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Issues
In selecting today’s stock, I swung back to the conservative side, and selected an undervalued stock in the energy/industrial sector that has recently resumed its upward trend as institutions climb back on board.
Market Gauge is 8Current Market Outlook


The market’s action last week—three days up and two days sideways in the S&P 500 and a run to new highs by the Nasdaq—looks excellent, and we think it’s time to put a little more of your sidelined cash to work. Yes, it’s a light-volume summer rally and earnings season will provide plenty of landmines to go along with the blastoffs, so we’re not advising going all in. But given last week’s early progress and stubborn refusal to give any of its advances back, we will bump our Market Monitor up by one step, putting it in the green. As always, we will listen to what the market tells us from here.

This week’s list has a couple of newcomers, including one of three Chinese stocks that have been making great strides. A few stocks with long Top Ten histories also made the grade. Our Top Pick is a Chinese retailer, JD.com (JD), that’s growing revenue at a blazing rate.
Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
ASML Holding (ASML) 350.01147-151136-138
Huazhu Group (HTHT) 30.8989-9382-85
JD.com (JD) 39.5841.5-43.538-39
JinkoSolar Holding (JKS) 0.0026-27.524-25
Littelfuse (LFUS) 0.00177-182169-173
Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) 423.92182-188168-173
NRG Energy (NRG) 0.0023.5-2520.5-22
TD Ameritrade (AMTD) 0.0045-46.542-43
Vertex Pharmaceuticals (VRTX) 230.36152-160140-145
Workday (WDAY) 194.88101-10493-95

This month’s Cabot Enterprising Model contains 16 companies that offer you a mix of “low” and “moderate” risk stocks to add to your portfolio, including a new company that operates entirely within Canada.
In this Mid-Year Top Picks issue, we feature our top five picks, which averaged 54.85% gains, plus updates on all our Top Picks. Going forward, analysts expect the three industries to grow the fastest in the remainder of the year to be energy, information technology and financials, and we have plenty of ideas in each of those sectors.

In addition to a detailed explanation of the market’s moves and our portfolio’s holdings, we write about the puzzling failure of the average investor to take part in the equity rally and how to handle stocks around their Initial public offerings.
This week’s featured stock is a fast-growing Chinese stock that dominates its mass-market business segment. Conservative investors will probably want to give it a pass, but risk-takers can jump on board. It has great growth potential!
Market Gauge is 7Current Market Outlook


Last week’s rally was very encouraging. Some major indexes and a handful of leading growth stocks hit new highs, and many others set up well. Coming after a six-week consolidation, it’s enough to put some sidelined cash to work, and we’re bumping our Market Monitor up a notch in response. That said, be sure to keep your feet on the ground and pick your spots, as the rally has come on extremely light volume (not the end of the world, but it does show a lack of conviction), the Nasdaq is still shy of new highs, and earnings season, which is now underway, is sure to have a big impact on individual stocks into early August.

This week’s list has a broad array of stocks from various sectors that attracted buyers as soon as the pressure came off the market. Our Top Pick is Western Digital (WDC), which lifted to new highs on good volume last week and has already preannounced solid results.
Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI) 0.0079-8373-75
CoStar Group (CSGP) 589.55265-271245-248
Dana Holding (DAN) 0.0022.5-23.521-21.5
E*Trade Financial (ETFC) 0.0037.5-4035-36
Facebook, Inc. (FB) 0.00156-160147-151
IPG Photonics (IPGP) 0.00148-153137-140
Kite Pharma (KITE) 0.0099-10487-90
New Relic (NEWR) 103.7045.5-47.541.5-43
Ryanair DAC (RYAAY) 0.00111-1151102-104
Western Digital Corporation (WDC) 0.0092-9584-86

Chinese stocks have bounced higher this week, giving the Cabot Emerging Markets Timer a much stronger buy signal. Coming after a stretch of flat trading dating back to mid-May, this newly strengthened signal is great news, and we have a Chinese internet stock to recommend that should benefit greatly from the support.
Updates
What a difference a month can make! What an April! The S&P rose 9.6% in April, making it the best single month for the market in six years. It hit an all-time high on Friday.

Sure, the war isn’t over. But the market doesn’t really seem to regard it as a war anymore, more like a blockade situation with the possibility of some skirmishes. While there is still headline risk, investors have moved beyond this war and are focusing on earnings. And for good reasons.
The results are in for the month of April. It was fabulous. The S&P rose 9.6%, making it the best single month for the market in six years. It hit an all-time high on Friday.

Sure, the war isn’t over. But the market doesn’t really seem to regard it as a war anymore, more like a blockade situation with the possibility of minor skirmishes. While there is still headline risk, investors have moved beyond this war and are focusing on earnings.
Now before you call me crazy concerning today’s newsletter headline, hear me out.

Even though large-cap names have garnered more than a fair share of attention among investors this year, I think a case can be made that companies with big capitalizations have a lot more room to run higher before they can be truly regarded as “overbought” or “played out.”
The market is digesting the push and pull of higher oil prices, a deeply divided Federal Reserve, prospects for a prolonged blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and fading momentum from the AI trade that helped push markets to all‑time highs earlier this month.

Despite the crosscurrents, the overall tone still tilts bullish, supported by investor comfort (for the time being) with the geopolitical tension, resilience in the U.S. economy, and improving visibility into earnings growth over the coming quarters.
Yesterday, four tech giants, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft, representing 22% of the S&P 500’s market value, reported strong quarterly earnings that highlighted the importance of AI.

You might think the above companies and their AI brethren are “asset light” companies but you would be very wrong.
It’s been a glorious April following a miserable March for the market. What happens in May may determine which direction stocks are headed for the rest of the year.

That’s probably overstating things a bit, but May should be crucial for the reasons we discussed last week: namely, the fate of the Iran war, but also the bulk of first-quarter earnings season and the introduction of a new Fed chair.
What war? This market is moving on. We may not be out of the woods yet, but investors are looking beyond the Iran war.

Stocks have already made up all losses from a rough March and then some. The S&P 500 had fallen 7.7% in the month of March by the 30th. Since then, the index has rallied over 13%. The S&P is now at a higher level than before the war began and is hitting new all-time highs.
The other day I was paid a visit by a roving ISP salesman who was pitching his company’s fledgling internet service over the local monopoly’s. We struck up a conversation and he asked what I did for a living. When I told him, his eyes lit up and he asked, “Got any good stocks you can recommend?”

Without thinking I blurted out, “Anything AI-related. You can’t go wrong.” The advice was only semi-facetious, for there’s undeniably a degree of truth behind it. My instinctive response to that question also prompted me to consider the question: just how long can the broad market continue its “all things AI” run without broader sector participation
Note: I’m out of town this week, so I’ll be a bit briefer on the update today—but I’m still checking my laptop a couple of times a day if you have any questions or comments. I’ll be back at my desk come Monday. Cheers.

WHAT TO DO NOW: Remain optimistic. The market and some leaders have hesitated, but all of our market timing indicators are bullish, and most stocks we own or are watching are working. Last Friday, we bought a half-sized stake in Nebius (NBIS) and added a 3% additional stake in ProShares S&P 500 Fund (SSO); earlier this week, we sold our small remaining position in GE Aerospace (GE); and tonight, we’ll buy a half-sized position (5% of the portfolio ) in Cava (CAVA). We’ll still have 46% in cash or so after these moves.
Despite all the headline noise lately we’re marching deeper into first‑quarter earnings season with the market’s path of least resistance still pointing higher.

Optimism around the extension of the tentative ceasefire in the Middle East has reduced geopolitical anxiety to a seemingly manageable level. The U.S. economy continues to show resilience, and the corporate earnings outlook points toward meaningful growth in the coming quarters and years.
The old saying, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes,” is an apt one for the stock market these last two years.

In early 2025, the S&P 500 raced to new all-time highs before peaking in late January/early February, only to get dragged down in March and April by a geopolitical crisis (tariffs/Liberation Day), before rallying in a V-shaped pattern as the severity of the crisis abated.
The market turned on the afterburners. The S&P 500 made up all the March losses and catapulted to a brand new high in a remarkably short time. It’s a market that sure looks like it wants to go higher. But stocks are being held back this week by more war uncertainty.

The current ceasefire with Iran expires on Wenesday night. Talks may not happen, and war talk is growing. The resumption of the war will almost certainly prompt a decline in the market. Aside from that near-term threat, investors are clearly looking past this war. Hopefully, it won’t last much longer.
Alerts
Tonight, we’re going to sell Amazon (AMZN), which doesn’t look awful but hasn’t been able to get going during the past couple of months. We’ll sell at about breakeven and hold the cash. We’ll also place Abiomed (ABMD) on Hold
Despite the continuing Buy signal from the Cabot Emerging Markets Timer, one of our stocks, Telkom Indonesia (TLK), is not pulling its weight and is now rated Sell.
USA Technologies (USAT) reported a mixed bag of quarterly results this morning. I think buying here has a relatively high probability of working out within a 30-day window.
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 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.