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Despite the risks
associated with contested election results and the impact of rising coronavirus cases on economic data,
expect stocks to be higher at the end of the year, says Lindsey Bell,
a chief investment strategist for Ally Invest, adding that,
"November and December are typically the two best months for
stocks, even in election years."
Billionaire hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman,
the longtime chairman and CEO of now-defunct investment advisory
Omega Advisors, isn’t bullish on the economy's long-term outlook, but
the short-term should be favorable for stocks—even if election
results are challenged, he said on CNBC Friday.
What
To Watch For
The 2020 holiday season. Retail sales were an
unexpected economic boon in September, and Morgan Stanley says it
expects similar traction in October as retailers pushed to start the
holidays early and amid gains in labor income, but the firm also
expects that a "difficult winter [with] rising Covid-19
cases" could slow down spending in the weeks to come.
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