Issues
Emerging markets are seeing a boost from positive news out of Hong Kong and on the U.S.-China front. Our Emerging Markets Timer has raced higher in recent days, putting it within striking distance of a new buy signal. Our new recommendation comes from an unexpected country, but a well established semi-monopoly industry.
Current Market OutlookThe major indexes found some decent support last week, rallying back to the top of their ranges, but overall they’re still thrashing around in the same range they’ve occupied since early August, keeping the intermediate-term trend sideways-to-down. The one thing that did change late last week was a bout of rotation, with money flowing into the beaten-down areas (financials, transports, energy, etc.); it’s something to keep an eye on, but we can’t say it’s a new trend quite yet. All in all, the market is showing us a lot of movement, but little net progress—and thus, our overall advice hasn’t changed. We’re keeping our Market Monitor at a level 5, meaning you should be choosy and keep things small on the buy side, while holding some cash and honoring stops and loss limits with your weaker performers.
The good news, as it has been all year, is that there remain many stocks that looks ready to enjoy meaningful upmoves if the market can get its act together. Our Top Pick is New Oriental Education (EDU), a rare China-related stock that’s making new highs on good volume.
| Stock Name | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Burlington Stores (BURL) | 193.95 | ||
| Jacobs Engineering Group (JEC) | 89.83 | ||
| Meritage Homes (MTH) | 102.20 | ||
| Neurocrine Biosciences (NBIX) | 123.40 | ||
| New Oriental Education (EDU) | 113.97 | ||
| Take-Two Interactive (TTWO) | 123.32 | ||
| Tandem Diabetes (TNDM) | 74.77 | ||
| Trex Company (TREX) | 117.56 | ||
| Twitter (TWTR) | 40.37 | ||
| Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM) | 34.43 |
I hope you had an enjoyable and relaxing summer. Wall Street is back to work this week, and Apple (AAPL) is launching a new product or two next week, so get ready for stocks to start moving again.
Despite the daily focus on the worst aspects of the China tariff story, the fact is that the broad market has built a decent base (albeit loose) over the past month. Repeated tales of doom and gloom aren’t sending it any lower. Thus, I remain long-term bullish, though short-term somewhat cautious.And I continue to recommend that you maintain a portfolio full of diversified stocks that meet your investment goals. Last week’s recommendation was a hot growth stock, so this week we swing back to a conservative dividend-paying stock, one that is performing very well today.As for our current stocks, there are no changes. The last week of August changed little, but going forward, I expect a little more action, ideally to the upside. Details in the issue.
Successful short-selling is more complex than just being “the opposite of long investing.” Shorting goes against the general upward trend in stock prices and against human nature that strives for making companies run better. But as long investors, we can use these short-selling risks to our advantage.
In this issue, we feature six stocks that have large short interest yet have pending turnarounds that could force short-covering.
In this issue, we feature six stocks that have large short interest yet have pending turnarounds that could force short-covering.
August has featured one big whipsaw after another, with the major indexes breaking down early in the month and making many dramatic moves since. But the overall evidence really hasn’t changed much—the intermediate-term trend still isn’t up for the market or most stocks, while the longer-term evidence is still mostly bullish. Thus, we’re sticking with a cautious stance. Tonight, we’re selling a small chunk of Okta (OKTA), which leaves us with a cash position of around 36%.
Elsewhere in tonight’s issue, we write about all of our current holdings (including newer addition Carvana) and discuss one major indicator to watch closely and how to find resilient stocks in the market. If today’s rally is for real, we could be putting money to work soon, but we’re content to patiently wait for a decisive green light.
Elsewhere in tonight’s issue, we write about all of our current holdings (including newer addition Carvana) and discuss one major indicator to watch closely and how to find resilient stocks in the market. If today’s rally is for real, we could be putting money to work soon, but we’re content to patiently wait for a decisive green light.
The cannabis sector remains in a correction, but many of our stocks are doing considerably better than the sector. And the sector itself is very likely near a bottom—which I why today’s issue is titled “Buying Opportunity.”
For new investors, it’s a great time to get started.
However, I’m also recommending reducing positions in four of our holdings, always working to put more of our money in the leading stocks—and with these sales, our cash level will rise—hopefully briefly—to 30%.
For new investors, it’s a great time to get started.
However, I’m also recommending reducing positions in four of our holdings, always working to put more of our money in the leading stocks—and with these sales, our cash level will rise—hopefully briefly—to 30%.
We are in the late stages of a recovery and bull market. The economy is still strong and the bull market could continue for a while. But the escalation of trade frictions with China is disrupting the situation.
Since the trade war escalated a month ago, the market has fallen every week since. And things might get worse before they get better. The trade war takes a small toll on the economy but it hurts the global economy much more. A faltering global economy would come back and bite us, and perhaps draw the next recession closer.
With no catalyst in sight to fix the current situation and a recession looming somewhere in the not-too-distant future, it makes sense to play defense. Defensive dividend paying stocks are the stars of the market now and may continue to be for a long while.
In this issue I highlight one of the very best defensive dividend stocks on the market. It has rock solid earnings in any environment and the stock should perform well in just about any market.
Since the trade war escalated a month ago, the market has fallen every week since. And things might get worse before they get better. The trade war takes a small toll on the economy but it hurts the global economy much more. A faltering global economy would come back and bite us, and perhaps draw the next recession closer.
With no catalyst in sight to fix the current situation and a recession looming somewhere in the not-too-distant future, it makes sense to play defense. Defensive dividend paying stocks are the stars of the market now and may continue to be for a long while.
In this issue I highlight one of the very best defensive dividend stocks on the market. It has rock solid earnings in any environment and the stock should perform well in just about any market.
The market remains under pressure in the short-term, for all the well-publicized reasons, but long-term, the market trend remains up, and many of our stocks are acting well. Today’s recommendation is a repeat, a stock we made money in last year that subsequently had a big correction and is now ready to run again. And it’s got a great story, too!
Current Market OutlookThe market came close to giving an all-clear signal last week, but the endless U.S.-China trade flareup knocked the market back on Friday. Despite the headlines, we still don’t see the environment as a total disaster—the indexes themselves are still holding above their recent lows, and many individual stocks (and most we’re following) are actually more resilient than that. But the bottom line is that little money is being made, and with the intermediate-term trend continuing to point down, you should remain in a cautious stance, keeping new buying on the small side and holding some cash. From here, we’re open to anything—given the pervasive pessimism, a new uptrend wouldn’t shock us, but the onus remains on the bulls to prove they are retaking control before we become more constructive.
This week’s list has a wide mix of stocks that have resisted the market’s downward pull—with some actually advancing despite the environment. Our Top Pick is MasTec (MTZ), a stock we missed a couple of weeks ago but think it can have a sustained advance due to its exposure to many strong markets.
| Stock Name | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Allakos (ALLK) | 77.83 | ||
| Blackstone Group (BX) | 49.12 | ||
| D. R. Horton (DHI) | 66.55 | ||
| HubSpot (HUBS) | 582.89 | ||
| Keysight Technologies, Inc. (KEYS) | 97.20 | ||
| LivePerson (LPSN) | 58.55 | ||
| MasTec, Inc. (MTZ) | 66.65 | ||
| Pinduoduo (PDD) | 87.53 | ||
| Synopsys (SNPS) | 137.53 | ||
| Target (TGT) | 124.77 |
Updates
After two near-record-setting months, stocks are encountering their first real turbulence since March. It’s no surprise.
While stocks go up an average of 10% a year, they rarely do so in a straight line. And after the S&P 500 rallied nearly 20% in April and May and the Nasdaq shot up nearly 30%, a pullback of some kind – or possibly even a true correction – was to be expected. It seems it’s happening all at once.
While stocks go up an average of 10% a year, they rarely do so in a straight line. And after the S&P 500 rallied nearly 20% in April and May and the Nasdaq shot up nearly 30%, a pullback of some kind – or possibly even a true correction – was to be expected. It seems it’s happening all at once.
Stocks look to enter summer near all-time highs, but leadership has narrowed and volatility has ticked up thanks to renewed scrutiny on the AI trade and open-ended questions about valuations in some of the hottest areas of the market.
There’s also been more focus on the evolving macro landscape, which features a resilient U.S. economy but stubbornly high energy prices due to the ongoing Iran conflict, and somewhat elevated yields. We’re now looking at a higher likelihood of a Fed rate hike, with the odds of a hike by December now well over 50%.
There’s also been more focus on the evolving macro landscape, which features a resilient U.S. economy but stubbornly high energy prices due to the ongoing Iran conflict, and somewhat elevated yields. We’re now looking at a higher likelihood of a Fed rate hike, with the odds of a hike by December now well over 50%.
The high-flying AI stocks got crushed on Friday. But those stocks started this week higher. Where do we go from here?
The technology-heavy Nasdaq index fell 4% on Friday, and the S&P 500 fell for the week for the first time in 10 weeks. A couple of things spooked investors. The AI trade turned sour after Broadcom (AVGO) reported earnings that included slightly lower revenue projections for its AI chips than were expected. Also, a blowout jobs report strengthened the case for a Fed rate hike by the end of the year.
The technology-heavy Nasdaq index fell 4% on Friday, and the S&P 500 fell for the week for the first time in 10 weeks. A couple of things spooked investors. The AI trade turned sour after Broadcom (AVGO) reported earnings that included slightly lower revenue projections for its AI chips than were expected. Also, a blowout jobs report strengthened the case for a Fed rate hike by the end of the year.
A major economic narrative that took shape in recent years was the decline and (presumptive) inevitable death of the so-called “petrodollar,” as a growing number of countries diversified their foreign exchange reserves away from the U.S. dollar and toward gold and alternative currencies like the Chinese yuan.
WHAT TO DO NOW: The overall market remains in good shape, though we are seeing some exuberance on the upside and also a few leaders begin to act sloppy. Near term, then, it’s still a coin flip as to what comes, but the vast majority of intermediate-term evidence remains bullish. In the Model Portfolio, we took partial profits in Marvell (MRVL) earlier this week; tonight, we’re buying a half-sized position (5% of the account) in Bloom Energy (BE), which is extremely volatile but also strong and coming off a few weeks of rest. Our cash position will now be around 28%.
This market just keeps going higher.
Sure, there’s uncertainty out there. The war isn’t over. Inflation and interest rates are still too high. But stocks didn’t get the memo. After a strong April, the S&P 500 rose 5% and the Nasdaq soared 8% in May. The indexes are up 20% and 30%, respectively, since March 30 and are continuing to make new highs this week.
Sure, there’s uncertainty out there. The war isn’t over. Inflation and interest rates are still too high. But stocks didn’t get the memo. After a strong April, the S&P 500 rose 5% and the Nasdaq soared 8% in May. The indexes are up 20% and 30%, respectively, since March 30 and are continuing to make new highs this week.
Despite the negative headlines and volatility, stocks just keep going.
After a strong April, the S&P 500 rose 5% and the Nasdaq soared 8% in May. The indexes are up 20% and 30%, respectively, since March 30. It’s also worth noting that despite the ongoing Iran war, the price per barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude oil closed down 17% for the month of May.
After a strong April, the S&P 500 rose 5% and the Nasdaq soared 8% in May. The indexes are up 20% and 30%, respectively, since March 30. It’s also worth noting that despite the ongoing Iran war, the price per barrel of West Texas Intermediate crude oil closed down 17% for the month of May.
This week’s Memorial Day observance marked the traditional onset of the summer vacation season for millions of Americans. It’s a time of traveling, sightseeing, picnics and parties. It’s also the peak season for enjoying cold, carbonated beverages like soda pop and energy drinks.
With this dynamic in play, I think it’s time that we give some attention to our holding in PepsiCo (PEP), which is entering a critical period of its sales year.
With this dynamic in play, I think it’s time that we give some attention to our holding in PepsiCo (PEP), which is entering a critical period of its sales year.
On the heels of a miserable March and a euphoric April, I wrote several weeks ago in this space that I thought May would determine which direction the market is truly headed, at least in the intermediate term. We have our answer, and it’s a definitive “up.”
All three major U.S. indexes are touching record highs as of this writing, with the S&P 500 up 4.3% in May, the Nasdaq up 7%, and the slower-moving Dow Jones Industrial inching higher by 1.6%. That’s despite the ongoing Iran war and the accompanying sky-high oil and gas prices, escalating inflation, bond yields at multi-year highs, possible Fed rate hikes later this year, and record-low consumer sentiment.
All three major U.S. indexes are touching record highs as of this writing, with the S&P 500 up 4.3% in May, the Nasdaq up 7%, and the slower-moving Dow Jones Industrial inching higher by 1.6%. That’s despite the ongoing Iran war and the accompanying sky-high oil and gas prices, escalating inflation, bond yields at multi-year highs, possible Fed rate hikes later this year, and record-low consumer sentiment.
Stocks have largely shrugged off this week’s dust‑ups in the Middle East as investors continue to bet on a near‑term memorandum of understanding (MOU) that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and push bigger sticking points between the U.S. and Iran down the road.
Yields have cooled off this week and continue to do so this morning, thanks to a slightly lower‑than‑expected core PCE reading. April core PCE rose 0.2% month over month, below both March’s 0.3% reading and consensus, giving the Fed some breathing room as policymakers weigh the competing forces of inflation and growth.
Yields have cooled off this week and continue to do so this morning, thanks to a slightly lower‑than‑expected core PCE reading. April core PCE rose 0.2% month over month, below both March’s 0.3% reading and consensus, giving the Fed some breathing room as policymakers weigh the competing forces of inflation and growth.
The $145 trillion global bond market is under some stress due to runaway debt. The 30-year U.S. Treasury bond yielded over 5% last week, up from 4.63% at the end of February. Americans are struggling to keep up with their debt payments, as the cost of borrowing money increases. This is a global story. In Japan, the 30-year government bond yield just hit a record of 4.15%, and U.K. government debt jumped to 5.85% earlier this month.
Nothing stops this market. The S&P 500 hit another new high this week.
The spectacular earnings season helped power the rally. Average earnings growth on the S&P 500 is over 28% in the first quarter. That is far better than the expected 13.1% and the highest level of growth for any quarter since 2021.
The spectacular earnings season helped power the rally. Average earnings growth on the S&P 500 is over 28% in the first quarter. That is far better than the expected 13.1% and the highest level of growth for any quarter since 2021.
Alerts
Nomura just upgraded the shares of this financial behemoth to ‘Buy’ and two analysts have increased their EPS estimates for the company in the past 30 days.
The top five holdings of this fund are: Apple Inc (AAPL, 1.59%); Microsoft Corp (MSFT, 1.51%); Amazon.com Inc (AMZN, 1.22%); Facebook Inc A (FB, 0.92%) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM, 0.82%).
One of our stocks reported this morning and results came in just shy of expectations. The bottom line is that the stock is selling off hard and is back down to its 200-day line, and in the zone of support that’s held for the last four months.
Alexion Pharmaceuticals (ALXN) reported positive results in a Phase 3 clinical study of ALXN1210 this morning, for treatment of Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria (PNH).
Two of our stocks reported their latest quarterly results yesterday and both disappointed; one is now rated Sell.
Signet Jewelers (SIG) fell dramatically upon news surrounding the fourth-quarter earnings release. The fourth-quarter numbers were not the problem, but there were additional announcements.
The shares were recently upgraded to ‘Buy’ at Gabelli & Co. and 12 analysts have increased their EPS estimates in the past 30 days.
Our first idea, an aerospace and oilfield service supplier handily beat earnings estimates and received a new ‘Buy’ rating.
Our other two recommendations are profit-taking on two previous ideas.
The market’s strength last week and today’s calm action was enough to turn our Cabot Tides back to a positive stance, flipping the intermediate-term trend back to bullish. Given that the Model Portfolio isn’t holding a ton of cash, we’ll start slow with one new addition tonight.
This company of non-physician-owned medical centers just made a strategic agreement with a major hospital chain.
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.