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Issues
Despite some heavy selling pressures early in the week, the market rallied to close the week following Nvidia’s (NVDA) blowout earnings report that highlighted the growth potential of AI. By week’s end the S&P 500 had gained 1.2%, while the Dow rose marginally and the Nasdaq fell slightly.
Despite some heavy selling pressures early in the week, the market rallied to close the week following Nvidia’s (NVDA) blowout earnings report that highlighted the growth potential of AI. By week’s end the S&P 500 had gained 1.2%, while the Dow rose marginally and the Nasdaq fell slightly.
The market had an excellent snap back today, which was good to see, but we’re still playing things a bit near-term cautiously for now—many leaders have suffered some distribution after good runs (and after some yellow flags near the turn of the month). Tonight, we’re holding some strong names, but also about one-third in cash, waiting a couple more days to see if today really does put in a low for most leaders.

Big picture, though, we remain quite optimistic—we’re certainly not looking to raise more cash if we can help it (we do have three names reporting next week), and we could put some cash back to work very soon if things hold up. Stay tuned.
As traders grappled with the moves in the bond market last week (expectations of rate cuts coming soon have faded), the market moved violently day-to-day, though big picture the indexes were mixed. By week’s end the S&P 500 had fallen 0.35%, the Dow was mostly unchanged, and the Nasdaq had lost 1%.
In the February issue of Cabot Early Opportunities, we take something of a barbell approach, reviewing a couple of phenomenal large-cap stocks poised for the next big chapter of their lives while also uncovering a handful of much smaller companies, one of which is just getting its business off the ground (literally)!

As always, there’s something for everybody!
The trends of the indexes remain up and the leading growth stocks remain firm, although many big tech names are showing signs of entering what appears to be an overdue pullback.

Volatility is also on the rise and a classic split tape environment is emerging, with some sectors weakening while others show strength. We’re keeping a weather eye out for any sudden changes, continuing to hold our winners, building some cash, but also taking advantage of recent sector rotation. This week’s Top Pick is a name making waves in the app publishing market while also harnessing the power of AI to grow its customer base.
Stocks have finally hit a speed bump, retreating modestly in the last couple weeks. But pullbacks are both inevitable and healthy in the long run. And the latest one offers an opportunity to buy some great companies at more attractive prices. So today, we add perhaps February’s hottest stock – after it’s been knocked down more than 8% in the last two trading days. I’m betting it’ll bounce back, and so is Mike Cintolo, who recently recommended the stock to his Cabot Top Ten Trader readers.
We remained on the sidelines last week and by the looks of what is on the earnings calendar this week, we might be sitting on the sidelines again this week. No worries, our patient approach continues to serve us well. I say this because this earnings cycle has been one of the most volatile in years. More active earnings traders have struggled while those that have remained patient, waiting for real opportunities to arise, have been rewarded. And while my goal is to make 8 to 10 trades per earnings season, sometimes we just don’t get there and that’s OK. Successful trading has always been about quality, not quantity. Who cares how many trades one places, if success isn’t a direct byproduct?
Nvidia (NVDA) is due to announce this week and has the chance to significantly move the market over the short-term. We have two positions that are both bearish-leaning at the moment, so a short-term move to the downside would be welcome. However, if that doesn’t occur, no worries, as long as we the market doesn’t rally significantly higher. If it does, we will need to adjust or close out our SPY iron condor. Shortly after the NVDA announcement I intend to add several new positions to the mix.

We locked in a 17.1% gain in DKNG at expiration on Friday. The gain in DKNG and GDX pushed our total return to all-time highs at 143.5%. I plan to continue our wheel-based approach in DKNG by selling puts early last week. As for GDX, we bought back our calls and sold more calls the week before (2/12).

Hopefully, we have the opportunity to add to our total with two trades due to expire at the end of this week. We sold puts in XLU and KO in mid-January and as it stands, both look to expire out-of-the-money. Of course, we need to see how the week plays out, but given our income wheel approach, with the exception of a crash, we are perfectly fine with whatever occurs. Our ultimate goal is to bring in options premium in a continual basis.
As traders grappled with the moves in the bond market (expectations of rate cuts coming soon have faded), the market moved violently day-to-day, though big picture the indexes were mixed. By week’s end the S&P 500 had fallen 0.35%, the Dow was mostly unchanged, and the Nasdaq had lost 1%.
As traders grappled with the moves in the bond market (expectations of rate cuts coming soon have faded), the market moved violently day-to-day, though big picture the indexes were mixed. By week’s end the S&P 500 had fallen 0.35%, the Dow was mostly unchanged, and the Nasdaq had lost 1%.
Updates
It can pay to pay attention to what investment legends are doing to cope in these turbulent times.

Warren Buffett still has a knack for seeking value and a history of going to Japan to find it in times of volatility. Overall, Japan’s Topix index trades at 13.3 times expected earnings, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. That compares with 18.9 times for the S&P 500.
WHAT TO DO NOW: Continue to play things in the middle, as the on-again, off-again environment remains in place. We are seeing some improvement from our Cabot Tides and Two-Second Indicator, which is a plus, but most of the evidence is stuck in the middle, so we think having a good chunk of cash as well as a few resilient growth names makes sense. We have no changes in the Model Portfolio tonight; our cash position remains just under 50%.
The cannabis sector remains under pressure. But the stock price weakness makes the group a good buy for contrarians because there are plausible catalysts on the horizon.

Let’s be clear. It won’t be easy to buy. It never is, when sentiment is so dark.

Buying right never feels good, as the saying goes. When the right time to buy comes along, you won’t want to, is how technical analyst Walter Deemer puts it.
As widely reported, Jamie Dimon, the 23-year-and-counting CEO of JPMorgan and its predecessor Bank One, recently penned his annual letter to shareholders. The 43-page tome covered topics ranging from the bank’s “Steadfast Principles Worth Repeating” to “Our Serious Need for More Effective Public Policy and Competent Government” along with some impressive numbers about JPMorgan’s financial, operational and share price performance over the decades.
It’s a big week. The March Consumer Price Index (CPI) report comes out on Wednesday. The number may determine the short-term course of the market.

Stocks have trended higher over the past month as the banking situation has so far tempered the Fed without any offsetting crisis. There now seems to be a greater likelihood of a recession later this year, but investors are also pricing in Fed rate cuts in the second half. That’s the dicey part.
This holiday-shortened week was relatively light on news, as investors digested signs of a weakening economy in front of what likely will be a fascinating earnings season.

Next Friday, Wells Fargo (WFC) kicks off our earnings season, likely providing at least some insights, along with those provided by several other major banks that report that day, into the banking industry’s current stresses. Our other banks report later, with First Horizon (FHN) on April 18 and Capital One Financial (COF) on April 27.
The market was impressive last week. The S&P 500 moved 3.5% higher for the week, accounting for nearly half of the better than 7% YTD return. Hopefully the rally has further to go.

Investors love it that the banking issues have had the benefit of tempering the Fed with no apparent offsetting crisis so far. The expected timeline for the Fed to stop raising rates has moved way up, to one more rate hike from what could have been a hiking cycle that lasted the rest of the year.
The big news this week is that OPEC+, including Russia, made the decision on Sunday to cut oil production by 1.16MM barrels per day from May through the end of the year. It appears that OPEC+ wants to keep oil in the $80-$90/barrel range.
Things are looking up in the market. The S&P 500 soared 3.5% last week and is now more than 7% higher YTD.

Investors love that the banking issues have had the benefit of tempering the Fed with no apparent offsetting crisis, so far. The expected timeline for the Fed to stop raising rates has moved way up, to one more rate hike from what could have been a hiking cycle that lasted the rest of the year.
This week, we comment on earnings from Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA).


We also include the Catalyst Report and a summary of the April 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.
WHAT TO DO NOW: The market remains stuck in the middle—on one hand, growth stocks and big-cap indexes are holding up very well considering the recent banking and economic fears, but on the other, the broad market is still weak, financial stocks are a mess and a couple of our key indicators are negative. All in all, then, we’re following the market’s split personality, holding about half in cash but also holding and nibbling on some resilient growth names. Tonight, we’re going to buy a half-sized stake in Axon Enterprises (AXON), though that will still leave us with 48% on the sideline.
Small-cap stocks have underperformed their larger-cap peers by a wide margin since Jerome Powell’s Congressional Testimony just over three weeks ago.


Part of that is because of the hawkish tone he struck. But mostly it’s because of the fallout of the SVB debacle, concerns over a 2023 financial crisis and what the spillover effects could be on the broader economy.
Alerts
Today I’m going to open a conservative bear call spread in SPY going out to the February expiration cycle (42 days until expiration).
Today I’m going to open a conservative bear call spread in SPY going out to the February expiration cycle (42 days until expiration).
On Tuesday I sent out our first Dogs of the Dow trade with some insight regarding the investment strategy, our approach to poor man’s covered calls and a detailed discussion on the trade mechanics.
As part of the Income Wheel approach, we allowed our Wells Fargo (WFC) puts to expire in the money at expiration last week. As a result, we were issued shares at our chosen put strike of 44. So far, we’ve managed to lock in $3.47 worth of premium or 8.3%.
On Tuesday I sent out our first Dogs of the Dow trade with a discussion regarding the investment strategy, our approach to poor man’s covered calls and a detailed discussion on the trade mechanics.
Yesterday I sent out our first Dogs of the Dow with some notes on the investment strategy, our approach to poor man’s covered calls and a detailed discussion on the trade mechanics.
Today I’m going to open a conservative iron condor in IWM going out to the February expiration cycle (44 days until expiration). We need to start ramping up our premium for February, so I plan on starting with an iron condor and hopefully adding a bear call and bull put spread to the mix over the coming days.
Enovix (ENVX) management hosted a two-hour-long presentation from their Fremont, CA factory yesterday afternoon that went deep into the company’s outlook for battery production, sales projections and customer interest. The team also talked about new senior management hires.
The Dogs of the Dow is an investment strategy that involves investing in the top ten Dow Jones Industrial Average stocks with the highest dividend yields. The theory behind the investment strategy is that the highest-yielding stocks have most likely lagged the market and as a result, are undervalued and due to outperform in the year ahead.
We currently own the VTI January 19, 2024, 145 call LEAPS contract at $54.50. You must own LEAPS in order to use this strategy.
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.