We recently compiled a list of the 10 Stocks That Will Bounce Back According To Hedge Funds. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) stands against the other stocks.

With 2024 coming to a close, investors have left several unknown variables behind them. They started out the year wondering when and if the Federal Reserve would start cutting interest rates. Then, as the year progressed, uncertainty about the outcome of the 2024 US Presidential Election came to the forefront due to the significantly different policy objectives of the two candidates.

Now, with President-elect Donald Trump waiting to be sworn in and the Fed’s interest rate cut cycle having kicked off in September, Wall Street is now focused on the impact of tariffs on global trade and the speed and depth of the interest rate cutting cycle. After the results of the election were clear, several sectors fluctuated in response.

Since this post is about stocks that can bounce back based on hedge fund holdings, it’s relevant to see which stocks tumbled in November. One of the hardest hit sectors was clean energy. The S&P’s clean energy stock index lost 10.4% in the days following the election as investors were worried about the rollback of clean energy subsidies rolled out during the Biden Administration and the incoming Trump Administration’s focus on traditional energy stocks and oil drilling.

While clean energy as a sector took the hardest hit, other stocks linked to China and the German automotive industry did not do well either. Shares of the Chinese stock that is known to have been a part of Warren Buffett’s investment portfolio fell by 4.8%, while shares of German car companies fell by as much as 6.6%. The drops were natural as investors were worried about tariffs against China impacting the car company’s business and tariffs against all countries that export to the US hampering the German car industry.

Along with the outcomes of a change in government, investors have also spent 2024 positioning themselves for the Fed’s monetary easing. The central bank started its rate cut cycle in September through a jumbo 50 basis point rate cut. In December, investors were greeted by the first set of economic data free of election worries in the form of the consumer price index. The CPI data was a mixed bag of results since while inflation grew at the fastest pace since April, two key inflationary components that have long held up strong against interest rates finally fell.

In numerical terms, US inflation sat at 0.3% in November and 2.7% in the twelve months ending in November. Additionally, core CPI, which removes the impact of volatile food and energy prices from the data, jumped by 0.3% in November to stay at the same level since August. Within this data, rents jumped by 0.2% and decelerated to levels last seen in July 2021. This marked a deceleration over the 0.3% reading for October, and the overall core CPI for the twelve months through November sat at 3.3%. This was lower than the three-month annualized average of 3.7%. This inflation data is crucial as it helps investors determine whether the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates thrice in 2025 or increase the number of cuts to four.

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