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Issues
We have two new additions to the portfolios in today’s issue, one of our stocks has changed its name, and one stock is now rated Sell.
Market Gauge is 8Current Market Outlook


Individual stocks have been somewhat tricky in recent weeks, with some doing great and others chopping around, while earnings season has done its usual job of helping some names while cutting others off at the knees. Even so, there are far more stocks in good shape than not, and the market itself is in fine shape, with all the major indexes we track above intermediate-term support. Things can always change, but with most of the evidence we see bullish, we’re sticking with a positive stance. Moreover, we see a ton of setups out there (especially among growth-oriented stocks and sectors that have consolidated during the past two months or longer) that should do well if the market continue to push higher.

This week’s list has a solid collection of recent earnings winners from a variety of different groups. There are many strong names to choose from, but our Top Pick is Align Technologies (ALGN), which has a great long-term growth story and a strong chart. Try to buy on dips.
Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
Align Technology (ALGN) 316.20164-169152-155
Brink’s (BCO) 0.0075-7968-70
Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) 0.00111-113150-107
Expedia Group (EXPE) 0.00153-157145-147
First Solar (FSLR) 83.7446-48.542-44.5
iRobot (IRBT) 103.17101-10792-96
Lending Tree (TREE) 411.51207-217190-195
Novocure (NVCR) 0.0019-2116-17
Proofpoint (PFPT) 113.7984-86.580-82.5
YY Inc. (YY) 0.0070-7364-66

Our market timing indicator is positive and our stocks are doing well. We’re heading into earnings season with a powerful wave of momentum providing the power. In this issue I do a little basic review of earnings season and list all the firm dates for companies we own. I also have a new/old stock that boasts very strong numbers and will be reporting in a couple of weeks.
I’m adding a 31-year dividend payer to the Safe Income Tier, and cover all our stocks that have reported earnings so far. You’ll also find some important information on REITs at the end of the issue which you should find valuable if you bought last month’s High Yield Tier addition.
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.

Updates
Has there ever been anything as overvalued as SpaceX (SPCX)?

Elon Musk’s rocket and space-based internet company reported $18.7 billion in revenue in 2025. That’s less than half the revenue declining electronics store chain Best Buy (BBY, $41.7 billion) generated last year, less than International Paper Company (IP, $23.6 billion), and barely more than Casey’s General Stores (CASY, $17.6 billion). Those three companies have a combined market cap of roughly $67 billion. As of this writing, SpaceX has a market cap of $2.7 trillion. That’s more than the combined market cap of Walmart (WMT), JPMorgan (JPM) and Visa (V). Together, those three companies generated $847 billion in revenue last year.
Small caps continue to hold up well. The S&P 600 Small Cap Index is up modestly since last Thursday and is trading just below the fresh all-time highs it hit earlier this week. The group’s resilience stands out, especially against a backdrop of narrowing leadership and ongoing rotation beneath the market’s surface.

The main macro development this week was the Fed’s June meeting and Chair Kevin Warsh’s press conference, which confirmed a shift in policy direction.
WHAT TO DO NOW: The market’s bounce has been a good one, and the intermediate-term outlook remains bright. That said, near term, there are still some crosscurrents (rotation into the broad market, Dow outperforming the Nasdaq) that tell us growth stocks could throw us another curveball in the coming week or two. Overall, then, we’re mostly standing pat, but we’re going to add a half-sized stake in Guardant Health (GH) here, leaving us with a still-good-sized cash position of 37% or so. Details below.
Stocks started this week with a huge rally as the Iran ceasefire deal appears to be the real thing.

Of course, it’s been months of supposed peace deals falling apart. It’s hard to believe. I’m sure that fact is holding the market back somewhat. But this one is different for a couple of reasons.
Stocks are starting off this week with a huge rally as the U.S. and Iran have reached a ceasefire deal.

We’ve been here before. These peace deals have fallen apart several times. I’m sure that fact is holding the market back somewhat. But this one is different for a couple of reasons. First, it’s the furthest a peace deal has gotten with both sides agreeing and independent verification from Pakistan. Second, this is what a peace deal would look like at this point if it’s real and lasting.
[Note: The Cabot Turnaround Letter weekly update won’t be published next Friday, June 19, due to the market being closed for the Juneteenth holiday.]

Before we get into the main topic for today’s newsletter update, a quick note on the portfolio is in order. I’m continuing our “spring cleaning” effort that we began last week by trimming a couple more of our holdings, but I’m also adding a new position to take the place of the recent deletions.
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.
Stocks look set to enter the summer near all-time highs, but leadership has narrowed, volatility has ticked up, and there’s been renewed scrutiny on the AI trade and valuation concerns in some of the market’s biggest winners.

At the same time, the macro backdrop remains a mix of resilience and intermittent turbulence. While economic data continues to hold up, energy prices remain elevated due to the ongoing Iran conflict – which has no end in sight – keeping upward pressure on inflation and yields.
Tech, commodity, AI, and Explorer stocks struggled this week as concern over capital expenditures increased. Mideast tensions intensified and inflation numbers came in yesterday at their highest rate in over three years, fueled by rising energy costs. The combination of anticipated higher interest rates and rising bond yields impacted the price of precious metals, with gold sliding below $4,200 an ounce and silver falling below $64 an ounce.
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%.
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.
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.
Alerts
Ulta Beauty (ULTA) has likely formed an intermediate-term top after sinking on earnings during the past three days.
It looks like one of our stocks may be falling prey to a change in regulatory action by the Chinese government. Sell Yirendai (YRD).
I’m putting J.M. Smucker (SJM) on Hold today while we wait to see if the stock can find support, but I don’t think the earnings report merits selling.
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.