Issues
The market’s pullback went over the falls late last week and on Monday, with panicky trading leading to a huge gap down--and possibly a short-term low. Overall, the evidence tells us the intermediate-term trend is down and that, even if we have bottomed, plenty of repair work will be needed. That said, the longer-term evidence is still positive and, frankly, we’re not having trouble filling up our watch list for potential fresh leaders. Long story short, we remain cautious here and hold lots of cash, but we’re not sticking our head in the sand, either, and could have a couple of small moves if the market continues to stabilize.
I have to admit, a couple of weeks ago, on our Cabot Street Check podcast, Chris Preston, host and Chief Analyst for Cabot Value Investor, and I discussed the possibility of a recession and I commented that I thought recession fears were mostly over.
Well, I’m going to reconsider that (a bit) after Monday’s 1,000+ point loss in the Dow. Last week’s jobs report came in at 114,000 jobs—considerably less than the 185,000 expected—spooking the markets and causing economic gurus to once again bring up the possibility of the dreaded “R” word. Additionally, the unemployment rate edged up to 4.3% and manufacturing and construction spending were also less than expected, furthering economic worries.
Well, I’m going to reconsider that (a bit) after Monday’s 1,000+ point loss in the Dow. Last week’s jobs report came in at 114,000 jobs—considerably less than the 185,000 expected—spooking the markets and causing economic gurus to once again bring up the possibility of the dreaded “R” word. Additionally, the unemployment rate edged up to 4.3% and manufacturing and construction spending were also less than expected, furthering economic worries.
The dramatic decline in the stock market of the last couple weeks has pushed two of our positions through our stops. And because of that we are going to exit those positions …
Please note, S&P 500 futures are indicated lower by approximately 4.5% this morning, while the Nasdaq is looking down 5.5%. I go into some of the reasons why below.
Regardless of the reasons, I do not expect to buy or sell many positions today. Instead, as I’ve said for weeks as the trading action had become murkier, I continue to preach patience.
Moving on to our Week in Review …
Regardless of the reasons, I do not expect to buy or sell many positions today. Instead, as I’ve said for weeks as the trading action had become murkier, I continue to preach patience.
Moving on to our Week in Review …
Please note, S&P 500 futures are indicated lower by approximately 4.5% this morning, while the Nasdaq is looking down 5.5%. I go into some of the reasons why below.
Regardless of the reasons, I do not expect to buy or sell many positions today. Instead, as I’ve said for weeks as the trading action had become murkier, I continue to preach patience.
Moving on to our Week in Review …
Regardless of the reasons, I do not expect to buy or sell many positions today. Instead, as I’ve said for weeks as the trading action had become murkier, I continue to preach patience.
Moving on to our Week in Review …
It looked like the bulls were ready to put up a fight last Wednesday, but it’s been all down since then, lowlighted by today’s action. Stepping back, we have two thoughts: Short term, there was definitely some panic today, and the fact that we saw a solid intraday bounce (closed well off the lows) implies some sort of bounce is possible. That said, the sharp, straight-down action from the market peak less than four weeks ago tells us a good amount of repair work is needed even if we do bounce. In terms of actions, we haven’t been pushing the envelope for many weeks, so if you have a good-sized cash position, we wouldn’t necessarily sell wholesale. That said, you should honor most stops (simply holding everything and hoping isn’t advised) while remaining patient. We’ll drop our Market Monitor to a level 4 (from 6) given the damage.
This week’s list has a lot of proper charts even after the latest selling storm. For our Top Pick, we’re going with a well-situated biotech firm that popped on positive drug trial results that will dramatically expand the opportunity for the big-selling drugs already on the market.
This week’s list has a lot of proper charts even after the latest selling storm. For our Top Pick, we’re going with a well-situated biotech firm that popped on positive drug trial results that will dramatically expand the opportunity for the big-selling drugs already on the market.
It’s become a full-blown market correction. When will the selling stop? No one knows. But as always, when it does, there will be ample opportunities to make huge profits on the other end of it. In the meantime, we prune a few of our hardest-hit positions today and add a new position designed to capture growth in the fastest-rising economic power in the world, India. It’s a brand-new recommendation from Carl Delfeld in his Cabot Explorer advisory.
Details inside.
Details inside.
Going into last week we knew it had the potential to be a wild five-day stretch, and the market didn’t disappoint as the indexes swung violently, and sector rotation was intense. By week’s end the S&P 500 had fallen 1.55%, the Dow had rallied 0.5%, and the Nasdaq had lost 3.8%.
Going into last week we knew it had the potential to be a wild five-day stretch, and the market didn’t disappoint as the indexes swung violently, and sector rotation was intense. By week’s end the S&P 500 had fallen 1.55%, the Dow had rallied 0.5%, and the Nasdaq had lost 3.8%.
Infrastructure has been a hot topic for the last couple of years given passage of a bipartisan bill to finally spruce up the U.S. and try and address climate change.
This month we’re jumping into a pure-play infrastructure company that owns railroads and deep-water ports supporting crude oil and clean fuel shipments, as well as a modern power plant that’s getting tons of calls from AI data centers.
One thing – the company reports quarterly results after the bell today!
This month we’re jumping into a pure-play infrastructure company that owns railroads and deep-water ports supporting crude oil and clean fuel shipments, as well as a modern power plant that’s getting tons of calls from AI data centers.
One thing – the company reports quarterly results after the bell today!
Two years after the yield curve inverted, there’s still no U.S. recession in sight. As a result, financials – beaten to a pulp during the double whammy of the 2022 bear market and the March 2023 bank collapse – have become the fastest-growing non-tech sector of the market. It’s also one of the most undervalued. So in this month’s issue, we add a very recognizable big bank that does a little bit of everything – and seems to be everywhere. It’s growing at a healthy clip and yet is cheaper than even the average financial at the moment.
Details inside.
Details inside.
Explorer stocks gained ground this week as market sentiment improved along with the odds of a Fed rate cut this fall.
I’ve been encouraging you to lighten up on some of the Magnificent Seven stocks over the last month or so. In just the last two weeks, these stocks have lost over $1.6 trillion in market value as market enthusiasm has waned and insiders have sold some stock.
What’s behind this trend?
Here are three possible reasons why big tech is facing a tough market.
I’ve been encouraging you to lighten up on some of the Magnificent Seven stocks over the last month or so. In just the last two weeks, these stocks have lost over $1.6 trillion in market value as market enthusiasm has waned and insiders have sold some stock.
What’s behind this trend?
Here are three possible reasons why big tech is facing a tough market.
Updates
So far, our recommended companies have reported strong earnings but the share performances following the reports have generally been sloppy. What’s going on?
Investors, of course, are forward-looking. So, decent trailing results can take a back seat to the incremental changes in near-term prospects. As we note in our discussion about the recent and continued slide in shares of Citigroup (C), investors are assuming that the company not only has no chance of improving its earning power but are also assuming that profits will probably slide backward. Comcast (CMCSA) reported one of the strongest quarters in its history, yet the outlook is for incremental headwinds in its customer count, so the shares slid.
Investors, of course, are forward-looking. So, decent trailing results can take a back seat to the incremental changes in near-term prospects. As we note in our discussion about the recent and continued slide in shares of Citigroup (C), investors are assuming that the company not only has no chance of improving its earning power but are also assuming that profits will probably slide backward. Comcast (CMCSA) reported one of the strongest quarters in its history, yet the outlook is for incremental headwinds in its customer count, so the shares slid.
It’s officially a correction. The S&P 500 fell 10% below the 52-week high on a closing basis last week. Now what?
As usual, all eyes are on the Fed. The Central Bank will decide on interest rates on Wednesday. Also, this week are earnings from Apple (AAPL) and several other large companies and another jobs report on Friday. But the Fed should be the main event.
As usual, all eyes are on the Fed. The Central Bank will decide on interest rates on Wednesday. Also, this week are earnings from Apple (AAPL) and several other large companies and another jobs report on Friday. But the Fed should be the main event.
This week’s note includes our comments on earnings from 10 of our companies. The deluge continues next week.
The note also includes the monthly Catalyst Report and a summary of the November edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter, which was published on Wednesday. We encourage you to look through the Catalyst Report. This report is a listing of all of the companies that have reported a catalyst in the past month. These catalysts include new CEOs, activist activity, spin-offs and other possible game-changers. We source many of our feature recommendations from this list. You will find it nowhere else on Wall Street.
The note also includes the monthly Catalyst Report and a summary of the November edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter, which was published on Wednesday. We encourage you to look through the Catalyst Report. This report is a listing of all of the companies that have reported a catalyst in the past month. These catalysts include new CEOs, activist activity, spin-offs and other possible game-changers. We source many of our feature recommendations from this list. You will find it nowhere else on Wall Street.
It’s said that the market climbs a wall of worry. It’s been a slippery wall lately, and this was the week when the bear case for the stock market really seemed to gather momentum.
The short list of bear case arguments includes the following:
The war between Israel and Hamas could easily expand into a broader conflict and draw the U.S. (and Iran, among others) deeper into a situation with no clear exit ...
The short list of bear case arguments includes the following:
The war between Israel and Hamas could easily expand into a broader conflict and draw the U.S. (and Iran, among others) deeper into a situation with no clear exit ...
WHAT TO DO NOW: The market cave-in continues, with some sacred cows and resilient stocks catching up on the downside now. The trend clearly remains down, and while we’re not craving more cash (69% coming into today), have only smaller positions and see some legitimate oversold signs out there, we’re also not going to just hold and hope with things that are caving in. Tonight, then, we’ll sell the rest of our ProShares S&P 500 Fund (SSO) and one-third of what we have left in Uber (UBER), which will leave us with just over three-quarters of the portfolio on the sideline. Details below.
Over the past month Tesla (TSLA) has struggled as continued price cuts have boosted sales but narrowed profit margins. It is also failing to live up to its brand as more than just a maker of electric cars (EVs).
Higher interest rates are eating into EV demand. Competition is catching up as Tesla last launched a new passenger vehicle in 2020. In October, BYD (BYDDY) outsold Tesla for the first time.
Higher interest rates are eating into EV demand. Competition is catching up as Tesla last launched a new passenger vehicle in 2020. In October, BYD (BYDDY) outsold Tesla for the first time.
The market has lost all the October gains. Despite the strong economy and optimistic earnings, interest rates continue to cast a shadow.
The economy is killing it (for now). Third-quarter GDP is expected to exceed 5%. That’s an economy nowhere near recession. And earnings should reflect that economic strength. Strong earnings can lift many stocks higher.
The economy is killing it (for now). Third-quarter GDP is expected to exceed 5%. That’s an economy nowhere near recession. And earnings should reflect that economic strength. Strong earnings can lift many stocks higher.
The S&P 500 index, of course, is the most widely used benchmark for stock market returns. Individual investors, financial media and those overseeing complicated institutional portfolios use this metric as their core measure of absolute and relative performance.
Professional investment consultants may take umbrage with this statement. These highly trained analysts are well-versed in the intricacies of quantitative analysis and can parse portfolio returns, relative to potentially hundreds of alternative benchmarks, into dozens of marginally relevant categories down to the 8th decimal place.
Professional investment consultants may take umbrage with this statement. These highly trained analysts are well-versed in the intricacies of quantitative analysis and can parse portfolio returns, relative to potentially hundreds of alternative benchmarks, into dozens of marginally relevant categories down to the 8th decimal place.
This week’s note includes our comments on earnings from Nokia (NOK). Next week, the deluge starts, with earnings from as many as ten companies.
After a very difficult September during which the S&P 600 SmallCap Index fell back to the May lows, things have finally stabilized in small-cap land over the last two weeks.
Energy stocks have been one of the main contributors lately, as have consumer staples and discretionary stocks. These guys have helped offset weakness in small-cap healthcare and tech.
Energy stocks have been one of the main contributors lately, as have consumer staples and discretionary stocks. These guys have helped offset weakness in small-cap healthcare and tech.
Alerts
The bullish momentum continues to benefit all our portfolios. None of this should be a surprise as all of our portfolios are inherently long delta.
Our BITO June 30, 2023 puts are essentially worthless, so we can lock in some decent profits and immediately sell more puts.
SPY has pushed into another short-term overbought state coupled with a gap higher today. As a result, we are going to once again add a bear call spread to the mix.
We jumped into a half-sized position in Airbnb (ABNB) in January 2022 then filled the second half in August of last year. Since we’ve been in the position ABNB has never done well. And while I fully believe in the business model I have concerns about the stock’s potential over the next 3-6 months.
We currently own the AAPL January 17, 2025, 135 call LEAPS contract at $48.00. You must own LEAPS in order to use this strategy.
We’ve held one-third of a position in Xponential Fitness (XPOF) after having sold the first third last September for a 28% gain and the second third just last month for a 39% gain.
We need to sell more premium in WBA and MMM today. I will be selling more premium in several of our positions throughout the various Fundamentals portfolios, including a few brand-new positions in our Growth/Value and Buffett portfolios.
I’ve decided to lock in my second profitable trade for the week. With 28 days left until expiration, I want to take off our July IWM iron condor for a profit.
The short-term measures we spoke about last week when we sent our SPY bear call spread out have subsided a bit. As a result, I want to lock in our SPY bear call spread that we placed just seven days ago for a nice profit.
PFE rallied over the past expiration cycle and as a result, our June 16, 2023, 40 calls were “called” away last week. We made 4.4% on the income trade. Per our Income Wheel guidelines, we will remain mechanical and sell puts in PFE today.
Today, a whopping eight Profit Booster positions will expire. Most are “slam-dunk,” full-profit trades, while others will go down to the wire.
The big takeaway, before we dive in, is we are going to let the situation play itself out, and come Monday/Tuesday of next week we will revisit our profits, as well as how we will manage the remaining positions.
The big takeaway, before we dive in, is we are going to let the situation play itself out, and come Monday/Tuesday of next week we will revisit our profits, as well as how we will manage the remaining positions.
With all of our short-term overbought measures in extreme territory I want to add a bear call spread to the mix for the August expiration cycle. While I look at overbought extremes as simply weight of evidence, it’s hard to pass up a trade when we are seeing overbought extremes coupled with several other market indicators that are screaming a short-term extreme is here.
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.