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Issues
The Federal Reserve resumed lifting interest rates Wednesday with a quarter-percentage-point increase that brings interest rates to a 22-year high. The decision was unanimous.

The benchmark federal funds rate will go to a range between 5.25% and 5.5% as the Fed continues its fight against inflation. This is the 11th increase since March 2022, when rates were near zero.

Inflation has already retreated from a four-decade high last summer and the consumer-price index was up 3% in June year over year which is much lower than the June 2022 peak of 9.1%.
Politicians in Washington, D.C. let cannabis investors down once again.

Commentary from lobbyists and Senators had suggested the Senate banking committee might make progress on cannabis sector banking reform (allowing banks to work with companies) in late July.

That turned out not to be the case. I cautioned at the time that a risk here is that the actions of politicians are hard to predict. But it was worth having exposure, in case there actually was progress on so-called SAFE banking, which seemed possible at the time.
Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Turnaround Letter. We hope you enjoy reading the August 2023 issue.

In this letter, we include our Mid-Year 2023 updates for our stock market and high yield bond market outlooks. After being totally wrong with our stock market outlook for 2023, what do we see for the rest of the year, and why? We were nearly spot-on with our high yield bond market outlook. How does this market look to us now?

Our feature recommendation this month is Kopin Corporation (KOPN), an obscure optical display company that previously was run like a hobby by a brilliant scientist. Its primary output was a chronic stream of operating losses and share offerings that heavily diluted its investors. Now, under completely new leadership, the company is being run like a for-profit commercial enterprise with a vast market opportunity ahead.
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.
The population is aging. And it’s aging at warp speed. People 50 years of age and older now comprise a third of the U.S. population. The fastest growing segment of the population is 65 and older as an average of 10,000 baby boomers are turning 65 every single day. And it’s not just this country – aging is a global phenomenon.

We don’t know how sticky inflation will be or what the Fed will do. We don’t know if there will be a recession this year or next year or what the recovery will look like, or who will be the next president. But we do know that the population is shifting and companies on the receiving end of the torrent of dollars that will flow as a result should benefit mightily.

In this issue, I highlight another new stock to buy. This stock is cheap with strong momentum and properties that should help it perform well in any kind of market. It’s a healthcare stock ahead of a huge megatrend, the aging population.

Investing with the tailwind of a megatrend makes it so much easier to make a successful investment. It makes mediocre stocks great and good stocks one of your best investments ever.
After a non-stop run for two-plus months, we’re finally seeing a bit of sloppiness in the Nasdaq and some growth stocks that have had huge runs— combining the recent action with the fact that the advance has been going on 12 weeks and earnings season is upon us, and further stumbles are certainly possible in growth. All that said, it’s been more about rotation than outright selling, as the broad market has actually picked up steam, and none of this alters our big-picture bullish thoughts, as the top-down evidence remains overwhelmingly positive. Put it together, and we’re still bullish, but we’ll pull in our Market Monitor a notch to a level 7 to reflect some of the near-term wobbles.

This week’s list reflects the market action, with more non-tech names, be it cyclical plays, drug firms or even a bull market-related business. Our Top Pick is a bull market stock that has just come alive after a long bottoming effort.
The bull market keeps rolling along, though both the Fed and a busy, star-studded earnings slate could provide a couple speed bumps this week. Still, I wouldn’t bet against this market right now, at least not in the intermediate or long term, so today we’re adding another high-upside pick. It’s a mid-cap software stock that’s trading well below its post-IPO highs, but that has built up a full head of steam the last two-plus months. It’s a new addition from Cabot Early Opportunities Chief Analyst Tyler Laundon.

Details inside.
As I stated on our subscriber-only call last week, expect to see several trades this week. On the call I went over several trades, bullish, bearish and neutral, and I expect to add at least one of each over the next week or so.

We need to ramp up positions and now that July expiration has passed, we start selling premium going out roughly 30 to 60 days, but given the low-volatility environment that has taken over the market, I would expect to sell premium going out towards a longer duration trade. Just know that even though we place a trade going out further in duration, say 60 days, it doesn’t mean that we are going to be in a trade for that long. As we discussed on our call, our average hold time per trade duration is 20.5 days, regardless of the duration of the trade at the point of entry.
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.
It’s been just over a week since the big banks announced earnings and during that time we’ve been fortunate to make an 8.0% return in JPM, and more recently, 6.4% in IBM using the Earnings Trader strategy.

Earnings announcements really ramp up this week with a long list of well-known blue-chip stocks due to announce. As I stated on our call last Friday, I hope to make at least two to three trades this week. During each earnings cycle we aim to make somewhere between 8 to 12 trades and given the opportunities ahead I don’t see any reason why we wouldn’t fall within our typical range.
Sector and index rotation was the name of the game last week as money raced out of tech to end the week and into sectors that had not been participating in the market’s advance recently. That being said, this is not necessarily a bad sign as the S&P 500 gained 0.7%, the Dow rallied 2.08% and the Nasdaq lost 0.6%.
Sector and index rotation was the name of the game last week as money raced out of tech to end the week and into sectors that had not been participating in the market’s advance recently. That being said, this is not necessarily a bad sign as the S&P 500 gained 0.7%, the Dow rallied 2.08% and the Nasdaq lost 0.6%.
Updates
This week’s Friday Update includes a summary of the recent Cabot Turnaround Letter and comments on earnings from Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA). There were no ratings changes. We also summarize the podcast and include The Catalyst Report.
There are a lot of negatives out there these days. The AAII Sentiment Survey shows optimism is in the tank while pessimism is through the roof.
Explorer stocks held their ground this week as we move two positions to a hold. Don’t be too discouraged. S&P 500 stocks struggled in the first half of this year, roughly equal to that of 1970. That year the S&P 500 fell 21% in the first half and then gained 27% in the second half. Let’s hope 2022 follows a similar pattern.
This market has recovered nicely after plunging into bear market territory and beyond the week before last. Unfortunately, the good times probably won’t last.
All year long the market has bounced to some sort of recovery after plunging to new lows. But stocks can’t seem to muster any lasting traction with rising interest rates, high inflation, and a souring economy. Those things are simply too much of a bummer to whistle past.


The market remains in a bearish posture, with a number of technical signals suggesting the move downward isn’t done yet. Greentech is below its 20-day and 40-day moving averages, which are downtrending, meeting our definition of bearish and there remains a well-defined downtrend line in the broad market and Greentech. That said, we’re above the lows of May, which in itself is a sign the market may be working its way toward a turnaround.
The stock market is resuming its downward slump, creating a drag on investor enthusiasm for buying shares. In many ways, this effect is no different from how consumers approach the purchase of any other item – if you are reasonably confident that the truck/house/trinket/whatever you are wanting to buy will be cheaper in a few weeks, you will wait to make your purchase.
The market rallied strongly off the lows last week, moving 6% higher on the week.
Is the bottom in?


I doubt it. The market has behaved this way all year. There has typically been a rally after intense selling and a new low. But stocks have difficulty generating any lasting upside traction in the face of high inflation, an aggressive Fed, and a slowing economy.


There was little news this week, but I wanted to highlight two things that are on my mind.
First, small and micro-cap stocks look incredibly cheap.

I am making one change to the four-ETF Undiscovered model. I am selling the Direxion Daily S&P 500 Bear 1X Shares (SPDN), a 20% position, and replacing it with the ALPS Medical Breakthroughs ETF (SBIO) in the 20% portfolio slot.
FTX, the cryptocurrency exchange founded by Sam Bankman Fried, remains well capitalized and has been stepping in to provide liquidity to other firms such as Voyager Digital and BlockFi. The FTX US exchange continues to be a great option for our traders to utilize. Other exchanges that I recommend are Coinbase and Binance. These “big three” crypto trading platforms have significantly less liquidity issues and better risk profiles when compared to other niche players.
This week’s Friday Update includes comments on our companies. There were no ratings changes or earnings reports. Look for the July edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter next week, where we update our semi-annual Equity Market Outlook and our High Yield Bond outlook and offer up our July feature recommendation.
The major indexes are up today, led by the Nasdaq, while growth stocks are beginning to perk up. As of 3 pm EST, the Dow is up 46 points and the Nasdaq is 132 points, while some growth funds are up 2% to 4% today.
Alerts
Onsemi (ON) closed beneath 60 yesterday. That triggers our tiered sell-stop for the position, of sell half ‘near 60.’
A couple of quick notes are in order. We exited our trading position in U.S. Steel (X) today after our stop-loss at 23.50 was violated on an intraday basis.
This gold miner is expected to grow earnings by more than 37% this year.
As we continue to balance the pursuit of opportunities with the desire to preserve capital/current gains we’re intently focused on stocks that are breaking down to new lows. Today we’ll take partial profits on another name and step completely away from one stock.
This company has had its issues, but analysts and insiders are betting on a turnaround. Earnings will be announced February 1, and the stock is trading at a P/E of just 9.15. The shares offer a current annual dividend yield of 4.80%, paid quarterly.
Both Sprout Social (SPT) and Kornit Digital (KRNT) have made fresh lows today so we’re going to take partial profits by selling one quarter of each position.
In the past 30 days, four analysts have raised their EPS estimates for this Real Estate Investment Trust. The shares have a current annual dividend yield of 2.72%, paid quarterly.
In a recent update, I used the phrase, “It’s always darkest before the dawn,” as I reasoned that the marijuana sector’s dreadful performance in 2021 was likely the prelude to a well-deserved rebound in 2022. And the news is still pretty dark.
This eco-friendly water management company is expected to post annual earnings growth of 49.5% over the next five years.
Analysts expect this money remittance company to grow earnings by more than 20% next year.
The market meltdown is continuing today, and while it’s being led by growth stocks, the selling is spreading out to every nook and cranny of the market—as of 12:30 eastern, the Dow is down 511 points while the Nasdaq is cratering another 350 points.
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.