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Issues
The market has been resilient in the face of some bad headline news during the past two weeks, but just about every major index and most stocks and sectors are essentially neutral--the evidence is as mixed as it can be. That’s not a bearish thing, per se, and we’re actually making one small new buy today in a peppy growth stock. But until we see more decisive action among growth titles (possibly as earnings season continues to ramp up), we recommend holding a good amount of cash (45% after our move tonight).
Less than two years removed from the dual implosions of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, the U.S. banking industry is thriving again, boosted by a resilient economy, declining inflation, and lower borrowing costs. No sector has reported better earnings growth in the fourth quarter than financials, with banks leading the way. And yet, bank stocks remain cheap. So today, we add a big name in the banking industry to our Growth/Income portfolio – one that’s growing fast, and cheaper than most of its peers. I think it could reach new all-time highs within a matter of months.

Details inside.
The AI theme came under heavy pressure last Monday, which weighed on the markets. However, by week’s end the bulls had bought the dip and impressively the S&P 500 had fallen only marginally, the Dow had eked out a small gain, while the Nasdaq “only” lost 1.5%.
The news today is all about the tariffs, but to this point, most things are simply hacking around in a range, so we’re fine holding resilient titles and ditching those that crack. Our biggest thought beyond the headline news or daily reactions is that, unless you’re hopping in and out of things every couple of days, there’s no real money being made of late, with selling on strength seen and headline news causing big moves up and down most days. To be clear, that’s more descriptive than predictive, but until something changes, we favor keeping new positions on the small side, holding some cash and practicing patience waiting for this ping-pong action to stop. We’re leaving our Market Monitor at a level 6 today.

We will say, however, that this week’s list is encouraging—it’s very growth heavy, and even after today’s pothole, many names are in position to get going if the market allows it. Our Top Pick is in the midst of a solid-looking nine-week rest after a huge comeback in the second half of last year.
Tariffs are here, and the market doesn’t like them. But how long are they here for? As this morning’s deal with Mexico to delay them by a month reveals, it’s possible tariffs are being used as more of a scare tactic than a permanent penalty. If so, that would be good for stocks. But the best thing to do with tariffs as an investor is to ignore them and focus on stocks that are performing well. And today, we do just that, adding a promising biotech that caught the attention of Cabot Top Ten Trader Chief Analyst Mike Cintolo.

Details inside.
The AI theme came under heavy pressure Monday of last week, which weighed on the markets. However, by week’s end the bulls had bought the dip and impressively the S&P 500 had fallen only marginally, the Dow had eked out a small gain, while the Nasdaq “only” lost 1.5%.
The AI theme came under heavy pressure Monday of last week, which weighed on the markets. However, by week’s end the bulls had bought the dip and impressively the S&P 500 had fallen only marginally, the Dow had eked out a small gain, while the Nasdaq “only” lost 1.5%.
More investment does not necessarily lead to more innovation.”

When doing something, experienced people will tell you without hesitation that you should do it this way, but inexperienced people will have to repeatedly explore and think seriously about how to do it, and then find a solution that suits the current actual situation.”

—Liang Wenfeng, founder of the company that created DeepSeek
As has been the case for the past decade, the fate of cannabis stocks lies largely in the hands of politicians.

Cannabis companies have been getting solid support from state-level politicians. Forty states now allow sales of medical cannabis.

Sure, they are permitting too many stores, and that is putting downward pressure on pricing. At some point, the market sorts that out. Prices will fall to a point where it is no longer that enticing to bring on new supply, yet companies will have gotten lean enough to produce profits. We are not there yet. But we will get there.
Lost in the frenzy surrounding all things AI are companies that fall under the “boring but important” category. This includes producers of everyday things we often take for granted but which are nonetheless crucial for the smooth functioning of countless segments of the economy. To be fair, these otherwise “boring” industries quite often provide investors with outsized opportunities for profit due to their under-the-radar nature.
January was shaping up to be another stellar month for stocks. The S&P 500 closed last week 3.73% higher for the month.

But stocks came crashing down on Monday when a Chinese start-up claimed that its highly popular AI assistant performs equally as well as leading models at much cheaper prices and using far less data. It calls into question the anticipated demand growth for AI.

But the selloff is probably an overreaction. This is the problem with high-flying stocks. Any bad news gets dramatically amplified because euphoria is so easy to disappoint. The AI catalyst is still very real. But it may have gotten ahead of itself. A day like Monday was bound to happen. It also creates opportunity.

In this issue, I highlight one of the best technology stocks on the market. It was riding high for good reasons, rapidly growing profits. Monday’s overreaction prompted the worst selloff of the stock in years. There is likely to be a bounce back and the stock can generate very high-priced calls.
Despite some wobbles early in January, the S&P 500 closed at a new all-time high on Thursday. And even though the indexes pulled back marginally on Friday, by week’s end the S&P 500 had gained 1.7%, the Dow had rallied 1.83% and the Nasdaq had added 1.53% (though the Nasdaq got hit again on Monday, led lower by AI stocks).
Updates
Isn’t this fun? The market gave us whiplash last week. The crash last Monday was the worst day for the market in years. It seemed like the sky was falling. But investors sobered up and the market closed flat for the week.

The tumult of last week was just a noisy road to nowhere. But the market also again showed great vulnerability to negative headlines. And while all that recession talk last week seems to have been clearly overblown, a recession is on the radar now. The market is resilient as usual. But don’t get too comfortable.
In today’s note, we discuss the recent earnings reports from Nokia (NOK) and Newell Brands (NWL), plus 15 other earnings reports from portfolio companies, some of which impacted their standing in the portfolio. Busy week, so let’s get into it.
What a wild couple of weeks.

For two weeks after the June 11 CPI print, small-cap stocks were advancing at such a record pace that they were finally being talked about again in the financial media.

Everything seemed great through the Fed meeting last Wednesday.

Then the wheels came off.
Markets remain on edge after Monday’s big selloff, Tuesday’s recovery, and yesterday’s down day. Some disruptive Explorer stocks were hit rather hard leading to Nio (NIO) being removed from the recommended list today while Super Micro (SMCI) is upgraded to a buy.

On Monday, trading in 401(k)s was more than eight times the daily average, the highest since 2020. My guess is that most of this activity was selling rather than buying.
This is the 13th bull market in the S&P 500 since 1950. If it ended today, it would tie for the shortest – just over 21 months – with the last bull market, the post-Covid-crash rally that began in March 2020 and tidily peaked at the end of 2021. The average bull market, according to statistics from Ryan Detrick of Carson Investment Research, lasts 65 months.

Does that mean this one can’t up and fizzle right now, taken down by a “carry trade” in Japanese equities, one bad U.S. jobs report, and a whole lot of political (presidential election) and social (war in the Middle East possibly spreading) uncertainty? Of course not. We know a bull market can last only 21 months because we just saw it happen.
Monday was a bloodbath in the market. All three indexes posted massive losses. The Dow was down 2.6%, the S&P fell 3%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 3.43% on the day. The indexes recovered some of the losses on Tuesday. What can we expect going forward?
A week ago, the main issue with the market seemed to be earnings and if the reports would save or doom the rally. But we have since been completely blindsided by fears of recession.


While earnings have so far not been impressive, the main event has suddenly become recession. Last week, the most recent jobs report was far worse than expected. There were numbers within that report that have reliably portended every recession since the 1970s. As a result, the stock market plunged, and interest rates crashed. The benchmark 10-year Treasury rate moved below 4% and Wall Street has assigned a 95% chance of the Fed cutting the Fed Funds rate by 50 basis points in September.
In today’s note, we discuss the recent earnings reports from Agnico-Eagle (AEM) and Janus Henderson Group (JHG). Our note also includes the monthly Catalyst Report and a summary of the August edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter, which was published on Wednesday.
WHAT TO DO NOW: Growth stocks remain very weak and, today, we saw the broad market get whacked as well. Overall, it remains a split environment, but our Growth Tides and Aggression Index are negative, and growth as a whole is under pressure. The Model Portfolio is more than half in cash, and while we’re not in our storm cellar, we’re standing pat tonight, keeping stops on our positions and taking it day to day. We have no changes tonight.
The market is going from wobbly to ominous. As of Tuesday’s close, the S&P is negative for the month of July after having been up 3.5% in the first few weeks of the month.


It’s technology. The weakness in the sector that began in the middle of July is continuing. The worry started with the report of AI chip export restrictions to China and has grown into fears of sector overvaluation and slowing growth. But it’s the heart of earnings season. And earnings will confirm or deny those fears.
The market seems to have regained its footing since the selloff last week. It’s still flat for the month of July, but it isn’t down, which is encouraging.

Technology hit a snag with bad news from China. We’ll see if earnings can overcome that weakness as the AI catalyst comes front and center again. But the bigger story in July was the broadening rally. An improving interest rate prognosis prompted a strong rally in the previously beleaguered interest rate-sensitive stocks in REITs and utilities.
Mattel (MAT) reported revenue of $1.08 billion, down 0.7% from last year, and missing the consensus estimate of $1.09 billion by 1%. Earnings per share, however, exceeded the consensus estimate of $0.16 by 18.75%, coming in at $0.19. Key metrics showed mixed performance: Barbie sales fell 5.9% to $266.10 million, Fisher-Price dropped 17.5% to $135.90 million, while Hot Wheels rose 3.9% to $327.40 million, and other brands reached $471.90 million, beating estimates.
Alerts
Sell Gen Digital (GEN) and Part of Elastic (ESTC)
WHAT TO DO NOW: The story remains the same, with the primary evidence in good shape, though many leaders are extended and more are starting to wobble. Last Friday, we sold half of Elastic (ESTC), which got walloped on earnings, and today we’ll sell the rest, as the stock has continued to show weakness. That will leave us with 37% in cash, which is more than we’d prefer—we’ll hold on to it for the moment but could re-deploy some in the very near future.
GitLab (GTLB): Good Quarter, Questionable Guidance. Book The Gain
In Income Trader, we’ve managed to lock in a return of over 45% in BITO. Not many can say they’ve made money in BITO on a more consistent basis, or any other crypto-related asset, since the beginning of June 2022. Just another reason why more and more individual investors are flocking to the tried-and-true, mechanically driven, income wheel approach.
GLD has pushed through our short call strike and the deltas of our LEAPS and short call contract are at parity. As a result, let’s buy back our short call and sell more going out to the April expiration cycle. As a reminder to those with an established position, I will be selling our LEAPS contract the next time around and initiating a new LEAPS position going out to the January 2026 expiration cycle. Our position is up over 22%, while the individual ETF, by comparison, is only up 10% over the same time frame.

WHAT TO DO NOW: Not much has changed today vs. our update last night when it comes to the market, but after a couple of positive earnings reactions this week, today brought a downer—Elastic (ESTC) is getting hit after a good-not-great report. It’s not a complete meltdown given the recent move, but we’re going to sell half our position and see how the stock acts from here. Our cash position will now be around 33%.
My “plan” to enter the weekend patting myself on the back for a week of decent stock performance in our portfolio might be foiled by Elastic (ESTC).
For those who are new and wish to enter a trade, all of the details are listed in the alert (as always) for those wanting to initiate a position. As always, if you have any questions, please do not hesitate to email me at andy@cabotwealth.com.
Leonardo DRS (DRS) Rising
EverQuote (EVER) and TransMedics (TMDX) Deliver


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