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Search resuls for: "Joseph Quinlan"


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Each "higher for longer" item carries investment implications. Here's a look at how each category breaks down: Interest rates "I do subscribe to the new moniker, 'higher for longer.' That statement came from someone who nevertheless thinks the central bank doesn't have to take rates any higher than where they are now. Defense spending Geopolitical tensions, such as the wars in Ukraine and Israel, as well as the "cold war in Asia," should lead to an increase in defense spending around the world. In 2022, global defense spending hit a record $2.2 trillion, Quinlan said, citing Stockholm International Peace Institute data.
Persons: Joseph Quinlan, Merrill Lynch, Quinlan, Patrick Harker Organizations: Federal Reserve, Bank of America Private Bank, Philadelphia Fed, Investors, Defense, Stockholm International Peace Institute Locations: Israel, U.S, Ukraine, Asia, Stockholm, Washington
The firm walked investors through patterns in interest rates and government spending. From 2008 to last year, ultra-low interest rates and central bank policy made for an era of easy money. They said that will favor value stocks over growth stocks, and will make dividend-paying stocks and alternative investments more appealing. It's also a potential economic challenge, as national debt levels have risen at the same time that interest rates have increased. "We have entered a bull market in state intervention and activism," Quinlan and Sanfilippo wrote.
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