Billionaire Ken Fisher Loves These 10 AI Stocks

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Earlier this month, billionaire Ken Fisher, while talking to Bloomberg, said that in his career spanning 50 years he never spent a "moment" thinking or worrying about what the central banks "might do."

Billionaire Ken Fisher Says He Doesn't Waste a "Moment" Worrying About Fed Moves

Why? Because Fisher said he's "always believed" that "they are just about as crazy and out of their minds as you can be."

Fisher, 73, said that the central bank management "never" knows what to do as it's reactive. To drive this point home, Fisher reminded everyone that just a month before the Fed's first 75bps rate hike, Fed Chair Jerome Powell had said that he was not even "thinking about" raising rates by 75bps.

Fisher Says Some Threats and "Big Surprises" are Not Priced In

Ken Fisher has been bullish on the economy over the past several months. Rate hikes, the inflation storm, banking crisis and global uncertainty did not waver Fisher's belief that we will come out of this crisis unscathed. But in his latest interview Fisher voiced concerns about some of the threats he believes are not yet "priced in." Fisher is worried about "big surprises" that can impact global stocks and global GDP. Fisher said in financial markets everyone is usually worried about more or less the same things. But sometimes threats can slip through the cracks and we don’t see them coming. Ken Fisher said a classic example of this surprise is mark-to-market accounting rules implemented in 2007 which "hugely took the mortgage problem and amplified it to write $2 trillion off of global bank balance sheets."

However, Fisher reiterated that he's bullish on the market right now.

"But whenever I am bullish I am still looking for risks."

Fisher Is Worried About a Nuclear War in Asia

Fisher's worries about the geopolitical chessboard stem from what he called the nuclear-armed triangle: China, India and Pakistan. Fisher said these three nations have different economies, politics and culture and they "usually don’t like each other." While Fisher thinks the odds of war in the region are not high, he doesn’t think such a war is "impossible" and fears any conflict between the nuclear powers in Asia would be "catastrophic."