remained relatively flat during the pandemic while the ability to spend was reduced. This results in a shift from spending on services, such as airfare and hotels, to spending on goods, which is subject to massive supply disruptions. Americans saved at record levels in 2020. If we really want to get goods inflation in check, we should work to entice other countries to reduce COVID restrictions to allow for a free flow of tourism. Spending on vacations reduces the appetite to buy a new car or other goods on a more frequent basis, in turn reducing demand on supply-strained goods.


It's not  crisis for the rich.....    why would the government want to stop it ?