Issues
We’re adding a 100-year dividend payer to the Safe Income Tier, and saying sayonara to a perpetual underperformer. We also take a look at the incredible power of dividend reinvestment.
In tonight\'s issue, we write about the importance of following your plan, especially soon after you buy a stock. We dive into our new \"7.5% Rule,\" which is another in a long line of studies that show higher prices to be very likely in the months down the road.
Current Market OutlookDuring the past three weeks, we’ve seen the market’s breadth begin to sag (small- and mid-cap indexes haven’t made much progress in three months), then we saw some key sectors falter (financials have decisively broken down) and now the market’s own intermediate-term trend is on the fence. That’s enough yellow flags for us to advise trimming your sails a bit; we’re nudging our Market Monitor down to a level 6, as the onus is on the bulls to pull us out of this near-term funk. However, longer-term, we’re much more optimistic—today’s show of support was encouraging, of course, and there remains a ton of strong stocks (especially growth-oriented stocks) out there, so you should continue to hold on tightly to your top performers.
This week’s list is chock-full of stocks that have ignored the market’s recent dip. There are many good names to choose from, our Top Pick is Teladoc (TDOC), a newer issue that’s emerging from a long post-IPO droop and consolidation. It has a great story.
| Stock Name | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Criteo (CRTO) | 0.00 | ||
| Grand Canyon Education (LOPE) | 121.03 | ||
| Lumentum (LITE) | 87.00 | ||
| MercadoLibre, Inc. (MELI) | 980.83 | ||
| Momo Inc. (MOMO) | 44.65 | ||
| RingCentral (RNG) | 238.73 | ||
| SiteOne Landscape Supply (SITE) | 98.49 | ||
| Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) | 0.00 | ||
| Teladoc, Inc. (TDOC) | 127.95 | ||
| Wynn Resorts (WYNN) | 121.08 |
Last week was a good one for the bulls, not because the indexes finished in the green but because after three poor weeks, the broad market finally found some support, with breadth improving and the number of stocks hitting new lows drying up. We wouldn’t say the broad market is completely out of the woods; another few days of positive action would be necessary to conclude that. But, overall, we’re optimistic—the intermediate- and longer-term trends are pointed up, most stocks outside of commodity sectors remain in good shape, and we’re even seeing some rotation into more growth-oriented groups, which is usually a good sign. We’ll keep our Market Monitor at a level 7 right now as we wait to see further confirmation from the broad market.
This week’s list is chock full of strong stocks with solid growth stories from a variety of industries. We’ll keep it simple with our Top Pick this week, going with Adobe Systems (ADBE), a liquid growth leader that just reported a strong quarter.
This week’s list is chock full of strong stocks with solid growth stories from a variety of industries. We’ll keep it simple with our Top Pick this week, going with Adobe Systems (ADBE), a liquid growth leader that just reported a strong quarter.
| Stock Name | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Adient (ADNT) | 0.00 | ||
| Adobe Inc. (ADBE) | 315.23 | ||
| Axalta Coating (AXTA) | 0.00 | ||
| Broadcom Limited (AVGO) | 266.26 | ||
| Children’s Place (PLCE) | 0.00 | ||
| Glaukos Corp. (GKOS) | 67.84 | ||
| KB Home (KBH) | 36.05 | ||
| Micron Technology, Inc. (MU) | 43.31 | ||
| Olin Corp. (OLN) | 0.00 | ||
| Veeva Systems (VEEV) | 180.23 |
While our contributors—and advisors in general—remain in the bullish camp, the sentiment (as you’ll see in our Advisor Sentiment Barometer) has turned a bit more bearish.
Current Market OutlookWe’ve begun to see a few worrisome developments when it comes to the market. Small-cap indexes have lagged badly and haven’t made any progress in three months. A few sectors (especially commodity-related) have broken down. And breadth in general has weakened, with the number of stocks hitting 52-week lows expanding in recent days. However, we see a lot of good news, too—the intermediate-term trend is still pointed up, lots of strong stocks have consolidated normally in recent days and we’ve even seen a few new leaders begin to emerge on big volume. Altogether, it’s fair to say that the evidence has weakened so we’re knocking down our Market Monitor back to a level 7 and will be watching events closely. But until the uptrend is cracked, you should remain mostly bullish, holding your strong performers and looking for new buys as opportunities arise.
This week’s list has a wide variety of stocks and sectors, including a few names we haven’t seen in a long time. Our Top Pick is Builders Firstsource (BLDR), a good-sized supplier of building products that just gapped up strongly on earnings after trashing earnings estimates.
| Stock Name | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Autohome (ATHM) | 98.65 | ||
| Builders FirstSource (BLDR) | 44.12 | ||
| Exelixis (EXEL) | 27.35 | ||
| Leucadia (LUK) | 0.00 | ||
| ON Semiconductor (ON) | 24.07 | ||
| PulteGroup (PHM) | 45.93 | ||
| Shopify (SHOP) | 585.00 | ||
| SVB Financial Group (SIVB) | 0.00 | ||
| Synopsys (SNPS) | 137.53 | ||
| Take-Two Interactive (TTWO) | 123.32 |
Updates
Hello from sunny Florida!
I am on vacation with my family this week, taking a much-needed break from the harsh, snowy Vermont winter (and narrowly making it down here ahead of the latest blizzard to dump another foot or two of snow on the Northeast). But with so much going on in the market – tariffs rejected! GDP growth slowing! AI panic! – I wanted to provide an update on everything that’s going on with our stocks.
I am on vacation with my family this week, taking a much-needed break from the harsh, snowy Vermont winter (and narrowly making it down here ahead of the latest blizzard to dump another foot or two of snow on the Northeast). But with so much going on in the market – tariffs rejected! GDP growth slowing! AI panic! – I wanted to provide an update on everything that’s going on with our stocks.
It’s the same basic market story as it has been for the last four months. Technology is floundering while other sectors are killing it. But a couple of events occurring this week could potentially change the dynamic.
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.
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%.
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%.
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.
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.
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.
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%).
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.
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%.
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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%.
Alerts
Tonight I’m recommending selling National Storage Affiliates (NSA) (ideally tomorrow on a bounce), and redeploying the profits into one of my other buy-rated stocks.
NanoString (NSTG), Aerohive (HIVE) and Q2 Holdings (QTWO) reported earnings.
Blackbaud (BLKB), Mitek (MITK) and Primo Water (PRMW) announce earnings . BLKB is now rated Sell.
Dave & Buster’s (PLAY) has dipped back toward the top of its prior launching pad as many restaurant stocks have sagged. We’ll place the stock on Hold and keep it on a tight leash. And today, Vulcan Materials (VMC) fell sharply after missing earnings estimates, partially because poor weather in the second quarter delayed construction projects. We’ll respect the stock’s action and move VMC to a Hold rating tonight.
Updates on LeMaitre Vascular (LMAT), Chembio (CEMI) and Blackbaud (BLKB).
Portfolios
Strategy
Our Cabot Top Ten Trader’s market timing system consists of two parts—one based on the action of three select, growth-oriented market indexes, and the other based on the action of the fast-moving stocks Cabot Top Ten features.