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Metros in Florida, Texas, and other states are seeing prices fall by as much as 12%, per Realtor.com. Miami, FloridaPedro Portal/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty ImagesMedian list price: $525,000Change from last year: -12.4%2. Orlando, FloridaSmithlandia Media/Getty ImagesMedian list price: $429,950Change from last year: -5.6%Advertisement9. Tampa, FloridaJohn Coletti/Getty ImagesMedian list price: $414,948Change from last year: -5.5%10. Nashville, TennesseeJohn Coletti/Getty ImagesMedian list price: $547,865Change from last year: -5.4%
Persons: , Miami , Florida Pedro, Swapan Jha, San Francisco , California Nicholas Klein, Kansas City , Missouri Edwin Remsberg, Austin , Texas RYAN KYTE, Jacksonville , Florida Dan Reynolds, Tampa , Florida John Coletti, Nashville , Tennessee John Coletti Organizations: Metros, Service, metros, Miami Herald, Tribune, Getty, Kansas, Orlando , Florida Smithlandia Locations: Florida , Texas, Realtor.com, Florida, Texas, Miami , Florida, Cincinnati , Ohio, San Francisco , California, Kansas City , Missouri, Austin ,, Jacksonville , Florida, Denver , Colorado, Orlando , Florida, Tampa , Florida, Nashville , Tennessee
Wells Fargo — Shares of the San Francisco-based lender rose 3%, helped by better-than-expected earnings. However, the bank's revenue of $20.37 billion came in below the $20.42 billion expected, and Wells experienced an 11% decline in net interest income. Tesla , Uber — Tesla shares tumbled 6.4% after its event for the robotaxi, a self-driving cab concept, left investors feeling underwhelmed. Affirm , Flywire — Affirm shares popped 3.1% after Wells Fargo upgraded the buy-now-pay-later stock to overweight from equal weight. Elsewhere in the digital payments space, Wells Fargo downgraded Flywire to equal weight from overweight, sending shares down 2.7%.
Persons: Wells, JPMorgan Chase, Tesla, underwhelmed, Carlos Tavares, Flywire, Mobileye, Morgan Stanley, Kinder Morgan, Ferrari, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Yun Li, Sean Conlon Organizations: LSEG, JPMorgan, Revenue, Bank of America, BlackRock, Mizuho, Bank of Locations: San Francisco, Wells, Flywire, Atlassian, China
Third-quarter adjusted earnings were $1.52 per share, topping the $1.28 per share expected from analysts polled by LSEG. JPMorgan Chase – Shares jumped 4.7% after JPMorgan, the biggest American bank, posted third-quarter results that beat estimates for profit and revenue. BlackRock – Shares climbed 2.8% after the asset manager beat analysts' third-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. Bank of New York Mellon – The bank stock dropped 1%, even after the company issued a stronger-than-expected quarterly report. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were expecting $1.42 in earnings per share on $4.54 billion of revenue.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, Walmex –, Fastenal, FactSet, Wells, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett, Natalie Knight, Doug Ostermann, Stellantis, Carlos Tavares, who's, LSEG, Kinder Morgan, Ferrari, BNY, , Alex Harring, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: San, LSEG, JPMorgan, JPMorgan Chase –, Walmart, Apple Pay, Bank of America, Securities and Exchange Commission, Finance, BlackRock, of, Bank of New York Mellon Locations: San Francisco, LSEG .
Here's why Stellantis is struggling
  + stars: | 2024-10-10 | by ( Robert Ferris | Christina Locopo | Jason Reginato | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHere's why Stellantis is strugglingMerging some of America's legacy car brands with big European ones made Stellantis the world's fifth largest automaker in 2021. Just three years later, Stellantis is struggling, and its troubles lie specifically with its North American business – home to Jeep, Ram, Dodge and Chrysler. Critics, including its own dealers, say the company raised prices too high and too fast, and didn't focus enough on making good cars. Its stock has plummeted and stakeholders are asking for its CEO to step down.
Persons: Stellantis Organizations: Dodge, Chrysler, Critics
Wild swings in mortgage rates discouraged almost everyone from venturing out into the market. As I wrote earlier this year, a gummed-up housing market — the Ice Age I was talking about — is good for nobody. When mortgage rates hit multidecade lows during the pandemic, millions of people were able to snag or refinance their way into cheaper monthly costs. That'd be within spitting distance of what the experts at John Burns Research and Consulting, a housing-research firm, call the "magic mortgage rate." In other words, trying to predict mortgage rates — and buying or selling a home accordingly — is a fool's errand.
Persons: Green, that's, Skylar Olsen, everyone's, it's, there's, Fannie Mae, John Burns, they'd, Ralph McLaughlin, Olsen, Lawrence Yun, Altos, Mike Simonsen, Chen Zhao, Zhao, We're, Mark Palim, Palim Organizations: Federal Housing Finance Agency, Federal Reserve, John, John Burns Research, Consulting, National Association of Realtors, Altos Research, Builders, Sun Locations: Sun Belt, Midwest
The Vanderbilts, one of America's wealthiest Gilded Age families, owned multiple opulent homes. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementDuring the Gilded Age, Cornelius Vanderbilt was America's richest man with an estimated net worth of $100 million, or around $200 billion in today's currency. His grandson, Cornelius Vanderbilt II, succeeded him as the president and chairman of the New York Central Railroad in 1885. The seaside residence, named "the Breakers" after the waves that break on Newport's rocky shores, was one of many opulent homes that the Vanderbilts owned as one of America's wealthiest Gilded Age families.
Persons: , Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Warren Buffett, Cornelius Vanderbilt II, Alice Vanderbilt Organizations: Breakers, Service, New York Central Railroad Locations: Newport , Rhode Island
Elon Musk has a big task this week: convincing investors that Tesla is more than just a car company. It may do so once again as Elon Musk prepares to use the studio lot to tell another story: that Tesla is more than just a car company. The long-awaited event — originally scheduled for August — is meant to give weight to the electric vehicle maker's pitch that it is a tech company first and a car company second. Meanwhile, in July, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives claimed the "Tesla AI story could be worth $1 trillion-plus and is the most undervalued AI name." Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty ImagesHowever, what's critical to note is the timing for Tesla's robotaxi push.
Persons: Elon Musk, Tesla, Tesla's, , Musk, Sam Altman, Andrej Karpathy, Dan Ives, Michael Macor, Caspar Rawles, Rawles, Donald Trump, Elon, Ross Gerber, Gerber, Uber, it's, Cruise, Paul Miller, Forrester Organizations: Service, Warner Bros, Elon, Robotaxi, EV, San Francisco, Getty, Elon Inc, Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, Twitter, Gerber Kawasaki Wealth, Investment Management, Baidu, GM Locations: Burbank, California, Tesla's, Palo Alto, Elonville, Chinese, China, Wuhan
Wall Street's top performers are hard workers who tend to work long, intense hours. Business Insider asked its 2024 class of Wall Street stars about how they stay mentally sharp. Here's what we learned about the hacks, habits, and routines that help top talent on Wall Street stay on their game. The routine helps him stay present with his home life as well as work, he added. But I think those two things help me to at least stay recharged and stay ready each day," he said.
Persons: , Mark Zhu, Craig Kolwicz, Goldman Sachs, Corey White, Nina Gnedin, Blake Cecil, Chi Chen, Robert Sapolsky, Justin Elliott, Read, Palmer Osteen, KKR's, I've, That's, Daniela Cardona, America's White, Ben Carper, it's, there's, Matthew Eid, Holm, Reinhard Dirscherl, Melissa Ding, Wells, Annie Cheslin, she's, Margaret Williams, Morgan Stanley, Williams, Apollo's Austin Anton, Erica Wilson's, deadlifted, Harrison DiGia, Patrick Lenihan, barre, Elizabeth Stone Redding, Stone Redding, Matt Gilbert, Thoma, Gilbert, I'm, Dan, Feroz Khosla, isn't Organizations: Business, Service, Blackstone, Finance, Goldman, of America, Man Group, Productivity, Bridgewater Associates, Bank of America, Fidelity Investments, RBC, Bank, America's, Jefferies, Capital Advisory, Ares Management, Getty, BlackRock, Blue, General Atlantic, JPMorgan Asset Management, TPG, Thoma Bravo, Citadel Securities Locations: Blackstone, Chicago, San Francisco, Coast, Boston, Silicon Valley, New York, I'm, Maldives, he's, Thailand, Central Park
Brian Niccol and Elliott Hill are taking over Starbucks and Nike , respectively, just as a key market that weighed on their predecessors gets a boost. As China's economic stimulus takes shape, it could end up helping these global brands. Nike and Starbucks in China While the exact plans for Niccol and Hill are still unclear, the Chinese market seems like it will be an area of focus. At Starbucks, the company's leadership team in China has already been reshuffled since Niccol took over in September. Still, a rebound for China's consumer won't necessarily boost sales for Starbucks and Nike without better execution.
Persons: Brian Niccol, Elliott Hill, Hartmut Issel, Niccol, Matthew Friend, Hill, Chen Luo, Ellen Hazen, . Putnam, Hazen, Eric Clark, I'd, it's, Clark, America's Luo, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Starbucks, Nike, Bank of America — Nike, UBS, Bank of America, CNBC, Brands, Bank, America's Locations: China, United States, Niccol, .
Yet the concept, which eventually became Raising Cane's Chicken Fingers, propelled Graves to his debut Tuesday on the Forbes 400, a ranking of America's richest people. He's reportedly the country's 107th-richest person, with an estimated net worth of $9.5 billion, largely driven by his ownership stake in Raising Cane's. Graves owns more than 90 percent of the company, and has no plans to take it public or sell his stake to private investors, he said. "I want my kids in the business to be able to carry our values on after their mom and I are gone," said Graves. "They can turn this into a worldwide business and continue to grow."
Persons: Todd Graves, Craig Silvey, Graves, He's, Cane's —, Cane — Organizations: LSU, Forbes, Nicholls State University, Small Business Administration, CNBC Locations: Louisiana, Cane's, California, Baton Rouge , Louisiana, Alaska —
Warren Buffett has sold 23% of his Bank of America stake for about $10 billion since mid-July. AdvertisementWarren Buffett has followed up the surprise paring of his Apple stake by taking a knife to another of his largest holdings: Bank of America. Berkshire has slashed its stake from 1.03 billion shares to 794 million shares, reducing its ownership from 13.2% to 10.2%. Related storiesBuffett might also be rebalancing Berkshire's $300 billion stock portfolio in line with his smaller Apple bet. True to his bargain-hunter reputation, Buffett topped up his Bank of America stake in 2020, when the pandemic-hit stock was trading around $25.
Persons: Warren Buffett, Buffett, , Berkshire Hathaway, hasn't, he's, Goldman Sachs, There's, Brian Moynihan Organizations: Bank of America, Berkshire Hathaway's, Express, Service, Berkshire, Securities, Exchange, Apple, American Express, Oracle, of America, Bank of, JPMorgan Locations: Berkshire, , Thursday's, Omaha
The battle of the face computers is on
  + stars: | 2024-10-04 | by ( Lloyd Lee | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +6 min
Meta debuted its Orion augmented reality glasses last week without a consumer release date. AR glasses are a substantial step toward a future that ditches the handheld smartphone for face computers. AdvertisementThe battle of the face computers is here, and Meta just launched a highly compelling salvo. Last Wednesday, CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled the company's latest innovation, Orion — augmented reality eyewear that weighs about 3.5 ounces. Snap's Spectacles are augmented reality glasses that run on the company's in-house OS.
Persons: Meta, , Mark Zuckerberg, Orion —, BI's Peter Kafka, Gene Munster, Apple, Greg Peters, we're, it's, " Peters, There's, Alistair Barr, Tim Cook, Cook, It's, Munster, Andrej Sokolow, BI's Jordan Hart, Justin Post, Andrew Bosworth, Jacob Bourne, Emarketer, Axel Springer, Bosworth, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Zuckerberg, Spokespeople Organizations: Orion, Apple, Service, Meta, Deepwater Asset Management, Bloomberg, Vision Pro, Netflix, Vision, Getty, Munster, CNBC, BI Locations: Cupertino
There are several key stocks in the U.S. investors need to be mindful of when navigating the current market environment, according to Bank of America. To capture the momentum from this rally, Bank of America screened for the most important stocks in each region of the world — including the U.S. — that have the potential to have the largest impact on portfolio performance, positive or negative. Bank of America found these stocks to be among the most important in the U.S.: Chipmaker Nvidia and oil and gas giant Exxon Mobil ranked fairly high on the firm's steady compounders list within the screen. Meta's shares are up nearly 64% year to date. Other stocks considered the most important names in the U.S. include rideshare company Uber and pharma name Eli Lilly .
Persons: Nigel Tupper, Vivek Arya's, Metaverse, Justin Post, Eli Lilly Organizations: Bank of America, Investment, U.S, Nvidia, Exxon Mobil, Exxon, Meta, Bank of America's, Uber Locations: U.S, Lebanon, Thursday's
Analyst Sara Senatore said the recent arrival of CEO Brian Niccol is a potential catalyst for Starbucks stock. She expects the former Chipotle chief to turn around Starbucks' North American business more quickly and with less investment than expected. SBUX YTD mountain Starbucks stock. Walmart stock has advanced more than 54% in 2024. WMT YTD mountain Walmart stock.
Persons: Anthony Cassamassino, Sara Senatore, Brian Niccol, Robert Ohmes, Ohmes Organizations: Bank of America, Dow Jones, Walmart, Bank of America's, Hasbro Locations: Iran, Israel
That's led the market to assume rates will fall to pre-pandemic lows, BofA's Bernard Mensah says. Yet, inflationary risks will likely keep rates elevated, Mensah says. Before the pandemic, in the decade following the Great Financial Crisis, interest rates remained at historical lows. Despite the Fed's apparent confidence that pricing pressures have eased, Mensah says a variety of inflationary risks will keep interest rates higher. Other analysts have also pointed to inflation risks from geopolitical conflicts.
Persons: That's, BofA's Bernard Mensah, Mensah, , Bank of America's Bernard Mensah, Rowe Price, Tomasz Wieladek Organizations: Fed, Service, Federal Reserve, Bank of America's, Bloomberg Locations: US, China, England, Switzerland, Sweden, Canada, Mexico
The average credit-card interest rate is now just over 21%, up from about 15% a decade ago. Additionally, as credit-card companies continue to charge high interest rates, more cardholders in debt become delinquent — and that could push the US economy closer to recession. Advertisement'The highest credit-card rates we've ever seen'Until 1978, most states had laws capping interest rates for credit cards and consumer products. Lowering the current high interest rates, and the profits that come with them, has become a priority across the aisle. Ted Rossman, a senior industry analyst at Bankrate, described the feedback loop of high prices and high interest rates as "a tough cycle to break."
Persons: Lana Linge, it's, Linge, isn't, Adam Rust, Bruce McClary, TransUnion, Austan Goolsbee, Rust, You've, you've, Antoinette Schoar, Schoar, David Silberman, GOP Sen, Josh Hawley, Hawley, Democratic Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Michele Raneri, Ranieri, Ted Rossman Organizations: Consumer Federation of America, Federal Reserve, National Foundation, Credit, Federal Reserve Bank of New, New York Fed, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Louis Federal Reserve, Federal, Financial, MIT, Center for Responsible Lending, Lawmakers, GOP, Democratic, Reserve, TransUnion Locations: overspending, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, South Dakota, Delaware
It also raised its price target to $210 from $187, suggesting shares could rise more than 17% from Tuesday's close. He maintained his $2,400 price target, which implies 16.2% upside potential from Tuesday's close. Bank of America's Lorraine Hutchinson reiterated her buy rating while trimming her price target to $100 from $104. Deutsche Bank analyst Krisztina Katai also maintained her buy rating and inched down her price target by $3 to $92. He also lowered his price target on shares to $40 from $42, implying upside of just 5.2% over the next 12 months.
Persons: Baird, Davidson, Raymond James, Pavel Molchanov, Molchanov, — Hakyung Kim, FANG, Betty Jiang, Jiang, Diamondback, John Pancari, Pancari, Marcelo Santos, Santos, LatAm, Santo, Elliott Hill, Bank of America's Lorraine Hutchinson, Hutchinson, Krisztina Katai, Katai, Matthew Boss, Boss, Baird downgrades Harley, Craig Kennison, Harley, Kennison, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, GE, General Electric, Barclays, Diamondback, Diamondback Energy, Endeavor, Endeavor Energy Resources, Management, T, T Bank, Federal Reserve, ISI, EA, JPMorgan downgrades, JPMorgan, MercadoLibre, Nike, Bank of, Deutsche Bank, Harley Locations: Tuesday's, Bank of America's, Hill
The information for the following product(s) has been collected independently by Business Insider: Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card, Bank of America® Unlimited Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card, BankAmericard® Secured Credit Card, Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Credit Card for Students. Bank of America Customized Cash Secured Card ComparisonIf you're considering the Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card, compare it to other secured credit cards such as the Capital One Quicksilver Secured Cash Rewards Credit Card and Discover it® Secured Credit Card. Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card vs. Bank of America® Unlimited Cash Rewards Secured Credit CardBoth the Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card and the Bank of America® Unlimited Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card have a $200 minimum security deposit, and both cards earn rewards. Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card vs. Capital One Quicksilver Secured Cash Rewards Credit CardThe Capital One Quicksilver Secured Cash Rewards Credit Card could be a good alternative to the Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card if you prefer its rewards structure. We're including this card comparison as a cautionary tale: If you're evaluating a Bank of America secured credit card, go with either the Bank of America® Customized Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card or the Bank of America® Unlimited Cash Rewards Secured Credit Card.
Persons: Cardholders, Merrill, you'll, you've, Cash, You'll, BankAmericard, cardholders aren't Organizations: Business, Bank of America, Card, The Bank of America, of America, Credit, Drug, Merrill, Bank, Deposit Bank of America, Quicksilver, . Bank of America, Cash, Capital, College
Arbitrage hosts like Anderson take to TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram to offer advice and promote paid courses on how to start and build your own short-term-rental empire. A 25-year-old TikToker with the handle @airbbnbmastery101 titled one video "How to quit your job in 2024 and get rich." There's no way to know for sure how popular Airbnb arbitrage is. Related storiesBut Airbnb arbitrage, in theory, isn't illegal; it depends on local laws governing how short-term-rental properties are licensed. DeRose says that he regrets working in short-term-rental arbitrage and that "it's very clearly hurting" the housing market.
Persons: Hailie Anderson, factly, Anderson, , Donald Trump, Dave Ramsey, Trump, Inayah McMillan, — tycoons, TikTok, she's, Airbnb, Jamie Lane, Alfred, They're, there's, Lane, Konrad Bicher, Wolf, Bicher, Tom DeRose, It's, it's Organizations: YouTube, HGTV, Target Locations: Austin, Salt Lake City, Nashville, Florida, New York, Cities, Barcelona, Europe, Asia
Utility stocks this year have mounted a rally unseen in more than two decades. In the third quarter, utilities are the best out of 11 sectors that comprise the S & P 500, climbing 18%. As a group, utilities are poised to score their largest quarterly gain since George W. Bush was president in 2003. If that holds through yearend, utilities will see their biggest annual advance since 2000, when they surged more than 50%. "Utilities are the hottest sector in the market currently," Wolfe Research Rob Ginsberg said in a note to clients in August.
Persons: George W, Bush, Wolfe, Rob Ginsberg, hasn't, It's, buildout, Ginsberg, Subramanian, Wells Fargo, Christopher Harvey, Harvey, LSEG Organizations: Utilities, Federal Reserve, Bank of, Nasdaq, Bank of America, Constellation Energy, CenterPoint Energy Locations: yearend, The Texas, Houston
The basic income myth: cash discourages work
  + stars: | 2024-09-28 | by ( Allie Kelly | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +10 min
Critics of guaranteed basic income often suggest that cash payments discourage work. Guaranteed basic income programs are gaining momentum across the US as an approach to poverty reduction. Related storiesBasic income critics say cash discourages workBillionaires, politicians, and financial leaders have criticized basic income programs, saying that cash payments could encourage laziness among participants. AdvertisementStill, guaranteed basic income programs reflect short-term results. Harper began teaching shortly after enrolling in a Georgia-based guaranteed basic income program, In Her Hands.
Persons: , Taniquewa Brewster, Brewster, America's, John Gillette, Sam Altman, Samra, aren't, Cepia Harper, Harper, I've, Asya Howlette, Howlette, Brewster — Organizations: Service, Texans, Business, Austin, Rep, Mayors, Orleans Mayor's, Youth Locations: Arizona, Illinois, Texas, Stockton and Baltimore, Denver, Georgia, Orleans
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRally in equities has a lot of momentum behind them, says Merrill and Bank of America's Chris HyzyChris Hyzy, Merrill & Bank of America Private Bank chief investment officer, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss Hyzy's thoughts on equity markets, how sold investors are on the 'soft landing', and much more.
Persons: Merrill, Bank of America's Chris Hyzy Chris Hyzy Organizations: Bank of America's, Merrill & Bank of America Private Bank
BI broke down the pros, cons, and frequently asked questions about basic income. Universal basic income and guaranteed basic income could fill gaps in the existing US social safety net, experts said. A benefit of basic income is the element of choice, according to Shafeka Hashash, associate director of guaranteed income at the Economic Security Project. Private donors often fully or partially fund basic income programs, lessening the cost burden on local governments. US states with active basic income programs include California, Illinois, Colorado, New York, Georgia, Louisiana, and more.
Persons: , Melvin Carter, Paul, Shafeka Hashash, Hashash, It's, John Gillette, Oscar Wong, UBI, Andrew Yang, Howlette, hasn't, Michael Tubbs, Allan Baxter, What's, Sam Altman, Elon Musk Organizations: Service, Business, St, SDI, SNAP, Economic Security, Arizona, Rep, American, Orleans Mayor's, Youth, University of British Columbia, Alaska Permanent Fund, Tech Locations: Valley, America, Los Angeles and Illinois, Texas, Missouri, Arizona , Iowa, South Dakota, Orleans, Denver, Atlanta, Alaska, California , Illinois, Colorado , New York , Georgia, Louisiana, Canada, Brazil, China, Germany, India, Iran, Ireland, California, New Mexico, Oregon
Analyst Jared Shaw raised his rating on the regional bank to overweight from equal weight and upped his price target by $4 to $14. Analyst Rob Dickerson downgraded the chocolate maker to underperform from hold and slashed his price target by $21 to $163. Analyst Lincoln Kong upgraded U.S.-listed shares to buy from neutral and raised his price target to $22.60 from $16.50. — Alex Harring 5:51 a.m.: BofA hikes Meta price target following Connect event Bank of America sees more room for Meta Platforms to run due to its artificial intelligence possibilities. Starbucks shares are flat year to date, but they have popped more than 20% over the past three months.
Persons: Bernstein, Jared Shaw, NYCB, Shaw, — Alex Harring, Sell Hershey, Jefferies, Rob Dickerson, Dickerson, flatlining, Hershey, Alex Harring, BofA, Ralph Lauren, Christopher Nardone, Justin Picicci, Corey Van der, Nardone, Picicci, Goldman, Bilibili Goldman Sachs, Lincoln, Kong, Bilibili, Justin Post, Post, Metaverse, Meta, Brian Niccol, Danilo Gargiulo, Gargiulo, Niccol, — Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, . Bank of America, Barclays, Bancorp New, Bancorp New York Community, Wall, Hershey, America's, Lincoln Kong, Bank of America, Facebook, Meta, Orion, Taco Bell Locations: Bancorp New York, Wednesday's, Thursday's premarket, Bilibili, U.S
Bank of America says the economy should enter a "recovery" phase as early as next year. So investors may want to consider higher-risk small-caps, which outperform in recovery, BofA says. Below are three higher-risk stocks that are well-positioned to take off next year. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! But despite warning signs emerging in the labor market, Bank of America says investors should start to consider adding riskier assets to their portfolio heading into 2025.
Persons: BofA, , Justin Post Organizations: of America, Service, Bank of America, Bank of, Federal Reserve, Business Locations: Bank of America's
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