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12 Best Growth ETFs to Buy

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In this piece, we will take a look at the 12 best growth ETFs to buy. If you want to skip our analysis of the latest bit of news about the stock market, then check out 5 Best Growth ETFs to Buy.

September is proving to be a crucial month for the stock market in the wake of the Federal Reserve's latest monetary policy meeting. The central bank has been increasing interest rates for more than a year now, and its latest gathering saw policymakers choose a pause but hint that rates will remain higher for longer than initially expected. This stance was expected given that the U.S. economy has surprised analysts and managed to grow and the recent rise in crude oil prices is creating worries that inflation might rise again or become tougher to curtail - requiring the Fed to increase rates even more.

However, the latest decision to skip a rate hike cements the fact that even though more interest rate increases might be in store and the Fed might not reduce them as strongly as some expect, the 'terror' era of 2022 that saw consecutive 75 basis point hikes is over. Yet, markets are still sensitive to the central bank's decision since the current investment climate of benchmark rates being higher than 5% is quite different from what investors have been accustomed to as of late. So any whiff of high rates tends to make stock market investors uneasy and this was also the outcome after the latest interest rate decision.

The key data set that accompanied the latest Fed gathering is its Summary Economic Projections (SEP) and the dot plot that lays down the course of hikes for the remainder of this year. This data shows that policy makers expect to raise rates by 25 basis points one more time in 2023 and reduce rates by 50 basis points next year. On the inflationary front, the central bank also expects inflation to drop to 3.2% by the end of this year, indicating that the policy shocks that the world and investors have had to deal with were fruitful.

Shifting towards markets, naturally, stocks all across the board were down. The S&P500 started slipping soon after the data was released and closed the day 41.75 points or 0.94% lower. The tech heavy NASDAQ 100 and the broader NASDAQ Composite indexes were down 1.46% and 1.53%, respectively, while the flagship Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) or the blue chip stock index closed the day by dropping 0.22%. On the other side of the pond, global reverberations of U.S. monetary policy were felt as the British FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 Midcap indexes fell by 0.4% each.