Billionaire Ken Fisher’s 10 Stock Picks with Huge Upside Potential

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In this article, we discuss billionaire Ken Fisher's 10 stock picks with huge upside potential. To skip Fisher's comments on current economic conditions and details about his Q3 bets, go directly to Billionaire Ken Fisher's 5 Stock Picks with Huge Upside Potential.

Ken Fisher runs one of the largest and most successful hedge funds in the world. Fisher Asset Management was started with $250 in 1979 and has over $205 billion worth of assets under management as of September 30, 2023. Ken Fisher remained the CEO of the firm till 2016 and passed the torch to Damian Ornani. However, Fisher remains the executive chairman and co-chief investment officer of Fisher Asset Management. Fisher’s firm offers personalized services and tailors an investment strategy according to its client’s needs. Fisher Asset Management serves 140,000 clients around the world.

Ken Fisher is also an author and is the son of legendary growth investor and author Philip Fisher. Between 1986 and 2017, he wrote the "Portfolio Strategy" column on Forbes. Furthermore, 6 out of 11 books written by Ken Fisher have been national best sellers. As of December 1, he has a net worth of $7.4 billion.

Ken Fisher on Current Economic Conditions

Wall Street has recently taken a sigh of relief, and analysts are bullish on the market conditions of the near future after the S&P 500 performed better than expected, in addition to the Federal Reserve keeping the rates steady in three out of the last four meetings. S&P 500 was up 20.15% year-to-date on December 1. Despite that, several analysts are predicting a “soft landing” or a mild recession in early 2024. However, Ken Fisher is quite optimistic about the future. He said that even though a lot of people have a negative view of the economy, he has a different opinion. He said in a video on Fisher Investments’ YouTube channel:

“A world of 2, 3, 4% GDP growth, low unemployment, and a return to 2% inflation isn’t actually that far away from where we are right now. It is not where we are right now, but it's not that far away, and yet that is the world we had in 2018-19. So, in some ways, whether we are or are not returning to that pre-pandemic economy and world in terms of notions like consumer debt, in terms of notions like deficits, in terms of notions like GDP growth, unemployment, inflation, etc. Well, we are not all the way there, and of course, by definition, interest rates are much higher at the level of what the Federal Reserve and the government are doing, than were the case then, but in a world of 2, 3, 4% growth, low unemployment, inflation falling down to around 3% on its way to 2%, it's not that bad a world. Is it perfect? No, but it's not that bad, and it's good enough that we should embrace that and get over our fears so much because we are still seeing fears at every corner.”