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After a well-deserved pullback during the past two weeks, the strong action this week from most major indexes and leading stocks is a good sign. Short-term, further wobbles are certainly possible after the strong nine-week advance off the market’s major bottom, but big picture, we remain very bullish and heavily invested.
In tonight’s issue, we write about a couple of simple tips for handling some off-the-bottom names in last year’s high-fliers, as well as reviewing our nine stocks and a couple others that look tempting.
Happy spring! The Bradford Pear trees and daffodils are beginning to flower here in Tennessee—one of my favorite times of the year!

And this year, with the market continuing to “bloom,” the unemployment rate steady at 3.8%, retail sales rising, and the housing market healthy, it sounds like spring is ushering in a happy period. Both investors and advisors agree, as you’ll see in our bullish barometer and Market Views.
The market remains in an uptrend, though the correction that started last week may do a little more damage. If so, try to take advantage of it, remembering that buying low is the goal.
Today’s stock is a name you know—a name all Americans know—and I think it’s a good buy here after correcting 39% last fall. Crista Huff is the Cabot analyst who recommended it most recently, in part on fundamental grounds, and my reading of the chart confirms her conclusion.
As for the current portfolio, we continue to make great progress, but there’s always room for improvement. The only changes this week are two upgrades from Hold to Buy. Details inside.
Market Gauge is 7Current Market Outlook


After nine strong up weeks, the past two have seen most of the market hesitate (at first) and then pull back (the S&P 500 fell all five days last week), resulting in a few stocks hitting potholes along the way. In the short-term, we think some further consolidation could easily come, shaking out some weak hands. But bigger picture, the recent action looks normal to us—none of the major indexes and very few leading stocks cracked any meaningful intermediate-term support, and today’s sharp rally is a good sign that buyers are still lurking. Be sure to watch your stops and loss limits, and it’s a good idea to be discerning on the buy side, focusing on strong stocks that have pulled back to solid entry points. Market-wise, though, we remain bullish and are keeping our Market Monitor at a level 7.

This week’s list has stocks from all corners of the market, which we see as an encouraging sign. Our Top Pick is RingCentral (RNG), a leader in a new cloud communications field with a stock that’s acting great.
Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
Carvana (CVNA) 82.9048-5141.5-43.5
EPAM Systems (EPAM) 188.24155-160142-145
Keysight Technologies, Inc. (KEYS) 97.2081-8573.5-75.5
Lending Tree (TREE) 411.51307-322278-288
Omnicell (OMCL) 81.0380-8473-75
Planet Fitness (PLNT) 0.0062-6457-58
Rapid7 (RPD) 63.5245-47.540-41.5
RingCentral (RNG) 238.73100-10591-94
Sea Limited (SE) 132.8622-2418-19.5
Tandem Diabetes (TNDM) 74.7761-6552-55

Emerging markets (EEM) stay in a confirmed uptrend with the support of generally upbeat earnings. Investors have piled about $86 billion into emerging-market stocks and bonds this year, more than in the last nine months of 2018 combined.

We have some earnings updates and a new recommendation that actually delivers the strong e-commerce growth—a leading consumer theme of emerging markets.
The market continues to drive forward, and sentiment remains bullish, as you’ll see in our Market Views. Investors are taking all the D.C. hoopla in stride, and seem content with the favorable economy which continues to provide low unemployment and a strong housing market.
If you own small or regional Western U.S. energy stocks, make sure to read my comments in the introduction about some pending legislation in Colorado that does not bode well for in-state energy production. I’m sorry to say that the legislation is likely to rapidly move through the legislature, because the minority political party does not have enough votes to block it, and the Governor is likely to sign it. For stock investors, forewarned is forearmed.
Some areas of the market have wobbled in recent days, and even the major indexes have stalled out a bit—but none of this looks unusual to me after such a strong 10-week run prior to this. With the trends pointed up and the vast majority of stocks in uptrends, we remain overall bullish, though we’re also keeping a close eye on all our stocks and jettisoning any where the potential has faded (we have two sells tonight).

And in their place, of course, we’re adding higher potential names. Tonight’s Stock of the Week is helping to revolutionize the advertising industry, and the stock has taken a brief rest after a powerful earnings-induced breakout nearly two weeks ago.
Market Gauge is 7Current Market Outlook


For the first time in two months, last week saw some sellers stepping up to the plate, taking profits in leading names despite some good earnings reports. And today we saw very strong selling across the board, with leaders falling sharply across the board, including many that dipped toward support. In the short-term, given the prolonged run off the bottom, more consolidation is likely, so we’re fine taking a profit (or partial profit) here or there. Intermediate-term, though, we’re still optimistic—while some of the action looks iffy, very few (if any) leading stocks or indexes have broken down at this point, and these type of sharp, scary pullbacks (assuming they find support at logical levels) aren’t unusual during bull moves. We’re knocking our Market Monitor down a notch, thinking the near-term will be more challenging, but remain overall bullish.

This week’s list has a bunch of strong names that have recently emerged, so they shouldn’t have as much pent-up selling pressures. Our Top Pick is MercadoLibre (MELI), where business is reaccelerating and the stock just came out of a big consolidation.
Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
Acacia Communications (ACIA) 51.8353-5647.5-49.5
CoStar Group (CSGP) 589.55450-470420-430
Cronos Group (CRON) 17.6220-2216.5-1705
DocuSign (DOCU) 107.9852-5446-47.5
Etsy (ETSY) 112.9766.5-69.560-62
Euronet Worldwide (EEFT) 142.83130-134119-122
MercadoLibre, Inc. (MELI) 980.83445-465400-415
Novocure (NVCR) 0.0050-5345.5-47
Universal Display (OLED) 187.54143-148128-131
Zscaler (ZS) 126.2255-5849.5-51.5

Updates
For value-focused investors, this year’s prologue has been a welcome change from the turmoil experienced in early 2025.

In just the past few weeks, some of last year’s most ignored or underappreciated laggards have posted outsized gains, with rallies that have made even momentum-driven tech stock traders envious. Even more remarkable is the fact that much of that strength has been concentrated in ultra-defensive areas of the market like consumer staples, utilities and healthcare.
The market rotation continues to be the main story out there this week, though rumblings of a potential strike on Iran, an update from the January FOMC meeting, and a slew of earnings reports and economic data releases have been giving investors plenty to think about.

In terms of the rotation, the equal‑weight S&P 500 ETF (RSP) is up 5.5% so far this year, illustrating that leadership is broadening beyond the narrow group of mega‑cap stocks that drove much of last year’s performance.

Year to date, the S&P 600 SmallCap Index is up 8.3% and the S&P 400 Mid‑Cap Index is up 7.9%. Both are comfortably outperforming the S&P 500, which is up just 0.1%, and the Nasdaq, which is down 2.1%.
Happy Chinese New Year! The year of the horse is upon us.

China is expecting an incredible 9.5 billion trips to be made during the 40-day Lunar New Year travel period. Chinese automakers are also on the move as the country’s numerous brands sold nearly 200,000 vehicles in Britain last year, doubling their market share to almost 10%.
As U.S. investors have shifted from risk-on to risk-off mode in recent months, a clear disparity between the “haves” and the “have-nots” has materialized.

Let’s start with the “have-nots.” Financials have fared the worst so far this year (-4.7%), followed by technology (-3.1%), communication services and consumer discretionary (-2.8% each). The downturn in the two tech-related sectors in particular is a stark departure from recent years, when technology led the charge of the current bull market.
Cyclical stocks are soaring and technology is floundering in the transformed market.

The bull market is turned upside down. For most of the first three years, technology, and particularly AI stocks, soared while most other stocks did very little. Now, previously meandering stocks are killing it while technology sinks.
Strong fourth-quarter earnings are confirming what the market was already doing.

Current estimates based on earnings reported so far are for 13.2% overall S&P earnings growth for the quarter. It’s a solid quarter and the fifth straight quarter of double-digit earnings growth. In terms of sector performance, cyclical companies are killing it, and technology is floundering, just like before earnings.
Like many coffee aficionados, I have something of a love/hate relationship with Starbucks (SBUX). My main gripe is that the company’s food and beverage offerings have always been pricey compared to the fare served in most fast-food restaurants and run-of-the-mill coffee houses.
The outperformance of small caps continues.

Through Tuesday’s close, the S&P 600 is up 10% year to date versus just 1.6% for the S&P 500.

All but three small-cap sectors are outperforming their large-cap counterpart. The strongest small-cap sectors are materials (+20%), energy (+23%), industrials (+17%), and tech (+11.4%).
Let’s talk about the power of staying invested.

Sure, when the market turns south – and I’m not even sure last week’s mini-dip qualifies – it makes sense to pare back on your weakest stocks and put a larger portion of your portfolio in cash. But taking your ball and going home – selling out of all of your stocks when times are tough – is not a winning strategy. Here’s why.
NOTE: We’re sending this a day early as I’m soon to embark on a trip with the kiddos over the next week. I will be working a good amount from the road, though, and will have updates if need be. Also, next week’s issue will be published as scheduled.

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WHAT TO DO NOW: The market remains very mixed, with growth measures still generally pointed sideways to down, while the broad market remains in solid shape. What’s interesting, though, is that we’re seeing more growth stocks kick into gear, along with some huge buying action in a few “cyclical growth” names. Tonight we’re making one move—adding a half-sized stake in Macom Tech (MTSI)—but are keeping our eyes open for a broader character change among growth stocks. Our cash position will be around 53%.
Today could be a big day for cannabis stocks.

The reason: We may get an important update on the rescheduling timeline.

Cannabis investors will be watching closely today to see whether Attorney General Pam Bondi offers a rescheduling update when she appears before the House Judiciary Committee. Upbeat comments could spark a sharp cannabis sector rally. The hearing starts at 10 a.m. EST.
I’m excited to share a couple of enhancements to Cabot Early Opportunities —improvements designed to sharpen our focus and better help you stay on top of the stocks we own.
Alerts
In the past 30 days, 11 analysts have increased their earnings forecasts for this homebuilder.
The top five holdings of this mutual fund are: Abiomed Inc (ABMD, 3.31%); Seattle Genetics Inc (SGEN, 3.23%); Eli Lilly and Co (LLY, 3.08%); Alibaba Group Holding Ltd ADR (BABA, 2.84%) and American Airlines Group Inc (AAL, 2.80%).





The shares of this medical device company were just upgraded by JP Morgan to ‘Overweight’, and eight analysts have increased their earnings estimates for the company in the past 30 days.
Comments on one of our stocks, one stock rejoins the Growth Portfolio, and one of our companies reported a fourth-quarter earnings beat.
The top five sectors in this fund are Financials (42.66% of assets); Communications (18.77%), and Consumer Cyclical (13.32%).
Updates on three of our stocks that reported quarterly earnings, plus updates on two stocks with Strong Buy ratings.
In the last few weeks, this energy company has also attracted Wall Street’s attention, with coverage of the shares initiated at both Credit Suisse (Outperform) and Citigroup (Buy).
Analysts expect growth of 70% for this industrial company next year.
These two banks are a great entrée into participating in the ADR markets.
The shares of this automotive systems supplier just hit their 52-week high. The company beat analysts’ estimates by $0.05 last quarter, perhaps a harbinger of growth to come as it takes on a leading role in autonomous vehicles.
The shares of this optical sensor company were just initiated at Dougherty, with a ‘Buy’ rating.
One stock moves from Strong Buy to Buy, one moves from Strong Buy to Hold, and one moves from Buy to Hold.
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