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15,090 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account"
15,090 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account".
  • Market Gauge is 6Current Market Outlook


    Impeachment talk stole the headlines last week, and China trade issues remain one of the chief economic concerns, but overall, the market remains healthy, with all major indexes in uptrends and most just a couple of weeks off their recent highs. Nevertheless, making money remains difficult, as the forces of rotation have been sending old leaders to the locker room and trotting out fresher new leaders to take their place. This is actually good for the health of the bull market, but it does make investing more difficult, so you should continue to tread carefully, in particular by choosing low-risk entry points and being ruthless at cutting loose your worst performers. As for the market monitor, we’ll stand pat this week, as the flurry of selling late last week has created some decent entry points.

    This week’s list includes a great variety of stocks, and our Top Pick is a lower-risk insurance stock, Arthur J. Gallagher (AJG), which has been building a base over the past couple of months and looking ripe to resume its uptrend.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Arthur J. Gallagher (AJG) 89.2787-9184-86
    Chubb Group (CB) 153.34156-164150-152
    Entegris (ENTG) 48.0846-4841-42
    Garmin (GRMN) 97.4581-8777-78
    Insulet (PODD) 175.69154-168145-147
    Jabil Inc. (JBL) 41.5034-3631-32
    MasTec, Inc. (MTZ) 66.6562-6559-61
    Synnex Corp. (SNX) 129.70110-113105-108
    Taylor Morrison Home (TMHC) 27.5124-2622-23
    Weight Watchers International, Inc. (WW) 35.3335-3830-32

  • With two strong weeks of action behind us, the short-term trend of markets is once again positive, and thus I am happy to once again recommend that you be heavily invested in a diversified group of stocks that meet your investing needs.

    Today’s recommendation is a repeat; we sold the stock in March for a nice 30% profit, and now we’re going to try again.



    As for selling, there is one recommendation, a short-term sell of ConocoPhillips (COP), which has been unusually strong. But if you want, and it suits your style, you can hold.



    Details inside.

  • As I mentioned last week, this is a shorter version of the Weekly Review, focused on our open positions. Those are…
  • As I mentioned last week, this is a shorter version of the Weekly Review, focused on our open positions. Those are...
  • Natural Grocers (NGVC) should have a decent day (+20% in early hours trading) after Q2 earnings beat expectations. Revenue grew 9.0% to $335.8 million (a $6.1 million beat) while GAAP EPS of $0.56 grew by 60%. Daily average comparable store sales grew by 8.9%. This was a very strong quarter.
  • Market Gauge is 6Current Market Outlook


    To us, the major (and most disappointing) theme of the past few weeks has been the selling in stocks as they approach their old highs—selling on strength has been seen in growth stocks for a couple of months but it’s even seeping into many cyclical-type names, too. In other words, while selling pressures are controlled (the intermediate-term trend remains up), buyers aren’t exactly stepping up in a major way. Of course, the real question is whether earnings seasons causes the bulls to flex their muscles; so far, that hasn’t happened, but there are a ton of reports coming this week and next, so we’ll see how it goes. Not to sound like a broken record, but we continue to think keeping some cash on the sideline and aiming to enter mostly on pullbacks remains the best play. We’re again leaving our Market Monitor at a level 6.

    This week’s list has a hodgepodge of names, many of which have reacted well to earnings, so if you’re going to buy strength, these are some top candidates. Our Top Pick is Crocs (CROX), one of the few growth-oriented names that has shown great power of late.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Academy Sports and Outdoors (ASO) 3130-31.527-28
    Bloomin’ Brands (BLMN) 3129.5-3126.5-27.5
    Capital One Financial (COF) 150141-146128-131
    Chart Industries (GTLS) 154149-155137-140
    Crocs (CROX) 9895-10084-87
    Fortinet Inc. (FTNT) 203197-204181-184
    Matador Resources Company (MTDR) 2625-2722-23
    Robert Half (RHI) 8886-8878-80
    Scientific Games (SGMS) 5854-5648-49
    United Parcel Service (UPS) 212203-209184-188

  • The market continues to make progress, despite the dramatic headlines gracing the front page every day (and popping up online throughout the day). Today I’m adding a well-known restaurant stock to the Dividend Growth tier of our portfolio, to take advantage of rising consumer spending and the strong American economy. I also have updates on all our stocks, most of which are rated Buy, and at the end of the issue I take a look at the importance of diversification.
  • Halfway through January and one of the big stories of the year is the continued outperformance of small-cap stocks. Along with the strength in the equal-weight S&P 500 (the Invesco S&P 500 EW ETF (RSP) is an easy option to track this), this is part of the “market is broadening out” theme that you’ve likely been hearing about.

    As I stated several times in the waning months of last year, small caps benefit from (1) an early cycle backdrop, (2) stabilizing earnings revisions, (3) positive operating leverage, and (4) lower rates. These conditions are materializing right now. Analysts expect small-cap earnings to grow 15% in 2026, only slightly ahead of the 14.8% expected for large caps but a massive improvement from the small-cap earnings contractions in 2023 and 2024, and above the expected 2025 earnings growth rate of 13.4%. By the way, mid‑cap earnings are expected to grow by 19.3% in 2026. This is helping to draw more attention to the small and mid-cap (SMID) asset class, which is actually what a lot of small-cap ETFs and mutual funds really have exposure to.
  • Everybody is talking about the potential of generative AI. But a lot of organizations haven’t yet organized their digital data in such a way that they can leverage it for AI, let alone protect it once AI applications gain access.

    Today, we’re jumping into a steady-growth software company that helps solve this problem.
  • Stocks are finally showing signs of life after a brutal August, and many of our Stock of the Week positions have fared even better than the market of late. Don’t expect much movement this week as investors will likely play out the summer string until they lock in after Labor Day. Will the (modest) recent gains hold in September, notoriously the weakest month on the investment calendar? We’ll start to find out next week. In the meantime, we won’t try and do too much, which is why today we’re adding a solid-if-unspectacular big-cap retailer that has a habit of beating the market. It’s a new addition from Cabot Dividend Investor Chief Analyst Tom Hutchinson.
  • While the market mourns the misfortunes of poor Mark Zuckerberg, we actually have a little ray of light in emerging markets, as the Cabot Emerging Markets Timer is showing a very new green light. New buy signals are pretty delicate, but we’re taking this one seriously, doing a little new buying and shifting another stock from a Hold to a Buy rating. As the artillery of the trade war rumbles, it’s nice to have something to celebrate. Read on for details.
  • We’ve entered a new bull market, and boy are those fun words to type!

    Sure, the rally has been thin, led by seven or eight mega-cap tech stocks and, more recently, artificial intelligence. And yes, with inflation and another Fed meeting on the docket this week, a huge bucket of cold water could be thrown in the market’s face in the next 48 hours. But as of this moment, stocks are the healthiest they’ve been since 2021, and that means we’re keeping our foot on the growth pedal. So today we’re adding another potential technology leader that’s a very recent recommendation from Mike Cintolo in Cabot Growth Investor.
  • In the wake of surprisingly successful second-quarter results among large-cap banks, all eyes are turning to regulatory reform as the next catalyst to rising earnings estimates among bank stocks.
  • WHAT TO DO NOW: Remain defensive, but keep your eyes open. Yesterday’s rally was noteworthy and may have started (or will soon start) a process of repairing the damage from the recent selling. That said, the market’s trends are still down and few stocks are in great shape, so the odds favor the repair process taking some time. Of course, we’re flexible, so if the buyers go wild, we’ll act, but tonight we’re again standing pat and seeing how this bounce plays out. Our cash position remains near 87%.
  • Stocks made another new high this week as investors expect a resumption of Fed rate cuts on Wednesday.

    The Fed Chairman indicated that the fed funds rate will be cut at the September meeting during his Jackson Hole comments last month. Wall Street traders are pricing in a 90%-plus probability of a 0.25% cut on Wednesday. And consensus expectations are for two more such cuts before the end of this year.
  • Market Gauge is 6Current Market Outlook


    The top-down view of the market remains just so-so, with the intermediate-term trend effectively on the fence—most indexes are hanging around their 50-day lines and have recouped about half of the recent corrections. Thus, some caution is still in order, especially as further news-driven moves are likely in the days and weeks ahead. However, the leaders (and potential leaders) of the market are very impressive, with more and more flashing constructive action, including some that are rallying on outsized volume, both of which are a sign that big investors are getting comfortable putting money to work. It’s not a wild bull market obviously, with relatively few stocks hitting new highs, but it’s safe to say the evidence has improved, causing us to nudge up our Market Monitor today.

    This week’s list has a bunch of good-looking stocks that have seen good-volume buying of late. Our Top Pick is Datadog (DDOG), which has returned to form after a big-volume breakout last week. Start small and add if the stock and market improve from here.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Alibaba (BABA) 288280-288260-265
    Datadog (DDOG) 107103-10792-94
    Purple Innovation (PRPL) 2523-24.520-21
    Seres Therapeutics (MCRB) 3027.5-29.523-24
    SolarEdge Technologies Inc. (SEDG) 273243-257218-224
    STMicroelectronics (STM) 3332-33.529-30
    Teck Resources Limited (TECK) 1413-14.211.5-11.9
    Twilio (TWLO) 283277-287250-255
    Twitter (TWTR) 4744-4640-41
    Zendesk (ZEN) 105101-10592-94

  • After last weekend’s successful space flight of Sir Richard Branson, one would have expected Virgin Galactic (SPCE) stock to soar on Monday. Instead, it lost altitude. Sure, the announcement of a $500 million secondary offering leading to dilution was not welcome news, but part of the reason the stock fell is that investors asked, “what next?” and sold some shares. What comes next is indeed the right question since markets always look forward.
  • 2020 has surely been one for the record books—the sharpest selloff in history from a record high to a bear market and then the sharpest rebound in history from a bear market to a new record high.
  • The new bull market went into hyperdrive last week, fueled by lower-than-expected inflation and an encouraging start to earnings season. With another interest rate hike and weak Q2 earnings expectations looming in the back half of this month and beyond, there could be some speed bumps ahead. But for now, the good times are rolling, and that means taking more big swings. This week, we do so in a small-cap, Canada-based rare earths producer that is a brand new recommendation from Cabot Explorer Chief Analyst Carl Delfeld.