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16,404 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account"
16,404 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account".
  • While the market officially remains in a downtrend, various indicators in recent weeks, combined with terrible news and sentiment, tell us the market bottom may have passed. But until we see real strength, continued caution is advised.
    Today’s recommendation may be too aggressive for some readers (it’s a semiconductor company, and we all know they can be volatile) but it has a good story and chart and I think it’s worth the risk.


    As for the portfolio, there are no sales, just one downgrade to Hold.


    Details in the issue.


  • In today’s issue, we’re adding a unique play on financial markets to the Dividend Growth tier. I also have a write-up on interest rates—the driving force behind many of this month’s sector rotations—at the end of the issue.
  • Today’s recommendation is a doozy. It may go to the moon, or it may fall flat on its face, but it’s got a good story, and I think we’ve got a decent entry point here.
  • The market’s main trend remains up and thus I continue to recommend that you be heavily invested in stocks that can help you meet your investing goals, all while remaining diversified to reduce risk.

    Today’s recommendation is a high-yielding stock that has a great history of performance—and as it’s still working its way back toward its high of February 2020, it’s attractive technically.



    As for our current holdings, there are no changes. With the new addition, the portfolio is fully invested.



    Details inside.

  • The bull market is alive and well, and our holdings, in general, are delivering as expected, with the usual zigs and zags to keep us on our toes.

    Today’s recommendation is a big solid technology company that should benefit for years from the ongoing 5G communications rollout—and it pays a nice dividend, too.



    As for our current holdings, there are no changes. With the new addition, the portfolio is once again fully invested.



    Details inside.

  • The market remains in an uptrend and, while the divergences and rotation of recent weeks haven’t been totally erased, our diversified portfolio is doing well and Cabot analysts continue to find attractive investment opportunities.

    In our current portfolio, the only change this week is an upgrade of Sea (SE) to Buy.



    As for today’s new recommendation, it’s in an out-of-favor sector that has the potential to deliver real upside surprises as the global economy emerges from COVID times.



    Details inside.

  • Today’s note includes earnings updates, ratings changes and the podcast.
  • The broad market remains in an uptrend, according to our intermediate-term market timing indicator, but our longer-term timing indicator, while improving, remains in a negative state. Thus, it remains possible that a major pullback is right around the corner—and if one comes, it will be handy to have cash at the bottom. So I’m still working to avoid being fully invested, though it’s getting tough because our stocks acting so well.
    For today’s selection, I’m going with a small company that’s taken a proven path to growth—consolidating a fractured industry. The stock was originally recommended by Tyler Laundon in Cabot Early Opportunities and here are Tyler’s latest thoughts.

  • In this Month’s Issue of Cabot Early Opportunities I reveal a few tips to help you buy into IPOs at reasonable prices and we look at some compelling data that suggests the 150 to 180 day period after IPO just might be one of the ideal times to buy.

    We also go inside five companies that look great right now, including a few software stocks, a consumer goods company and a MedTech stock that’s flying under the radar now, but not for long!


  • Calling market tops is impossible, but leaning against the wind is something you learn after a while, if you pay attention. So today, with many of our stocks once again hitting or near new highs, I’m leaning into the wind by selling one and downgrading another to hold.

    As for new buying, today’s recommendation comes straight from Cabot Top Ten Trader. It’s an underappreciated retail stock that surged higher on a great earnings report two weeks ago and has since pulled back to what I think is a great entry point.
  • The election is over, a winner swiftly declared, and the Fed is set to cut rates again today. All of that is hugely bullish, as evidenced by the market hitting fresh all-time highs on Wednesday. But it’s even bigger news for small-cap stocks, which are historically overdue for a massive run. So today, we add a new small-cap stock whose name virtually everyone knows – and perhaps has indulged in themselves. That addition is part of a sweeping portfolio overhaul in our November issue, which includes two stocks reaching – actually eclipsing – our price targets, and our one true laggard getting the ax after a bad earnings report.

    Lots to talk about today. Let’s get right to it.
  • Stocks have also been a bit stuck in the mud for the last month or so, partly because investor confidence in the Fed’s interest rate-slashing timetable has waned as inflation has remained stickier than expected. Wednesday’s CPI print didn’t help; March inflation came in at 3.5% year over year, a tad hotter than the 3.4% expected and up from 3.2% in February. The month-over-month increase was 0.4%, higher than the 0.3% bump that was anticipated. Stocks promptly sold off, with all three major indexes down more than 1% in early Wednesday trading.


    Eventually, however, inflation will dip below that stubborn 3% threshold, and the Fed will start to cut short-term interest rates. We just don’t know when.
  • Stocks have barely budged for three months.

    The S&P 500 is a mere 1.5% above its mid-July highs, while the Nasdaq is actually down 2.5% since its July 10 peak. The Dow has made the most headway, up 2.1% since its July 17 apex. This type of multi-month lethargy is nothing new for an election year.
  • The Fed went big!

    Everyone knew Jerome Powell and company were going to (finally) cut the federal funds rate for the first time in four and a half years on Wednesday. The question was by how much – 50 basis points (0.50%) or 25 basis points (0.25%)? To my mild surprise (but not to Wall Street’s – the options market had swung to a 59% probability that it would be 50 bps prior to the announcement), the Fed opted for the larger cut, slashing rates from 5.25-5.5% to a 4.75-5.25% range. So far, the market seems unsure how to take the hefty cut – all three major indexes were up more than half a percent immediately following yesterday’s 2 p.m. ET announcement, but then were narrowly in the red by day’s end.
  • It’s been widely noted that the stock market’s sloppy start to 2024 is among the worst in a decade, or longer. Traders and TV commentators carry on about how the first trading day, or week, or month, sets the tone for the entire year. “How goes January, so goes the year” is a frequently bandied saying. It’s enough to make an investor toss in the towel and wait until 2025.

    The longer I am in the investing world, the less I listen to this banter. It all sounds great, and maybe there are some years in which these ultra-short-term trends-as-predictors pan out, but they are so unreliable that they are worthless at best. Even if they had a 100% accuracy rate, why make a bet that this perfect record will continue?