Issues
It was another rough week for the bulls as the bond market and China worries continue to weigh on the indexes. By week’s end the S&P 500 and Dow had both lost 2.22%, while the Nasdaq declined by 2.6%.
It was another rough week for the bulls as the bond market and China worries continue to weigh on the indexes. By week’s end the S&P 500 and Dow had both lost 2.22%, while the Nasdaq declined by 2.6%.
In the August Issue of Cabot Early Opportunities, we talk about what happened to the summer stock rally and dig into five companies selling everything from coffee to sporting goods to mobile advertising tools.
Enjoy!
Enjoy!
Ahead of the long holiday weekend the market had yet another good week. The S&P 500 gained 1.75%, the Dow rallied 1.5%, and the Nasdaq rose another 1.9%.
This week in an attempt to diversify the portfolio we are adding an energy play.
This week in an attempt to diversify the portfolio we are adding an energy play.
The market’s nascent downturn remains in effect, with the short-term trend of most indexes and sectors pointed down and with growth stocks bringing up the rear (though today was a good first step to reverse that). Even so, the pullback from a top-down perspective continues to look normal, so we’re not hiding in our storm cellar, either—we’re hanging onto our resilient, profitable stocks while nibbling here or there on high-odds opportunities. We’ll leave our Market Monitor at a level 6 today.
One of the more encouraging things of the past three weeks is that we’re not having trouble finding good-potential names with solid charts, and this week’s list is no different. Our Top Pick is a great growth story and now, after a couple of bad years, all of the firm’s metrics are pointed in the right direction.
One of the more encouraging things of the past three weeks is that we’re not having trouble finding good-potential names with solid charts, and this week’s list is no different. Our Top Pick is a great growth story and now, after a couple of bad years, all of the firm’s metrics are pointed in the right direction.
August has been a slog for investors, as an uneven earnings season has given the sellers the full buckets they needed to throw a bit of cold water on the 2023 bull market. While high-flying growth stocks have certainly taken it on the chin, especially on earnings, the overall market pullback has been fairly modest, and probably healthy in the long run. With prices lower than they were in July, particularly among growth stocks, today we add a big name with a revolutionary product that many people already use regularly – though only about half the country has access to it. That will soon change, which is why Cabot Growth Investor’s Mike Cintolo is high on it.
The market rally in 2023 and recent pullback have left the All-Weather portfolio up a respectable 8.5%, with the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) continuing to do the heavy lifting, up 27.5%.
Nothing has changed from last expiration cycle, both bond funds (TLT and IEF) and the commodity fund (DBC) continue to lag behind, but that is the yin-yang protective nature of the All-Weather portfolio just doing its job. That being said, all of our positions are outperforming their respective ETF benchmarks, once again showing the power of using a poor man’s covered call approach.
Nothing has changed from last expiration cycle, both bond funds (TLT and IEF) and the commodity fund (DBC) continue to lag behind, but that is the yin-yang protective nature of the All-Weather portfolio just doing its job. That being said, all of our positions are outperforming their respective ETF benchmarks, once again showing the power of using a poor man’s covered call approach.
Not too much to report this week as we simply allow our August positions to erode in value, which as options premium sellers is a good thing. We enter earnings season this week, so I fully expect to add several positions to the portfolio over the coming weeks. We currently have six open position with the intent of getting up between eight and 10.
We finally had the opportunity to take off our August 18, 2023 462/466 bear call spread for a decent 7.8% gain. Certainly nothing to write home about, but given the rise in the SPY since we opened our 462/466 bear call spread back on June 30, we were more than happy to lock in a profitable trade. We were in the trade for 37 days.
Several days after we locked in our profit in the SPY 462/466 bear call spread we were given the opportunity to lock in another winner, a 9.9% profit in our SPY September 15, 470/475 bear call spread. We were in the trade for 7 days.
Several days after we locked in our profit in the SPY 462/466 bear call spread we were given the opportunity to lock in another winner, a 9.9% profit in our SPY September 15, 470/475 bear call spread. We were in the trade for 7 days.
As earnings season winds down, we are greeted with several nice trading opportunities in some big names including Home Depot (HD), Target (TGT), Cisco Systems (CSCO) and Walmart (WMT).
After a slow earnings week last week things pick back up on the earning front this week. My hope is that we are able to make two, if not three trades this week with the focus being on the four trades in the Weekly Watchlist below. As we discussed on our subscriber call last week (out last call for this earnings cycle), we have several quality opportunities in front of us. Now let’s hope Mr. Market offers us some decent probabilities and premium so that we can take on a few short-term earnings trades.
After a slow earnings week last week things pick back up on the earning front this week. My hope is that we are able to make two, if not three trades this week with the focus being on the four trades in the Weekly Watchlist below. As we discussed on our subscriber call last week (out last call for this earnings cycle), we have several quality opportunities in front of us. Now let’s hope Mr. Market offers us some decent probabilities and premium so that we can take on a few short-term earnings trades.
Stop me if you have heard this before, but inflation data and the moves in the bond market continue to be the major drivers of the market’s moves. And last week traders weren’t thrilled with these inputs as the S&P 500 fell by 1%, the Dow gained 0.5% and the Nasdaq continued its recent weakness with a further decline of 2%.
Updates
Many are dubbing this week the most important of the year in terms of financial and market news. There are a slew of important earnings reports, a Fed meeting and likely rate hike, and the second-quarter GDP report.
Big news can bring great change. Change can bring good things when the current environment stinks. After all, if you live in Siberia, you’re not worried about climate change.
Big news can bring great change. Change can bring good things when the current environment stinks. After all, if you live in Siberia, you’re not worried about climate change.
Russia’s decision to cut the oil it exports to Europe again – it’s now down to about 20% of pre-Ukraine invasion levels – is a sign the country wants to force energy prices higher to break opposition to the war. Higher fossil fuel prices are a long-term positive for renewable utility-level energy in Europe and for EVs there and in the U.S. In the sector right now, there are still lots of headwinds, but Greentech is making some progress. The near-term moving averages, the 20-day and 40-day, are now flat and hinting at turning higher, a sign that the bears may be wearing themselves out. Other signals are mixed but increasingly suggest the lows of May could be the bottom of this market.
We are entering the heart of earnings season. So far, the results are unimpressive. The entire retail sector is on alert after Walmart’s pre-announcement about weaker earnings due to their accelerating efforts to offload surplus inventory.
This week, we had a decent amount of news as earnings have started to get under way.
CFTC Commissioner Caroline Pham expressed support for cryptocurrency by criticizing the SEC’s enforcement approach. The following is an important statement, as crypto industry leaders including Sam Bankman Fried are calling for clearer regulatory guidance.
A sudden surge in the U.S. dollar over the past year has bought good and relatively bad news for some firms. With the dollar strengthening, American companies with significant imports have benefitted from cheaper foreign exchange trade. Meanwhile, companies with a more global business are suffering because the strong dollar is affecting their performance.
This note includes our review of earnings from Mattel (MAT) and Nokia (NOK). Next week starts the deluge, with Vodafone (VOD), Dril-Quip (DRQ), General Electric (GE), Xerox (XRX), Polaris Industries (PII), Holcim (HCMLY), Kraft Heinz (KHC), M/I Homes (MHO), Lamb Weston (LW), Janus Henderson Group (JHG), Shell (SHEL) and Newell Brands (NWL) reporting.
There were no ratings or price target changes this week.
There were no ratings or price target changes this week.
The major indexes had another good day, today—both the Dow and Nasdaq rose 162 points.
This is the million-dollar question: With incoming data anything but straightforward the Fed is trying to thread the needle ever so gently to guide the economy down to a soft landing.
The market has been strong over the last month. In fact, the S&P 500 has rebounded more than 9% from the June lows. Is this rally for real?
I doubt it.
There was the normal bounce off the lows and now investors can focus on earnings. The bad inflation report is out of the way and the Fed has tipped its hand that there will be a 0.75% rate hike later this month, which is better than the 1% hike that was expected after the 9.1% June inflation report.
I doubt it.
There was the normal bounce off the lows and now investors can focus on earnings. The bad inflation report is out of the way and the Fed has tipped its hand that there will be a 0.75% rate hike later this month, which is better than the 1% hike that was expected after the 9.1% June inflation report.
Earnings season is coming!
We didn’t have much news this week, but our companies will start reporting in late July and August.
We didn’t have much news this week, but our companies will start reporting in late July and August.
Alerts
Cloudflare (NET) reported Q4 results yesterday that surpassed expectations. Revenue was up 54% to $193.6 million while adjusted EPS came in at $0.01. As compared to some other software stocks that have beat expectations, Cloudflare reinvested the surplus cash in growth initiatives, so it didn’t flow to the bottom line.
Our first idea, a cloud security company, is set to report earnings today. Analysts are expecting EPS of $0.11 on revenues of $241.56 million. Our second recommendation is a short-sale of a company whose shares are on a downward slide.
Cloudflare (NET) reported Q4 results yesterday that surpassed expectations. Revenue was up 54% to $193.6 million while adjusted EPS came in at $0.01. As compared to some other software stocks that have beat expectations, Cloudflare reinvested the surplus cash in growth initiatives, so it didn’t flow to the bottom line.
Sprout Social (SPT) reported a terrific Q4 yesterday and offered above-consensus guidance for 2022. Despite the good results and outlook, we’re going to sell another one-quarter position to take our stake down to one half today. The bottom line is it continues to be a challenging environment for pure growth stocks, and we need to continue to adapt to the times.
This Indiana bank is rated ‘Strong Buy’ by Zacks, based on rising earnings estimates. It also pays a healthy annual dividend yield of 2.31%, paid quarterly.
This electrical equipment company beat analysts’ EPS estimates by $1.02 last quarter.
Today is the expiration of our three February covered calls. The big picture takeaway is that all three will expire for full profits, you don’t need to act on any of these trades, and come Monday we will no longer own a stock or option position in MRO, TECK and ABBV.
This title insurance company beat earnings estimates in its most recent quarter, posting EPS of $2.94, compared to the $2.01 estimate. The shares have a current dividend yield of 2.15%, paid quarterly.
Gold is heating up as the Ukraine-Russia situation heats up, and some of the blue-chip senior and mid-tier gold miners are showing conspicuous signs of relative strength. Since mining stocks tend to outperform gold in a precious metals bull market, it’s time to take a closer look at the leading miners.
Cloudflare (NET) reported Q4 results yesterday that surpassed expectations. Revenue was up 54% to $193.6 million while adjusted EPS came in at $0.01. As compared to some other software stocks that have beat expectations, Cloudflare reinvested the surplus cash in growth initiatives, so it didn’t flow to the bottom line.
This medical device maker is expected to grow earnings by more than 30% next year, and is trading at a severe discount. The shares have a current annual dividend yield of 3.07%, paid annually.
One of the many market aphorisms that float around in my head says, “Never sell a dull market short.” It reminds us that in theory, low volume and calm trading ranges such as we’ve seen in the cannabis sector recently tend to signify a balance of buying and selling pressures, and thus a likelihood, particularly after the previous one-year decline, that the dullness will soon be replaced by a new uptrend.
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.