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  • Housekeeping: As a reminder, with the market closed on Monday, your next issue of Top Ten will come Tuesday evening, February 18. Have a great long weekend.

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    It’s been a solid week for the big-cap indexes and many growth measures, most of which are up a couple of percent or a bit more, though the broad market indexes have been mostly quiet, up or down a smidge.
  • With the calendar flipping to 2025 and the long holiday weeks/weekends behind us, most traders will be back at their desks starting today. Let the fun begin!
  • With the calendar flipping to 2025 and the long holiday weeks/weekends behind us, most traders will be back at their desks starting today. Let the fun begin!
  • WHAT TO DO NOW: While we’re not aiming to sell wholesale given our large cash position (60% coming into this week), today we’re going to sell the remaining portion of our stake in AppLovin (APP), which is being mauled by a couple of short reports today. We had already sold the vast majority of our stake, but today we’ll sell the rest and hold the cash. Details on that (and other stocks) below.

  • It’s been a relatively quiet week if you follow the major indexes, with the big-cap measures flat and some of the broader indexes down less than 1%. And that keeps the top-down evidence broadly neutral: Most indexes are trending sideways, with some (big-cap indexes, even a growth measure or two) near the top of their ranges while others are stuck in the mud. Meanwhile, things like Treasury rates, our Aggression Index and other factors remain on the intermediate-term fence.
  • 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%.
  • Despite some worries early in the week, the bulls once again bought the dip, and pushed the indexes near all-time highs. For the week, the S&P 500 and Dow gained approximately 1.35%, and the Nasdaq rallied 1.7%.
  • After a few constructive weeks in the market, this one was a bit of a bummer, with the selling pressures picking up in some key names—and the broad market. As of this morning, the big-cap indexes are up or down a smidge on the week, though broader indexes (small- and mid-caps, NYSE Composite) were off 2% or so.
  • After weeks of ping-pong action, the sellers have finally taken control for the first time since last fall: The intermediate-term of the major indexes has turned down and the broad market has done the same, with more than two-thirds of all stocks now south of their 50-day lines. It’s the same when it comes to leaders—for weeks they had found support at key levels, but now most have cracked intermediate-term trend lines, including the key chip sector, which keeled over this week.
  • *Note: Your next issue of Cabot Profit Booster will arrive next Wednesday, May 28 due to the market holiday next Monday, May 26 in observance of Memorial Day.

    Sparked by positive trade developments, the stock market raced higher last week as the S&P 500 rallied 5%, the Dow gained 3.4%, and the Nasdaq added 6%.
  • The worries in the Middle East have continued to move markets in the last week, and despite some worrisome moments as well as signs of hope, the markets are little changed since we last wrote. The S&P 500 fell 0.2%, the Dow was virtually unchanged and the Nasdaq eked out a small gain.
  • Note: We’re sending this out a day early as our offices are closed for Independence Day tomorrow. We’ll be back at it again on Monday (July 7) with your regular issue. Have a great long weekend!

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    Most of June saw quiet action, with the market doing little despite good or bad news. But the last two weeks have seen a change in that—first, in a good way last week, with the major indexes and most everything rallying to new highs, but second, this week saw a good-sized rotation out of all things growth and into other areas, with the Dow Industrials and even defensive sectors (consumer staples) leading while most growth titles softened.
  • The U.S.-China trade war is dominating the investment landscape. But if you avoid certain big-name multinational stocks, it shouldn’t impact your portfolio.
  • Enovix Warrant (ENVXW) Follow Up. Exercise Enovix Warrants (ENVXW)
  • Before we dive into this week’s covered call idea we are going to first move on from our position in Credo (CRDO) as the stock finished below the 40 strike price on Friday, which means the call we sold expired worthless, leaving us with our stock position today which is now trading back above 40 (great!).
  • Good gracious, last week was volatile for the market as the indexes moved violently day-to-day. Yet, by the close of trading on Friday the S&P 500 and Dow were only down marginally on the week, while the Nasdaq had declined by 1.5%.
  • Last week, we saw the market begin to hesitate and leading stocks begin to take on some water on some earnings reports—combined with good-not-great action from the major indexes in the weeks before, that put the overall intermediate-term trend on the fence.
  • For the second straight week, the leading indexes went in vastly different directions as the S&P 500 fell 0.6%, the Dow lost 1.9%, and the Nasdaq gained 1%.
  • Despite plenty to worry about in the market including the rising tensions in the Middle East and the short-lived port strike, impressively the S&P 500, Dow and Nasdaq all rose marginally last week.

  • It was a down week for the market as the Dow initially led the indexes lower early in the week, then was followed by the Nasdaq later in the week. Though on a positive note, the market rebounded nicely from its lows on Friday afternoon.

    By week’s end the S&P 500 was down marginally, while the Dow and Nasdaq both lost 1%.