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Issues
Let’s start with some remarkable statistics.

Nvidia’s (NVDA) fourth-quarter revenue reported yesterday was $68 billion, up 73% from the same period last year. It now makes more revenue in a single quarter than most chip competitors generate in an entire year. Nvidia’s profit for the last 12 months was $120 billion. Just three years ago, Nvidia’s profit was $4.4 billion.

It is estimated that more than one-third of the value of the stock market is represented by companies based in the San Francisco Bay/Silicon Valley area.
We continue to get solid signals from the White House that cannabis rescheduling is on track. That’ll be a significant catalyst for cannabis stocks. The only question is the timing. That remains uncertain and probably unknowable. Cannabis stocks remain a buy on weakness ahead of this catalyst.

The background here is that last December, President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Justice Department to move cannabis to Schedule III from Schedule I under the Controlled Substances Act.
The bull market has broadened out beyond technology in a big way. While the S&P 500 is about even for the year so far, most market sectors are beating the index, and by a lot. In fact, six of the eleven sectors have a better than 8% YTD return, not even two months into the year.

The new market dynamic is having a profound impact on the portfolio. Several stocks that had been dead weight in the portfolio have soared in recent months to 52-week highs. The new market has turned previously underperforming stocks into strong income generators.

It has been a strong run for several portfolio stocks. But a largely successful earnings season is almost over. That means there will be no obvious catalyst to continue driving stocks higher, at least for now. The situation makes it a better time to capitalize on recent price surges instead of adding more positions and hoping for more.

Under the current circumstances, the biggest market opportunity right now is income. In this issue, I highlight three more high-priced covered calls on stocks that have had strong rallies.
In researching potential candidates for this month’s edition of the newsletter, I narrowed down my final list of top choices to the usual 10 stocks. What caught my attention when reviewing the list, however, was how many of them were in the healthcare sector—in particular, the therapeutic arena.

I was gratified by this discovery since I feel that a.) medical stocks are underrepresented in the portfolio, and b.) the sector is at once defensive in nature (always a good thing in my estimation) yet also poised to benefit from ongoing sector rotation.
Before we dive into this week’s covered call idea, I need to address two items.

First, we are going to sell our RKT stock as the February call that we sold expired worthless, leaving us with our stock position.
It remains about as mixed an environment as we can remember, which does mean the risk of some sort of convulsion (a correction, a re-rotation into laggards, etc.) is elevated. That said, as opposed to the on-again, off-again action from certain areas in January, we have seen the winners persist of late, so that’s where we’re focusing—while also holding some cash and raising stops along the way given what’s going on. For the moment, we’ll stick with a level 6 on the Market Monitor, but again, we’re OK taking swings at strong stocks.

This week’s list is very heavy on the cyclical side of things, with many names perking up and out of long ranges. Our Top Pick has a solid growth profile and has emerged on the upside after a six-month choppy phase.
Tariffs rejected. Big shortfall in GDP growth. Possible emerging conflict with Iran. There were enough headlines last week – and really, Friday alone! – to make your head spin. And yet … stocks were mostly calm, with no sudden movements in either direction. As always, the stock charts matter more than the headlines, at least when it comes to investing.

So, let’s stay the course, which this week means adding a well-known stock that continues to thrive in the midst of the ongoing travel resurgence. It was Mike Cintolo’s Top Pick in his Cabot Top Ten Trader momentum-trading advisory last week.

Details inside.
Despite early-week angst over continued AI disruption fears, markets steadied into the weekend as tech found fresh legs and headline risk eased after a key Supreme Court ruling altered the U.S. tariff landscape. The rebound in mega-cap names helped sentiment improve off midweek lows, though small caps lagged. For the week, the S&P 500 rallied 1.1%, the Dow advanced 0.3%, and the Nasdaq led with a gain of 1.5%, while the Russell 2000 was essentially flat.
Despite early-week angst over continued AI disruption fears, markets steadied into the weekend as tech found fresh legs and headline risk eased after a key Supreme Court ruling altered the U.S. tariff landscape. The rebound in mega-cap names helped sentiment improve off midweek lows, though small caps lagged. For the week, the S&P 500 rallied 1.1%, the Dow advanced 0.3%, and the Nasdaq led with a gain of 1.5%, while the Russell 2000 was essentially flat.
It’s not 1999 out there, but the Model Portfolio has been doing OK despite the choppy, challenging, crosscurrent-filled market of late, partially thanks to an interesting dynamic—while the top-down evidence really hasn’t changed much in recent weeks (if anything, it’s probably worsened a bit, especially when it comes to growth funds and our Aggression Index), we are definitely seeing more individual stocks perk up, both within AI and in cyclical areas.

We do have two or three moves we’re close to making—while we’re not eager to be heavily invested given the evidence, we have a lot of cash and are likely to put some to work soon. But, tonight, we’ll stand pat and see if opportunities arise in the next few days—while also seeing if the Nasdaq’s test of its recent low holds. Bottom line, stand pat here, but we’ll be in touch with any changes in the days ahead.
With the market’s rotation into energy, industrial and other “unloved” stocks continuing well into 2026, we’re leaning deeper into the trends.

This month’s issue focuses on yet another specialty industrial player, an under-the-radar biofuel story, and an energy name with exposure to strong, international markets.

As always, the goal is to stay aligned with what’s working.

Enjoy!
Despite a small bounce Friday on softer inflation data that eased some knee-jerk selling, markets finished on their back foot as renewed investor anxiety around artificial-intelligence disruption rippled through tech and cyclical stocks. Growth names lagged, pressure widened beyond software to financials and real estate, and defensive sectors outperformed amid falling Treasury yields that weren’t enough to stem the slide. By week’s end, the S&P 500 had fallen 1.4%, the Dow Jones had lost 1.2%, and the Nasdaq Composite had tumbled 2.1%.
Updates
It has been called by many pundits the biggest speculative event since the late ‘90s Internet stock mania. I’m referring, of course, to the widely referenced “AI bubble” that has been in play for the better part of the last three years.

But is it truly a “bubble” in the historical sense of the term? The answer to this question is salient for us not only as investors, generally speaking, but also as it concerns at least a couple of the stocks in our portfolio—namely Intel (INTC) and Centuri Holdings (CTRI).
WHAT TO DO NOW: It’s not 2008 out there, but the market environment remains very challenging, especially for growth, where most indexes, funds and stocks are struggling. That said, we have started to see some growth names emerge on the upside, and our watch list is growing—if we can see more than a day or two of strength, we’d like to put some money to work. But until then, we’re content to stay close to shore and patiently wait for growth stocks to get moving. In the Model Portfolio, we’re placing Axsome Therapeutics (AXSM) on Hold tonight; our cash position is still just above 50%.
It’s been an interesting week here in Rhode Island, where most people are finally dug out from the roughly three feet of snow that fell across the state Sunday night and into Monday.

Growing up in Vermont, major snowstorms were certainly disruptive. But more often than not, it was all about how we would get to the ski resort without going off the road.
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.
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.
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.
Alerts
A leader in the medical device industry, this company is benefiting from the ramping up of merger and acquisition activity.


Stryker Corp. (SYK)
from Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Investor


Stryker Corp. (SYK) is the leading orthopedic products maker in the world, and is well diversified with its offerings of surgical instruments, stretchers...
Rising home sales is fueling growth for this real estate fund.

Third Avenue Real Estate Value Investor Fund (TVRVX)
from Sound Advice

Third Avenue Real Estate Value Investor Fund (TVRVX) has led the pack of all real estate mutual funds during the last three years. It is replete with stellar values substantially below...
This energy producer beat its last quarter estimates by a penny, and earnings are trending up on higher production.

Birchcliff Energy (BIR.TO)
from Market Insider Bulletin

Birchcliff Energy (BIR.TO) is a growing mid-sized energy company with total production weighted 83% to natural gas. In fiscal 2013, the average annual production was 25,800 boe/day....
For its most recent reported quarter, this semiconductor company beat analysts’ estimates, producing EPS of $0.91 vs. the estimates of $0.53.

OmniVision Technologies (OVTI)
from Validea Hot List Newsletter

OmniVision Technologies, Inc. (OVTI) designs integrated and semiconductor image-sensor devices. The Company’s main products, CameraChip image sensors, capture an image electronically and are used...
This data mining company was recently upgraded to “overweight” from “equal weight” by Morgan Stanley, and is growing at a double-digit pace.

Splunk, Inc. (SPLK)
from Top Stock Insights

“Machine-generated data” is produced by all varieties of electronic devices, including home appliances, electrical meters, mobile devices, automobiles, medical devices, GPS devices and radio-frequency...
Here are two trading opportunities in retail stocks whose shares have been beaten down.

Lululemon Athletica (LULU) and Zulily (ZU)
from Shortex Market Letter

Lululemon Athletica (LULU)
52-week high/low: 77.75/36.26
Market Cap: $6.34B
EPS: 1.91
P/E: 22.12

The maker of yoga apparel/athletic gear reported FY Q2 revenue increase of 13% to $390.7M. On-line sales up 30%. Income @...
After a successful turnaround, this company is posting double-digit increases in sales and its earnings are back in the black.

Callon Petroleum (CPE)
from The Oberweis Report

Callon Petroleum (CPE) is a production company focused primarily on the Permian Basin in Texas. In late 2013, the company completed its strategic repositioning that began...
The selling in the commodities markets is still strong. But with market volatility and global uncertainty on the rise, owning a bit of gold may be a defensive strategy.

SPDR Gold Shares (GLD)
from Nate’s Notes

While it has taken a bit longer for the heavy selling to hit the gold market, a...
The rise in emerging market volatility and pressures on the growth of those markets creates an opportunity for shorting them with this ETF.

Direxion Daily Emerging Markets Bear 3X ETF (EDZ)
from The National Investor


Direxion Daily Emerging Markets Bear 3X ETF (EDZ) is designed to provide daily results, before fees and expenses,...
New construction is fueling the growth of this window and door business. The company’s earnings rose more than 14% for its recent quarter, handily beating estimates by $0.04.

PGT, Inc. (PGTI)
from Weiss Stock Ratings Heat Maps

PGT, Inc. (PGTI) manufactures and supplies residential impact-resistant windows and doors. It recently completed the acquisition...
This big pharma company just received an FDA panel recommendation for its obesity drug. The shares have a current dividend yield of 1.3%, paid annually.

Novo Nordisk (NVO)
from DRIP Investor

It is extremely easy for any U.S. investor to buy individual foreign stocks via American Depositary Receipts. ADRs are securities that trade...
This tech company is a new IPO, whose shares are gliding back toward a buy-in price. As newly-public companies may be more volatile than their peers, please be sure to make them a small portion of your overall portfolio.

ReWalk Robotics (RWLK)
from New Technology Superstars


ReWalk Robotics (RWLK) makes robotic walking systems,...
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