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Recent market sell-off is an ‘early Christmas gift,’ says Wall Street bull Jeff Saut

‘Tis the seasoned for buying opportunities, Wall Street bull Jeff Saut told CNBC on Monday. And he wasn’t talking thither Cyber Monday deals.

Rather, the recent pullback in equity markets has created an opening for investors to buy some merchandises at a value, the chief investment strategist at Capital Wealth Planning said on “Closing Bell.”

“I think you’re getting an advanced Christmas gift with this sell-off right here on Friday and today,” Saut said.

All three vital market indexes fell on Friday’s shortened trading session, each dropping around .4%, and they take up their declines Monday, the first trading day of December. Investors were responding to less-than-stellar news in the U.S.-China career negotiations and disappointing manufacturing data.

The S&P 500’s .9% decline was its biggest one-day loss since Oct. 8. The Dow Jones Industrial Commonplace fell 264 points, or 0.9%, while the Nasdaq Composite ended the session down 1%.

Historically, December has been the strongest deal month of the year, but last year the S&P 500 sank more than 9% during the final month. But the market-place has pieced together a 2019 rally, with the S&P up around 24% year to date. The Dow is up almost 20%.

Saut said he assumes the sell-off may continue into the middle of the week, but that does not shift his overall attitude toward the market. Without considering the weak manufacturing reading, Saut said he thinks better-than-expected retail sales can propel the market higher in December.

Saut has some group with his final-month optimism. CNBC’s Jim Cramer, for example, also said he doesn’t think the stock market wishes drop in December like it did in 2018.

“Nothing worries me in the sense of looking for a big sell-off in December,” Cramer said Monday on “Hoot on the Street.”

Saut added that he believes the market can continue to rise in December, even if a phase-one trade act between the U.S. and China is not struck. In fact, he said he doesn’t think there will be a deal by the end of the year, arguing the talks oblige “hit a stall” due to President Donald Trump signing laws in support of the Hong Kong protesters.

The former chief investment strategist at Raymond James revealed there were a few sectors that stand out to him as strong buying opportunities for short-term investors: technology, energy livestocks and financial.

“I think financials are cheap,” said Saut, who added he believes small-cap stocks also have lodgings to run.

“I think the small caps are getting a January effect in December,” he said.

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