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    The stock market will be volatile until the election before resuming its rally to record highs, market vet Ed Yardeni says

    By Kelly Cloonan,

    5 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1YPGI7_0vKW7CpY00

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1wUTTp_0vKW7CpY00
    Ed Yardeni
    • Stock market "choppiness" will likely continue until the election, Ed Yardeni says.
    • Yardeni says gridlock is the best-case scenario for the market to resume record highs.
    • Indexes saw fresh volatility Tuesday as Nvidia fell and new economic data was weaker than expected.

    Market "choppiness" will likely continue until the elections before stocks can resume their climb to record highs, Ed Yardeni says.

    "We're seeing quite a bit of choppiness going on in the market here. I think it may continue until the elections, and then I think we'll resume to new record highs," Yardeni said in a Wednesday interview with CNBC.

    In early August, the S&P 500 lost 3%, its biggest daily drop since 2022, in a historic market rout .

    The volatility resumed this week, with indexes on Tuesday notching their worst losses since the August sell-off as Nvidia shares tumbled and weak manufacturing data sparked new fears about an economic slowdown.

    Yardeni says the market's return to record highs is partially dependent on the election's outcome, and that a gridlock outcome is the best-case scenario for the market.

    "If we get a sweep of the Democrats or a sweep of the Republicans, I don't think the market is going to look forward to those kinds of regime," Yardeni said. "I think the market much more prefers gridlock."

    Gridlock in the capitol often results in sluggish legislative action, which markets prefer as it creates less uncertainty and fewer regulatory surprises to deal with.

    According to data from LPL Financial, the S&P 500 has historically climbed during a split or Republican-controlled Congress and Democratic president.

    "I think gridlock will win," Yardeni said.

    "If that's the case, then I think the market will move higher, simply because the economy is doing fine notwithstanding the tightening of monetary policy over the past couple of years, all the geopolitical and domestic political stress. But all in all, the economy is doing fine," he added.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
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    Comments / 9
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    Mario Quiles Quiles
    4d ago
    Stay the course, stay long on equities, don't listen to the bullshit as the oracle says. stay cool as a cucumber đŸ„’, tell the naysayers to go suck on the cucumber and enjoy the ascending stock rise up? buy the dip.live off the dividend income and the stock price appreciation with growth stocks.
    Michael Ojeda
    4d ago
    Who cares who wins, capitalism will be killed by either party.
    View all comments
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