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16,376 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account"
16,376 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account".
  • What a difference two months make!

    On April 8, the Nasdaq had plummeted to bear market territory after touching all-time highs just six weeks earlier, and the S&P 500 was on the cusp of joining it. Small caps were faring even worse. Volatility had spiked to multi-year highs. And everyone was certain a recession or high inflation – or both – were imminent.

    The reason was tariffs. “Liberation Day,” a week earlier, on which President Donald Trump had imposed sky-high tariffs on more than 100 U.S. trading partners from all over the world, had sent stocks plummeting as economists clutched their pearls and warned of imminent collapse.
  • The law of averages is a powerful thing … especially when it comes to investing.

    Stocks and sectors that outperform for an extended period of time often regress to the mean, sometimes violently, when people least expect it. On the flip side, stocks and sectors that have underperformed for months or even years start to get noticed by bargain hunters and play catch-up, even if it’s a bit more gradual.
  • U.S. stocks remain paralyzed by tariff fears, but not energy stocks. They’re the best-performing S&P 500 sector by far this year, more than doubling the return of any other sector. And yet, they remain the most undervalued sector by virtually every measure. So this month, we add a large-cap energy stock to the Cabot Value Investor portfolio that has a yearslong history of not only outperforming the market, but blowing it out of the water. But after a slow start to the year, it’s trading at a rare discount. We think it has immediate upside – and a high dividend yield should hold us over until it gets there.

    Details inside.
  • There have been plenty of market meltdowns over the years. Few have matched what’s happened since last Wednesday evening – so-called “Liberation Day” – when President Trump announced plans to place high tariffs on … the rest of the world. In the week that followed, stocks nose-dived by 13%, with both the Nasdaq and Russell 2000 swinging to a bear market last Thursday and Friday and the S&P 500 nearly following suit.

    Until yesterday.
  • Warren Buffett isn’t concerned about the market’s slow start this year. “What’s happened in the last 30, 45 days is really nothing,” the Oracle of Omaha said at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual shareholder meeting last weekend. In the grand scheme of market history, he’s right.
  • Few industries were more negatively impacted by Covid than the cruise industry. And few have come roaring back faster in Covid’s wake. And yet, share prices haven’t kept up with the record sales and passenger numbers. So today, we recommend a major cruise-industry stock that has the largest disparity between sales and earnings growth and share price growth. We also have updates on all our existing stocks as investors mercifully put a historically choppy April for the market in the rear-view mirror and flip the calendar to what will hopefully be a far more fruitful May.

    Details inside. Enjoy!
  • Stocks are at all-time highs, continuing to climb a Wall of Worry that’s made of tariff fears, economic worries, political turmoil and overseas conflicts. Eventually, a pullback is probably in order. But for now, the good times are rolling, and we need to keep capitalizing on them. So today, we add a dividend payer that’s really more like a growth stock, a recent recommendation from Cabot Dividend Investor Chief Analyst Tom Hutchinson. The tech stock is getting a major boost from (what else?) AI, but Tom thinks it still has plenty of room to run – even while trading at all-time highs.

    Details inside.
  • It’s been another productive year for the market, with the S&P 500 up more than 17% with a few trading days to spare. Growth stocks continue to carry the day despite recent weakness, advancing more than 22% this year. Value stocks have held their own, up more than 13% and picking up the slack of late as momentum in the growth space has waned. But ultimately, it was yet another year of growth outpacing value.
  • While some restaurant chains regularly make adjustments and continue to prosper, others correct their mistakes in time. And some recognize their mistakes too late..

    However, several casual dining restaurant chains that have lost their way have turnaround appeal. In this issue, we take a look at five.
  • In today’s issue, we’re giving some tips about how to handle your portfolio when markets are kicking up a fuss. We also have a new stock pick that takes us outside China and the tech sector, plus the portfolio moves we’re taking to lower our exposure a little.
  • There has been plenty of action in emerging markets recently, but today’s strong rally pushed the Cabot Emerging Markets Timer to a clear buy signal. Part of this may be the continuing effect of a great Singles’ Day splurge in China, and I write about that. We’re making some adjustments to the portfolio to put the spotlight on the winners and switch out of one laggard.
  • The market’s broad rebound continued today, erasing a good part of the losses sustained in the recent two-week collapse. The major indexes still have a long way to go to return to their old highs, but I think they will do it, as our market timing studies tell us that the sharp pullback was likely simply a normal correction in the long-term uptrend.
  • The market’s main trends remain up, and thus I remain bullish, while continuing to remind you that a balanced portfolio with attention to risk management is always smart.
  • Inflation cooled for the second straight month in May, the U.S. labor market seems back to pre-pandemic levels, and the economy is expanding at a low but steady pace.

    Therefore, the Fed is holding back on interest rate cuts. Probably the right move. Keep the ammo dry for when it is really needed. This was a solid week for Explorer stocks with all making gains except for a small pullback in Super Micro (SCMI).
  • Inflation cooled last month to its slowest pace in more than two years, buoying markets even though the Fed may raise interest rates later this month.

    While the Nasdaq composite is a basket of more than 3,000 stocks listed on the Nasdaq exchange, the Nasdaq 100 is the basis for the QQQ – the second-most heavily traded ETF in America, after the SPY ETF which tracks the S&P 500.