Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel proved to be right on with his prediction about the Dow Jones Industrial Average hitting 18,000 by the end of 2014. Now, heading into 2015, Siegel…
Tag: Jeremy Siegel
Siegel Still Keen On The Bull
Does the recent market turmoil mean the bull market is ending? Jeremy Siegel doesn’t think so, even if the Federal Reserve starts raising interest rates sooner than previously expected. (more…)
Siegel: Rates Won't Rise As Much As Feared
Over the past five years, stock returns have been well above their long term average. But over the last ten years, they remain below the average. So what does Wharton…
The Moving Average Strategy: Good Results -- If You Have The Discipline
Does a 200-day moving average strategy work over the long term? In recent commentary for the American Association of Individual Investors, AAII Journal Editor Charles Rotblut takes a look at…
Siegel: Stocks 10% to 15% Below Fair Value
While stocks have stumbled out of the gate in 2014, Wharton’s Jeremy Siegel doesn’t think the declines are a sign that the bull market is ending. “While I still think…
9% Returns Ahead for Stocks?
In March 2009, Barron’s began a series of articles on long term stock performance, with one of the main conclusions being that when stocks have below average returns over a…
Siegel: S&P Fair Value around 2,000
Wharton professor and author Jeremy Siegel says stocks remain attractively valued, particularly given interest rate levels. “We are still at extremely normal, average valuations and, in fact, low valuations, given…
Siegel: Stocks Still Look Good
Author and Wharton Professor Jeremy Siegel says it is still a “very favorable climate” for equities. Siegel tells CNBC that a lack of major economic uncertainties should continue to push…
Shiller Talks Valuations, Counters Siegel
Yale Economist Robert Shiller says the market looks overpriced, but not so much so that you should avoid stocks. “I’m not really saying don’t invest in stocks,” Shiller tells CNBC’s…
What Keeps Siegel Up At Night
In a column for Kiplinger’s, the bullish Jeremy Siegel talks about what he sees as threats to his upbeat outlook. Siegel cites a couple risks whose impacts would go far…