Get long boomer stocks and short millennial shares, says Bank of America

  • 📰 CNBC
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 23 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 13%
  • Publisher: 72%

Nederland Nieuws Nieuws

Nederland Laatste Nieuws,Nederland Headlines

The firm found stocks that are particularly exposed to the well-off generation.

Boomers have cash and appear to be weathering rising interest rates better than other generations, according to Bank of America. Because of this, the bank sees stocks particularly exposed to the well-off group that investors of all ages should buy. The baby boomer generation, born between 1946 and 1964, was in the prime working age during the main period of wealth creation, according to analyst Ohsung Kwon.

Those boomer dollars are mainly going to health care, entertainment and home improvement, Kwon said, which make stocks in this spaces good longs given the strength of that consumer base. On the other hand, millennials' stretched dollars tend to go toward housing and apparel, meaning they can make good shorts. Luxury homebuilder Toll Brothers and real estate investment trust Welltower were both among Kwon's boomer-focused long ideas.

Wij hebben dit nieuws samengevat zodat u het snel kunt lezen. Bent u geïnteresseerd in het nieuws, dan kunt u hier de volledige tekst lezen. Lees verder:

 /  🏆 12. in NL
 

Bedankt voor uw reactie. Uw reactie wordt na beoordeling gepubliceerd.

Nederland Laatste Nieuws, Nederland Headlines

Similar News:Je kunt ook nieuwsberichten lezen die vergelijkbaar zijn met deze die we uit andere nieuwsbronnen hebben verzameld.

Bank of America Corp. stock falls Tuesday, underperforms marketSupported by world-class markets data from Dow Jones and FactSet, and partnering with Automated Insights, MarketWatch Automation brings you the latest, most pertinent content at record speed and with unparalleled accuracy.
Bron: MarketWatch - 🏆 3. / 97 Lees verder »

America's getting older — and that's good news for stocks: Deutsche BankSteven Goldstein is based in London and responsible for MarketWatch's coverage of financial markets in Europe, with a particular focus on global macro and commodities. Previously, he was Washington bureau chief, directing MarketWatch's economic, political and regulatory coverage. Follow Steve on Twitter: MKTWgoldstein.
Bron: MarketWatch - 🏆 3. / 97 Lees verder »