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Issues
The choppy market waters of April have given way to much calmer seas through the first week of May. In the grand scheme of things, the damage (4% drawdown in the S&P 500) was limited, and the bull market remains very much intact. It pays to be an optimist, especially in bull markets. So today, we add another growth-y name (with an AI twist, of course) that has become rejuvenated and recently caught the eye of Cabot Early Opportunities Chief Analyst Tyler Laundon.

Details inside.
Last week was full of ups and downs for the market, as the inflation/economic story continues to swing with every data point. And while there was volatility, by week’s end the S&P 500 and Nasdaq had risen marginally, while the Dow had gained 1%.
Last week was full of ups and downs for the market, as the inflation/economic story continues to swing with every data point. And while there was volatility, by week’s end the S&P 500 and Nasdaq had risen marginally, while the Dow had gained 1%.
The market has hung in there during the past couple of weeks, which is good to see, but there hasn’t been enough strength from the major indexes or from growth stocks to tell us the buyers have retaken control. At the same time, nothing has changed with the big picture, either, which leaves us with the same thoughts we had two weeks ago: Right now, it’s best to be cautious as the correction plays out and as earnings season goes along, but you want to be prepared to move when the tide turns back up.

For our part, we’re holding a good chunk of cash and standing pat tonight, but we have an expanded watch list as we monitor earnings season for signs of future leadership.
The dark clouds of persistent inflation and high interest rates continue to hover over the market. But with a record amount of capital on the sidelines and little to no movement in most stocks over the last two-plus years, I’m optimistic that better days are ahead, assuming the inflation/Fed clouds eventually part. Thus, I continue to seek out companies that are essentially growth stocks at value prices. And today, we add another one to our portfolio in the form of a big-name company that’s benefitting greatly from a return to normalcy in a post-Covid world … but whose shares are trading at barely half their pre-pandemic peak.

Enjoy!
The digital marketing world has been turned upside down as new privacy measures make it more challenging to track consumers across online and in-app activities.

But one company has been building out a unique opt-in data set and the backend technology to do just that. It sells this information to the biggest companies in the world so they can reach consumers with personalized marketing messages. With the new privacy measures, business is strong.

All the details are inside the May Issue of Cabot Small-Cap Confidential.
After falling 4-6% two weeks ago, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq bounced back by 2-3% last week. Quite the whipsaw! By week’s end the S&P 500 had gained 2%, the Dow had risen marginally, and the Nasdaq had added 3.3%.
After falling 4-6% two weeks ago, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq bounced back by 2-3% last week. Quite the whipsaw! By week’s end the S&P 500 had gained 2%, the Dow had risen marginally, and the Nasdaq had added 3.3%.
After falling 4-6% two weeks ago, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq bounced back by 2-3% last week. Quite the whipsaw! By week’s end the S&P 500 had gained 2%, the Dow had risen marginally, and the Nasdaq had added 3.3%.
As we like to say “up is good,” so last week’s snapback from the major indexes and many stocks and sectors is certainly a good thing, and we like that many stocks have actually built six- to 10-week launching pads. Thus, if the rally can continue, there should be plenty of names to sink our teeth into assuming earnings season goes well. However, first things first: The market and most stocks aren’t out of the woods yet, having “only” rallied back into resistance, and earnings season is still in full swing. We’ll leave our Market Monitor at a level 6, but we’ll change that quickly if the bulls show some follow-on buying.

This week’s list is a hodgepodge of earnings winners, resilient growth names and some commodity ideas as well. Our Top Pick is a volatile chip equipment maker with a system that’s perfectly suited for the AI revolution. Earnings are due next week, so keep it small here and see what the quarterly report brings.
The buyers finally stepped up after a brutal first three weeks of April, and suddenly the bull market feels back on again. One week doesn’t make a rally – not if the Fed (which rears its ugly head again this week) has anything to say about it. But for now, the selling has ceased, with an assist from a better-than-expected earnings season. Today’s addition isn’t exciting – it specializes in things like pipes, valves and water meters – but it’s a practical – and potentially quite profitable – way to play America’s geyser of infrastructure spending. It was newly recommended by Mike Cintolo to his Cabot Top Ten Trader readers.
Tech stocks steadied a bit this week as quarterly earnings started coming in. Sea (SE) was up this week on two analyst upgrades. Super Micro (SMCI) will report crucial quarterly earnings early next week.

The Explorer’s one current European stock recommendation is Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk (NVO). It has passed French luxury group LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton to become Europe’s most valuable company.
Updates
The big news this week was, of course, that the FOMC decided to pause and not hike interest rates at the June meeting. But as expected they suggested that a couple more 25-basis point hikes are in the cards throughout the rest of the year.


It feels like this “we want to keep you guessing” messaging is partly due to wanting to see how more data comes in and partly to keep investor expectations in check. The latter seems especially relevant given the S&P 500 just moved into a new bull market and AI enthusiasm has pushed a number of the MegaCap stocks to new highs.
Cabot Options Institute Income Trader is focused exclusively on the creating consistent income through a variety of options selling strategies. Whether you have questions about selling puts, covered strangles, jade lizards or our income wheel approach, Andy is more than happy to help you steepen your learning curve in this live event.
Cannabis stocks are about to make a big move over the next several weeks. This is a good trading opportunity.

What is going to send the group higher?

The Senate should take significant steps to advance key bank sector reform that would help cannabis companies, say lobbyists.
In baseball, on an infield hit with a runner on third base, the fielder will look directly at the runner before throwing the ball to first base for a sure out. This “look” prevents any attempt by the runner to score – if he takes off for home plate, the fielder will throw him out.
It’s a new bull market! The S&P 500 has rallied over 20% from the low, the technical definition of a bull market. The index is also up about 12% YTD. Are stocks topping out or are we off to the races? Despite inflation, the Fed, and increasing forecasts of recession, stocks have defied conventional wisdom and rallied strongly. That’s impressive. But this rally is incredibly thin. Ten primarily large technology company stocks are responsible for all of the index gains YTD. The other 490 stocks have collectively gone nowhere.
We are moving shares of Molson Coors Beverage Company (TAP) from Buy to Sell. The shares are approaching our 69 price target, with only about 4% upside remaining. This is close enough, given that much of the run-up is being driven by Budweiser’s Bud Light marketing blunder in the United States. Sales of Bud Light have slumped as much as 25%, while sales of Coors, Miller and others have jumped. It’s not clear how long this phenomenon will last, but the share valuation is becoming relatively full. We are reluctant to raise our price target from here. Shares of Molson Coors have produced about a 29% total return since our initial recommendation.
WHAT TO DO NOW: Remain optimistic. The market has steadily shown improvement during the past two or three weeks, with even yesterday’s rotation helping the broad market—and today’s snapback in leading stocks is good to see. Our Cabot Tides have effectively turned positive, and our Two-Second Indicator is close, too. Having just put a slug of money to work (including three new half-sized buys on Tuesday’s special bulletin), we’ll sit tight tonight, but if the good vibes continue, we’ll probably add more exposure next week. We have no changes tonight. Our cash position stands around 50%.
While everyone has been watching the highlight reel of top performers with leverage to the AI theme lately, the real story this week is that more areas of the market are shaping up.

Yesterday, while the Nasdaq sold off, we saw the S&P 600 Small Cap Financial ETF (PSCF) pop 3%. That came on the heels of a 4% rally Tuesday.

Yes, yes, I know. Nobody really cares about this ETF. But small banks make up almost a third of total U.S. deposits. They matter, bigly.
Explorer stocks gained or held their ground this week as the so-called “Mega-Cap 8” stocks dominate a narrow market for now.

China has become the 20% market – 20% of world GDP and 20% of multinational total revenue. This explains the steady stream of CEOs to China while Washington and Beijing top officials traded insults at a Singapore defense forum.
This is, dare I say, a good market.

The S&P 500 is up 11.31% YTD, and the year isn’t even half over. Stocks have rallied more than 20% from the October low. The index is within bad breath distance of last summer’s high. The S&P is only 10% below the all-time high.

Why is the market so strong? There are several reasons. Inflation is coming down. The Fed is almost done hiking rates. And there is no recession. Throw in a booming artificial intelligence business and you have a rising market.
This week, I wanted to share a few charts before getting into my weekly update.

The first chart shows the amazing valuation discrepancy between small stocks and large-cap stocks.

Mega-cap stocks are trading at a PE ratio of 29.4x while small-cap stocks are trading at a 12.8x.
Alerts
NerdWallet (NRDS): Sell A Quarter and Hold the Rest
Moving Conduent (CNDT) to Sell
It’s expiration week and we need to roll a few of our positions. Expect to see several trade alerts over the next few days as we buy back our short calls and immediately sell more short calls (collecting premium) for the March expiration cycle.
SPY continues to rally and has now pushed through our short 415 call strike. As a result, I am going to take off the trade. I will be following up this trade with a few opening trades as we need to start looking towards March expiration for premium-selling opportunities.
Earnings Updates: ABNB, NRDS, TIXT, SEDG, UDMY
Exscientia (EXAI) pulled back yesterday but is recovering this morning.
We still have a few February positions in our Dogs of the Dow portfolio that need rolling. I’m starting with DOW today and will roll the rest of our February positions into March over the next two days.
SPY continues to rally and has now pushed through our short 415 call strike. As a result, I am going to take off the trade. I will be following up this trade with a few opening trades as we need to start looking towards March expiration for premium-selling opportunities.
Our WBA calls are due to expire today, so I want to buy them back for a few pennies and immediately sell more premium. JPM and AMGN are due to expire next week, but most, if not all of the premium has left the respective calls. Therefore, I want to buy back our short calls and like WBA, immediately sell more calls.
I will be exiting the Disney (DIS) trade today. I will discuss the trade in greater detail in our subscriber-exclusive webinar at noon ET tomorrow, February 10.
As discussed in our weekly issue this week, and on our weekly call last Friday, I will be taking a position in Disney (DIS) today. DIS is due to announce earnings after the closing bell today (February 8). The stock is currently trading for 111.10.
Portfolios
Strategy
A few Cabot Options Trader subscribers have asked me about ways to protect gains in their portfolios, so I thought I would write to everyone with a couple of strategies using options to hedge your portfolio.
A subscriber recently asked me if I keep a journal of my trades. Many traders keep journals so they can look back at their trades and evaluate what they did right and what they did wrong.
Want to know how the big institutional investors use options? Here is an example of how one trader spent $132 million on three technology stocks.
Options trading has its own vernacular. To know how to do it, you need to know what every options term means. Here are some of the basics.
Our Cabot Momentum 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 Momentum Trader features.