Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
However, economist Harry Dent envisions a starkly different scenario for 2024. ... The stock market is no stranger to fluctuations, but Dent's forecast goes beyond the typical market correction.
Dent, born in Columbia, South Carolina, is the son of Republican political strategist Harry S. Dent Sr. Dent is the founder of HS Dent Investment Management, an investment firm based in Tampa, Florida that advises, and markets, the Dent Strategic Portfolio Fund mutual fund. Dent is also the president and founder of the Dent Research and ...
Economist Harry Dent recently said in an interview with Fox Business that the market is currently in the "bubble of all bubbles." And research firm Capital Economics predicts that the S&P 500 ...
On Dec. 30, 2011, financial guru Harry Dent was quoted in Bloomberg making a bold prediction: In 2012, the S&P 500 stock index of America's biggest companies would see its value cut in half, or at ...
Harry Shuler Dent Sr. (February 21, 1930 – October 2, 2007) was an American political strategist considered one of the architects of the Republican Southern Strategy.One of the South's leading power brokers, he was instrumental in securing the votes to get Richard Nixon nominated for President at the 1968 Republican National Convention. [1]
For example, in U.S. contemporary economics, Harry Dent, a University of South Carolina and Harvard Business School graduate and Fortune 100 consultant, has popularized the baby-boomer spending wave theory. [1] According to Dent, [2] the stock-market decline of 2008 was a result of baby boomers aging past their peak
Harry was introduced to politics as a child when his father, a judge, took him into the polling booth to help pull the levers for elections. He attended Riverdale Country School. He is the nephew of singer-songwriter Neil Sedaka, who married Enten's aunt. [7] Enten graduated magna cum laude, and Phi Beta Kappa from Dartmouth College in 2011.
The FedWatch tool predicts two 25 basis-point cuts next year, which is significantly less than the five cuts forecast by the Fed itself when it issued its summary of economic projections in September.