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3,117 Results for "transacción para una cuenta Google ☛ acc6.top".
  • The market looked ugly early last week before finding some support, but we’re going to need to see more before changing our stance. We will say that, with September in the rearview mirror, there are many studies that point to a year-end rally and we continue to see a decent number of potential growth-y leaders that aren’t far from overcoming some technical hurdles. In other words, now’s not the time to stick your head in the sand, but as always, we want to see it first (some decisive buying) before taking much action. We’ll leave our Market Monitor at a level 5.

    This week’s has a broad array of resilient stocks, with our Top Pick in pole position to be one of the top growth stocks—if and when the market gets going.
  • Quick note: Because next Monday is Memorial Day, our next issue of Top Ten will be published Tuesday after the close, May 28.

    The market’s good-looking rebound continued last week, with big-cap indexes notching new highs and most other indexes close to doing so. Granted, a lot of individual stocks are still battling with resistance from their prior highs in February/March and many growth names are set to report earnings during the next couple of weeks. Throw in the fact that sentiment has definitely gotten a bit complacent again and you want to pick your stocks and entry points carefully. Still, right now the intermediate-term trends are up for the market’s major indexes and most leading and potential leading stocks. We’ll keep our Market Monitor at a level 8.

    This week’s list has a lot of enticing names, with some showing power and others set up nicely to break out if the bulls remain in control. Our Top Pick is a retail name that appears to be finally getting going after a long, tedious consolidation.
  • After a sharp correction in early April, the market posted a nice, but not powerful, rebound for four weeks but the past two weeks have definitely hurt the near-term evidence, whether you look at the overall market or leading stocks, where some abnormal action has appeared. There’s still more positive evidence than not, but at this point it’s very much a mixed bag, with some stocks acting fine, some coming under the gun and lots of up-and-down action. We’ll leave our Market Monitor at a level 7, but it’s vital to be in the right names and sectors.

    This week’s list has many resilient names, including a few that have been out of the spotlight for a while. Our Top Pick is a small medical device outfit that, thanks to a good-sized acquisition of late, looks like a major player in the spinal surgery area, with new products and technology selling well.
  • There’s no doubt the evidence has improved during the past three weeks, with the major indexes living above their 50-day lines, the broad market returning to good health and with some leadership names perking up, too. Of course, that doesn’t mean it’s perfect out there—defensive-type indexes and stocks have been outperforming, earnings season has been very tricky and we’re even starting to see some hot and heavy action in speculative names, which usually isn’t a great sign. All in all, the evidence is certainly more good than bad, so we’ve extended our line a bit but are also looking to be “pulled” into a more heavily invested position should more leadership names emerge. For now, we’ll leave our Market Monitor at a level 7.

    This week’s list has something for everyone, with a lot of charts showing power, usually following earnings. For our Top Pick, we’re going to the cyclical side of the market, with a name that has out-of-this-world earnings and is just emerging from a tight area.
  • Last week was another constructive week, with the major indexes surviving some early volatility to finish the week higher—and with more leading (and potential leading) stocks perking up as they round out multi-week launching pads. It’s pretty obvious the intermediate-term evidence has improved during the past couple of weeks, though we wouldn’t say it’s all clear out there, as the major indexes and growth measures are moving into the thick of resistance, and this week brings an avalanche of earnings reports from key stocks, so it’s still very much a day-by-day process here. Even so, we always go with what’s in front of us—we’ll nudge our Market Monitor up to a level 7 and could go higher if more individual names kick into gear.

    This week’s list has a bunch of recent earnings winners, some of which are out to new highs, while others are setting up. Our Top Pick is one of the former that has a great near- and longer-term outlook in the aerospace and defense area.
  • Most of the rubber-meets-the-road evidence is positive when it comes to the intermediate-term, that said, short-term, some wobbles and rotation are beginning to creep in—some growth areas (like chips) are weakening while the broad market (small-caps, etc.) are perking up, and after five weeks of strong gains, investor sentiment has gotten a bit comfortable. That doesn’t have us growing more cautious, and in fact, we’re bumping up our Market Monitor to a level 7—though we are still favoring moving gradually and picking your stocks and entry points carefully.

    This week’s list has another nice collection of stocks, including everything from precious metals to chemicals to some powerful earnings gaps in the tech space. Our Top Pick is a tech infrastructure name that isn’t early in its run, but after a choppy three months, it appears ready for its next move.
  • For the big-cap indexes, last week was intriguing, with a sharp dip from resistance on Monday and Tuesday leading to an equally-sharp snapback—a possible shakeout of sorts. That said, the bullish action remains concentrated in a handful of names; the broad market is still meandering at best and there were more than a few air pockets last week among potential leaders. All in all, we’ll drop our Market Monitor to a level 4—that said, there are still tons of earnings reports on tap this week and next, so a bunch of gaps up (and broad market strength) could give us plenty to work with.

    This week’s list has a bunch of recent earnings winners as well as a few that are set to report. Our Top Pick was an early leader off last year’s October lows and looks to be resuming its uptrend after a two-month rest.
  • The market and some growth stocks held their own around year-end and popped to start the year, but last week was a bad one, with the sellers hitting most everything. There are tons of crosscurrents out there, and we’re starting to see some oversold measures really get stretched, so we’re not hibernating in a bear cave. But the bottom line is that the intermediate-term trend of most indexes, sectors and stocks are down so we continue to favor being cautious. Our Market Monitor now stands at a level 5.

    This week’s list has something for everyone, with a lot of good setups for if/when the market does turn up. Our Top Pick has hung in there very well in recent weeks despite the market’s tumble.
  • January is living up to its volatile reputation but there’s no doubt it’s begun to improve—the intermediate-term trend, which was negative for most everything out there, is back to neutral; the broad market is showing some rapid, intriguing improvement; and individual stocks have improved their standing, with some popping to new highs. To be clear, this isn’t a buying panic, but after a few weeks of tedious action that has brought sentiment down, we’re OK with gradually extending your line while remaining nimble. We’ll up our Market Monitor to a level 7 today.

    This week’s list is a mixed bag, with everything from growth to turnarounds to commodity names. Our Top Pick looks like one of the leaders of a new group move after being in the doghouse for a couple of years. Try to get in on dips.
  • The market is still in fine overall shape, but under the hood, it’s becoming more and more of a mixed situation. To be clear, there remains a lot more good than bad when examining the evidence, but for the here and now, we advise simply taking things on a stock-by-stock basis—holding your strong performers (albeit also raising stops and potentially booking a partial profit here or there), while cutting bait with those that lag or crack support and keeping some powder dry. We’ll again leave our Market Monitor at a level 7—we’ve had good success finding winners but don’t advise flooring the accelerator at this point.

    This week’s list is growth-ier despite some potholes seen last week, which is a plus. For our Top Pick, we’re going with a blue chip in the AI theme, with its recent post-earnings pullback setting up an opportunity.
  • All in all, not a bad month. The stock markets had a nice bounce. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.2%; productivity increased (by 2.4%), higher than economists expected; and while home prices continued to rise in certain areas of the country (Northeast and Midwest), nationwide, they fell by 4.9%, to $401,800, on average.

    And best of all, the turmoil regarding tariffs doesn’t seem to be affecting earnings much.

    FactSet reported that, so far, 90% of S&P 500 companies have announced second-quarter earnings, and 81% have reported a positive EPS surprise and a positive revenue surprise.

    That gives us an 11.8% earnings growth year over year—not bad!
  • January has lived up to its billing so far, with lots of ups and downs among individual stocks and sectors based on a variety of news, rumors and, starting today, some Q4 pre-announcements linked to upcoming conference presentations. Even so, while the action is hectic, the underlying evidence is the same as it has been for the past few weeks: The intermediate-term trend of the major indexes is positive, not powerful, while for individual stocks and sectors, many are acting well, but it depends where you look. If we see a shift in the evidence, we’ll shift our stance, but until then, we’re leaving our Market Monitor at a level 7.

    This week’s list is a potpourri of ideas from a variety of different areas that have come into favor this year. Our Top Pick is a solid growth story in the strong aerospace/defense area with big earnings coming. Shares boomed out of a base last week—try to enter on weakness.
  • Market Gauge is 5Current Market Outlook


    There have been a growing number of yellow flags among leading growth stocks in recent months, and last week the sellers finally came out of the woodwork, causing a quick 10% top-to-bottom drop in the Nasdaq and cracking the uptrends in many leaders. Where does that leave us? Overall, the market’s intermediate-term trend remains up, though it’s getting close to the fence as most indexes test their 50-day lines. Throw in the fact that many areas are holding up OK and we don’t advise you to sell wholesale. But with decisive weakness in most leaders following huge runs (and some climactic upside activity during the past two weeks), paring back makes sense, and from here, the onus is on the bulls to step up. We’re knocking our Market Monitor down to a level 5.

    This week’s list contains a bunch of names that have either avoided any major selling or have pulled back normally to support. Our Top Pick is Penn National Gaming (PENN), which looks like one of a couple of leaders in the “new” gaming boom.

    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    AutoNation (AN) 56.1654-5748.5-50
    Boston Beer Company (SAM) 791.28765-790695-710
    Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) 1299.151230-12701100-1125
    Deere & Company (DE) 210.19203-208183-186
    EPAM Systems (EPAM) 308.95298-308273-278
    Farfetch (FTCH) 26.0425-26.522-23
    Five Below (FIVE) 122.69120-124106-108
    Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (FCX) 15.7215-1613.2-13.8
    Nintendo Co., Ltd. (NTDOY) 66.7664-6659-60
    Penn National Gaming (PENN) 55.3153-5644-46



  • This year has been about as choppy and tricky as we can remember, so nothing the market would throw at us from here would come as a surprise. That said, there’s no question the snapback of the past couple of weeks has been very encouraging—the major indexes have rebounded beautifully, with many regaining their 50-day lines, and individual stocks (especially growth stocks) have done great, with more and more moving back to (or out above) their prior highs. We also like that the bounce has been broad, with the on-again, off-again, rotational action taking a backseat to outright buying. Obviously, the market isn’t totally out of the woods, as most indexes are still range-bound and earnings season is upon us, which will often change the trajectory of things. But we always go with what we see, and the odds are increasing that the September/early October correction is over. We’re moving our Market Monitor back up to a level 7, and could go higher than that if the good vibes continues.

    This week’s list represents the broad advance of late, with stocks of all different spots and stripes making the cut. Our Top Pick is Zscaler (ZS), which has lifted to new price and relative performance highs after a six-week pullback.

    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Atlassian (TEAM) 415392-405360-365
    Cameco Corporation (CCJ) 2625-2721.5-22.5
    Continental Resources (CLR) 5249-5142.5-43.5
    Datadog (DDOG) 157152-158135-138
    MGM Resorts (MGM) 4847-48.542.5-43.5
    Range Resources (RRC) 2421.5-2318.5-19
    Snowflake (SNOW) 338322-333286-292
    Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) 870845-865760-770
    XENE (XENE) 3129.5-31.525-26
    Zscaler (ZS) 301292-302262-268

  • Market Gauge is 5Current Market Outlook


    After last Monday’s plunge, the initial rebound was very encouraging, and the fact that the major indexes are still doing their best to hang in there is a plus. But, while many individual stocks are in decent shape, the wild rotation that has been a hallmark of 2021 has returned, with money racing into cyclical areas and out of growth stocks the past couple of days. We’re still sticking with a stock-by-stock approach, and most names, despite their wobbles, remain in fine shape, simply pulling in after big runs; others, however, look worse and should be pared back or sold. To be fair, such action isn’t totally surprising—big breaks like last Monday’s usually have some reverberations, so we wouldn’t say the action is negative as much as it’s a sign we’re still in the tricky, choppy environment that has existed for some time. We’re going to leave the Market Monitor at a level 5 and see how things play out in the days ahead.

    The good news is that this week’s list is full of names that have enjoyed outsized accumulation of late. Our Top Pick is Devon Energy (DVN), which looks like a leader of a fresh breakout in energy stocks (and cyclical stocks more broadly). We suggest aiming for dips as these names usually pull in after powerful rallies.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Apache (APA) 2322-23.519.5-20
    Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding (BHVN) 133130-134116-119
    Brooks Automation, Inc. (BRKS) 109102-10693-95
    Cimarex Energy (XEC) 8882-8572.5-74.5
    Devon Energy (DVN) 3532-3428.5-29.5
    DoorDash (DASH) 217206-212185-189
    SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. (SEAS) 5856.5-58.551.5-52.5
    Signet Jewelers (SIG) 8482-8573-75
    Snap Inc. (SNAP) 8078-8169-71
    SVB Financial Group (SIVB) 674655-675600-610

  • Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the April 2021 issue.

    As value investors, we look for companies that are selling at a discount to their underlying value. But how do we measure that value? In this issue, we briefly describe and discuss the EV/EBITDA metric, which is our preferred valuation tool.



    While our stocks generally did well this past week, there wasn’t much news. With earnings season starting next week, most companies are remaining fairly quiet.



    One change we made was to reduce our rating on Tyson (TSN) from a Buy to a Hold. The shares have about 8% upside to our recently raised price target. From here, we’d like to learn more about its earnings power, which hopefully will be provided in its fiscal second quarter report, before deciding to either raise or sell.



    Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.



    I’m best reachable at Bruce@CabotWealth.com. I’ll do my best to respond as quickly as possible.



    Thanks!

  • Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Undervalued Stocks Advisor. We hope you enjoy reading the June 2021 issue.

    Many of our recommended names are at or approaching our price targets. The decision to keep or sell isn’t easy in a strong market. Our patience is being tested (in a good way).



    Few people would attend the Indy 500 and think about investment horizons. But, such is the world that your chief analyst inhabits. The race itself was a thrill, as always. It was also a showcase of different investment horizons, featuring that of new track owner Roger Penske.



    Earning season has concluded, so it has been a slow period for company-specific news, although Tyson (TSN) announced the surprise departure of its new CEO. Some companies, including Bristol-Myers (BMY), Cisco (CSCO) and Dow (DOW) are presenting at various investor conferences. These can be worthwhile to watch and are free to the public, with replays available in addition to the live presentations.



    Please feel free to send me your questions and comments. This newsletter is written for you and the best way to get more out of the letter is to let me know what you are looking for.



    I’m best reachable at Bruce@CabotWealth.com. I’ll do my best to respond as quickly as possible.



    Thanks!


  • Market Gauge is 7Current Market Outlook


    The first week of the year was extremely volatile, but all in all the action ended up positive, with major indexes kissing fresh all-time highs and many leading stocks ending up nicely on the week. Overall, then, not much has changed—the primary evidence remains positive, so we’re content to ride things higher, but there’s little doubt the environment is hot and heavy (basically the opposite of what we saw 10 months ago), so you should continue to keep your feet on the ground (trail stops, take partial profits when available) and be discerning with your buys (aiming to enter after a bit of rest or some sharp shakeouts to support areas).

    Because of this, most of our buy ranges are a bit below current prices (looking for pullbacks), though we still see some solid setups. One is Snap (SNAP), which is a clear leader in the internet space and has just returned to its highs after its first test of the 10-week line since its October blastoff.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    8x8, Inc. (EGHT) 35.532.5-34.527.5-29
    LPL Financial Holdings (LPLA) 116.8108-11297-99
    The Mosaic Company (MOS) 26.825-2721.5-22.5
    Palo Alto Networks (PANW) 364.6345-360310-320
    Progyny (PGNY) 44.940.5-4336.5-38
    Snap Inc. (SNAP) 54.453-5547-48.5
    Spotify (SPOT) 344.2335-347297-304
    Sunrun (RUN) 95.887-9174-77
    Vale S.A. (VALE) 18.617.4-18.215.8-16.2
    Zillow (Z) 143.2134-140119-122

  • Welcome to our TOP PICKS issue! For this issue, I asked the Cabot analysts to give me a couple of their top picks for 2024. I hope you will be pleased with the diversity—market-cap and sector-wise—that the analysts have offered.

    But first, let’s talk about the market.
  • After a very sharp dip for most major indexes and especially the Nasdaq, a bounce is underway. When looking at individual stocks, we’re fairly encouraged with what we see, which is a good sign that there will be leadership to sink our teeth into once this correction finishes up. But, at this point, we can’t conclude the correction is over, with most major indexes and key measures still buried under resistance (such as 50-day lines) and with formerly strong areas (chips, etc.) still looking suspect. We’re not opposed to a nibble here or there, but we continue to think remaining patient will pay off. We’ll move our Market Monitor up to a level 5, but still think keeping plenty of cash on the sideline makes sense.

    This week’s list is chock-full of names that are acting great, most of which have recently shown big-volume strength after earnings, though we prefer to aim for dips in many cases. Our Top Pick is a familiar name that staged a classic earnings-induced breakout last week.