• Mar 28, 2025

2 Industrials Stocks to Target This Week and 1 to Ignore

Industrials businesses quietly power the physical things we depend on, from cars and homes to e-commerce infrastructure. Still, their generally high capital requirements expose them to the ups and downs of economic cycles, and the market seems to be baking in a prolonged downturn as the industry has shed 8.6% over the past six months. This drop was worse than the S&P 500’s 1.6% loss.

  • Mar 28, 2025

1 Healthcare Stock with Solid Fundamentals and 2 to Ignore

Healthcare companies are pushing the status quo by innovating in areas like drug development and digital health. But financial performance has lagged recently as players offloaded surplus COVID inventories in 2023 and 2024, a headwind for overall demand. The result? Over the past six months, the industry has tumbled by 9.8%. This performance was worse than the S&P 500’s 1.6% decline.

  • Mar 28, 2025

2 Industrials Stocks on Our Watchlist and 1 to Brush Off

Whether you see them or not, industrials businesses play a crucial part in our daily activities. Unfortunately, this role also comes with a demand profile tethered to the ebbs and flows of the broader economy, and investors seem to be forecasting a downturn - over the past six months, the industry has pulled back by 8.6%. This drop was worse than the S&P 500’s 1.6% loss.

  • Mar 28, 2025

2 Large-Cap Stocks with Solid Fundamentals and 1 to Turn Down

Large-cap stocks are known for their staying power and ability to weather market storms better than smaller competitors. However, their sheer size makes it more challenging to maintain high growth rates as they’ve already captured significant portions of their markets.

  • Mar 28, 2025

US consumers remained cautious about spending last month as inflation ticked higher

Inflation picked up last month and consumers barely raised their spending, signs that the economy was already cooling even before most tariffs were imposed. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose 2.8% compared with a year ago, higher than January’s figure of 2.7%. Economists watch core prices because they are typically a better guide of where inflation is headed.

  • Mar 28, 2025

US consumer spending rebounds in February; core inflation firmer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. consumer spending rebounded in February amid rising prices for goods and services, which could amplify fears that the economy was facing a period of tepid growth and high inflation amid an escalation in trade tensions. The report from the Commerce Department on Friday showed a measure of underlying price pressures increasing by the most in 13 months. Economists say President Donald Trump's protectionist trade agenda, marked by a rush of tariff action announcements since taking office in January, will boost prices of imported goods and drive inflation higher in the months ahead.