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16,381 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account"
16,381 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account".
  • The market is forward looking. It senses an end to this pandemic crisis and a reopening of the economy sooner rather than later. That’s good news. And I agree. The end-of-the-world pessimism that caused the market crash is being tempered. It’s a very good thing.
  • A recent survey by the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) showed that the percentage of investors who think stocks will rise over the next six months plunged to its lowest level in more than a year.
  • FedEx (FDX) reports earnings later today and all will be watching as its shares tumbled last week after it issued a sales warning. The Federal Reserve issued its fifth interest rate hike of 2022, and it certainly won’t be the last one, warned dove-turned-hawk Fed Chairman Jerome Powell. This brisk run-up in rates, which should have been earlier and faster, is hitting growth stocks hard since those are mostly high revenue growth companies that are not yet profitable. The market is punishing this group to levels that tempt longer-term investors.
  • Yes, as many of you have anticipated, Tesla (TSLA) is the eighth in my series of “10 Revolutionary Stocks.”
  • Tesla remains on course as the leading force in the transition from a fossil fuel automobile environment to one powered by efficient electricity.
  • WHAT TO DO NOW: Remain cautious. The selling is spreading out now, so much so that our Cabot Tides have flipped to a sell signal as the number of new lows picks up. The odds still favor this being a correction, not a massive new downtrend, but most stocks (and especially growth stocks) remain under the gun. Tonight, we’re forced to sell our small remaining position in Shift4 (FOUR), which we gave every chance to hold up but has decisive broken down. We’ll also place ProShares S&P 500 Fund (SSO) on Hold given the Tides signal, though we’re holding onto what we own. All told, our cash position will be around 55%.
  • This week, markets took slower economic growth numbers to mean no more interest rate hikes and higher stocks. That’s the logic of Wall Street today.

    Laszlo Birinyi (pronounced BUH-ree-nee), an investor who “listened” to the market rather than corporate or financial news, passed away this week. He was someone who thought differently. His theory about the flow of money that made him one of the nation’s foremost stock pickers in the 1990s will endure.
  • It was a fairly quiet week in terms of the leading indexes’ performance as the S&P 500 fell marginally, the Dow mostly finished the week unchanged, and the Nasdaq fell by 0.4%.
  • With a 29% average annual rate of return over 13 years at Fidelity, Peter Lynch certainly earned his status as a legendary investor.

    Recently, Lynch revealed that indexes like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have been propped up by a handful of high-flying tech stocks. “The truth is, we’ve been in a stealth bear market for a long while now if you don’t count those 10 or so darling mega-caps,” Lynch remarked with his trademark sarcasm.

    That may soon be coming to an end.
  • The broad market has traded higher for eight straight sessions, the longest run since 2021. The Nasdaq is up for nine sessions.

    The S&P Small Cap Index is up in five of the last nine sessions, but the last four have been down. What the ...?!!

    Big picture, this isn’t great for the broad market as we want a more broad-based rally. And in theory it’s not great for us.

    But the reality is our portfolio isn’t diversified along the same lines as the small-cap index. We’re not overweight financials, energy and health care (we have little to no exposure to all three) and instead are focused on pure-play opportunities that aren’t expected to trade in lockstep with the small-cap index.
  • For our recommended stocks, earnings season started this week with reports from Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) and Wells Fargo (WFC). Next week, Nokia (NOK) reports, and the deluge for our companies starts the following week on October 24 with fourteen companies reporting.

  • This week, Dow (DOW) and Nokia (NOK) reported earnings. The deluge for our companies starts next week with twelve companies reporting.

    Next week, we will publish the November edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter on Wednesday and our proprietary Catalyst Report on Friday.
  • This week tech stocks looked better while First Republic Bank continues to struggle to gain its footing. It was a relatively quiet week for Explorer stocks as movement up or down was minimal. However, the news on the global electric vehicle (EV) race is coming fast and furious.
  • Centrus Energy (LEU) shares recovered five points this week to reach 35 as the Department of Energy announced that it and Centrus Energy’s American Centrifuge Operating, LLC will share the $150 million cost 50-50 to demonstrate production of a fuel called high assay low enriched uranium. This is still a buy for aggressive investors.
  • More than $15 trillion in assets are linked to the performance of the S&P 500 index in some way, according to S&P Dow Jones.

    Apple, at about $2.4 trillion, and Microsoft, at $2.1 trillion, are so large that, taken together, the two companies would be the third-largest sector of the index, behind tech and health care. This share is trending lower as other companies rise.
  • Gannett (GCI) reported after the bell yesterday, beating on revenue but missing earnings expectations by 21%. The company posted an $84M loss on $635M in income but reiterated guidance to 10% growth in its digital division, keeping overall revenue declines to the low to mid-single digits. CEO Michael Reed reiterated the focus on digital transformation, with revenues from that side of the business likely to comprise 50% of Gannett’s income by 2025.