Dr. Jeremy Siegel, the «Wizard of Wharton,» Professor of Finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business, analyzes historical market trends and how various
macroeconomic factors affect stock prices in this acclaimed book.
Dr. Jeremy Siegel, the «Wizard of Wharton,» Professor of Finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business, analyzes historical market trends and how various
macroeconomic factors affect stock prices in this acclaimed book.
Not exact matches
Your shares go up and down with the company's value, which can be
affected by a wide array of (often unpredictable)
factors, including management decisions, government regulations and
macroeconomic events.
Practitioners of the bottom - up approach ignore
macroeconomic factors and instead look at individual microeconomic
factors that
affect specific companies they're watching.
A Fox News article quoted Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of financial aid Web site Finaid, as saying, «Student loan debt has become a
macroeconomic factor; it
affects the economy.
Macroeconomic factors like GDP, Inflation, and Retail Sales
affect the value of your portfolio.
Because of the worldwide use and consumption of gold and worldwide acceptance as a financial instrument, gold prices are
affected by a lot of
macroeconomic and political
factors.
We argued that the difference in impact is likely a result of other
macroeconomic factors that
affect longer - term rates and segmentation in the market.
Power - sector CO2 emissions are influenced by a number of
factors not directly
affected by environmental policies, such as
macroeconomic growth levels and relative fuel prices.
There are two principal reasons for this: (1) law firm failure to respond to
macroeconomic factors that have disrupted multiple industries; and (2) hubris and the belief that «lawyer exceptionalism» would protect firms from the tectonic buy - sell change
affecting other industries.
Other shorter - term
factors affecting market fundamentals include cyclical trends, such as broad
macroeconomic conditions measured by metrics that include the jobless rate, employment growth, consumer confidence and the velocity of residential home sales.