In the "Behind the Markets" podcast on Friday, the Wharton professor highlighted a slew of recent economic data that showed worrying signs of weakening, including a drop in job openings, a rise in jobless claims, and softness in the manufacturing sector. The inflation we are seeing is not temporary and will be probably one of the major political issues in 2022, he predicted. Jeremy Siegel, Wharton professor of finance, joins the 'Halftime Report' to discuss inflation, the Fed and market. Siegel is also a lifelong friend of Robert Shiller, an economist at the Yale School of Management, whom Siegel has known since their MIT graduate school days. He taught at the University of Chicago for four years before moving to the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Michael Steinberger is a Delaware-based journalist and a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine. And part of that relationship and the tension around it is the way that we have treated the land in this country. When calculating actual house prices into inflation numbers, he said, really inflation disappears. Despite his reputation as a market maven, Siegel was never tempted to jump into the financial world. (When he wrote in the late 1990s and early 2000's, index funds were not necessarily available in 401k plans but have become more popular since then.) Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel told CNBC on Tuesday that the stock market could fare well into next year if the Fed speaks up about what it's seeing in the underlying economy. He already knew several people at the School, and from the moment he arrived, he felt he belonged. Equity Risk Premia, Corporate Profit Forecasts, and Investor Sentiment around the Stock Crash of October 1987, Journal of Business, 65 (4), October 1992, pp. Inflation Alert: Expect Prices To Climb 25% Says Wharton's Jeremy Siegel For all stocks or investment options, Siegel advise following a "D-I-V" mnemonic as a guideline: prioritizing dividends, international, and valuation. We at the National Park Service are charged under the Organic Act of 1916 with being the stewards of the flora and fauna, and of, of course, there are memorials and monuments also. Sign up for free newsletters and get more CNBC delivered to your inbox. Here's what the experts have to say, Watch CNBCs full interview with Invescos Brian Levitt and Bahnsen Groups David Bahnsen, Watch CNBCs full interview with Fundstrat's Mark Newton on Fed's next move, Watch CNBC's full interview with Ritholtz's Josh Brown on tech's hot streak, Watch CNBC's full interview with Inside Mortgage Finance's Guy Cecala. Get this delivered to your inbox, and more info about our products and services. As we walk through the quiet corridors, past his old office and a favorite conference room, its hard not to detect a certain wistfulness in his voice. Even as other departments caught up with finance, Siegel remained Whartons most prominent figure, and his legacy is formidable. Siegel had his pick of graduate programs, including at MIT, which had arguably the most prestigious economics department in the world at the time. Risk, Interest Rates, and the Forward Exchange, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 86 (2), May 1972, pp.

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