Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Search

15,057 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account"
15,057 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account".
  • While the overall market looks pretty good, growth stocks are looking terrific. Here’s a look at 5 growth stocks and how to handle them.
  • Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Turnaround Letter. We hope you enjoy reading the December 2023 issue.

    Every investor has loser stocks. We discuss two ways to convert this year’s losers into assets and winners, including tax loss selling and buying shares that others have discarded for artificial reasons. Last year’s crop of bounce stocks performed exceptionally well. We discuss five for this year that look promising.

    One of our more productive methods for sourcing new ideas is to see what other like-minded investors are buying. We discuss how to refine the vast data in 13F filings and review four from the most recent batch of filings that look attractive.

    This month’s Buy recommendation, Fidelity National Information Services (FIS), was used in a February 2023 article about how we evaluate candidates. It was too expensive then, but its recent 26% share price slide and encouraging fundamentals make it attractive to buy now.
  • The market is at all-time highs. But most stocks are undervalued.

    That’s the strange but true reality in today’s Magnificent 7/AI-centric bull market. Yes, if you’ve invested in the seven largest mega-caps or a handful of artificial intelligence-related stocks (Broadcom (AVGO), Palantir (PLTR), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM), etc.), you’ve done quite well. But most other sectors have lagged.
  • The world of crypto is new and exciting, but there are some important things to learn before you start trading cryptocurrencies.
  • If you’ve ever been tempted by the stories and claims about day trading – don’t be. Here’s why day trading isn’t something that we recommend at Cabot.
  • The market has taken a dramatic turn.

    Previously beleaguered stocks are soaring while technology flounders. Cyclical stocks in industries including materials, energy, consumer companies, and industrials have posted double-digit returns while the overall market is barely positive.

    Is this a lasting trend or a temporary aberration? The cyclical rally indicates investor confidence regarding the state of the economy in the quarters ahead. Will that stronger growth materialize? Is the AI trade finished, or is this just another periodic consolidation?

    Anything can happen in the next several months. It’s easier to focus on the longer term instead of trying to figure out the next fashionable trend on Wall Street. Sectors go in and out of favor all the time. Industry leadership changes often. But one strategy has been a winner in just about every kind of market over time – dividend growth.

    In this issue I highlight several portfolio stocks that have consistently paid and grown the dividend for many years and have delivered stellar returns with far less volatility than the overall market.
  • Last week, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority hosted hundreds of bankers including the heads of 90 global financial institutions to discuss the current status and future outlook for the world’s capital markets. Despite the increasingly tight grip that China has on Hong Kong, which is leading to a diminished relevance for the island state, notables including Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman and Goldman Sachs head David Solomon participated in the in-person meetings. The draw: Hong Kong remains an important gatekeeper for access to mainland China’s financial markets.
  • Discovering good stocks for long-term investment success will allow you to feel confident in the stock and will lead to greater wealth.
  • Some weak economic numbers and political uncertainty about Hong Kong roiled markets a bit but emerging and international stocks rebounded a bit today. China stocks are getting some scrutiny in Washington amidst U.S.-China rivalry. Nevertheless, our new recommendation today is from the Middle Kingdom and is centered on a high growth theme that has a lot of momentum behind it.
  • What a month! Markets have had some pretty wild moves since last month, gyrating with significant volatility, and that looks like it may continue for a while. But that’s OK as the volatility is now serving up some pretty exciting discounted opportunities for investing.

    Economically speaking, inflation abated somewhat, with core inflation falling to 3.2% for August, its lowest point in three years. And that sets the stage for an estimated 25 basis point reduction in interest rates when the Federal Reserve meets next week, according to the latest economist polls. The rate gurus now think that we may see a total of three rate cuts before the end of the year.
  • Growth stocks, led by the Magnificent Seven, have again carried the market this year.

    The Mag. 7 – the clever name for big-tech behemoths Amazon (AMZN), Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOG), Meta (META), Microsoft (MSFT), Nvidia (NVDA) and Tesla (TSLA) – are up an average of 22% this year. Because those seven companies account for more than a third of the entire S&P 500, they’ve carried the index to a solid 16.5% gain year to date. The Equal Weight S&P 500 index, which equally weighs each of the 500 stocks that comprise the benchmark index, is up a mere 8.5% and has barely budged since the Fourth of July. For most stocks, the entirety of this year’s rally occurred during the post-Liberation Day run-up from the second half of April through early July.
  • In today’s note, we discuss pertinent developments and ratings changes for some of the stocks in the portfolio, including Alcoa (AA), Atlassian (TEAM), GE Aerospace (GE), SLB Ltd. (SLB), Starbucks (SBUX), Super Hi International Holding (HDL) and Teladoc Health (TDOC).
  • Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are a popular low-cost alternative to mutual funds that can help investors achieve their diversification goals, gain exposure to asset classes and sector trends they’re interested in, and save money while they do it. This month, we’ll dive into the pros and cons of investing in ETFs, how to identify the funds that match your investing style, and how to evaluate their risks and potential. In short, we’ll explore everything you need to know to make more money investing in ETFs.
  • September is living up to its reputation as a tricky month, with lots of volatility among leading stocks and rotation and news-driven moves on a day-to-day basis. Still, just going with the evidence, the trends of the major indexes and most stocks are up, so I remain bullish. That said, finding stocks early in their overall uptrends that aren’t obvious to the crowd is vital—tonight’s Stock of the Week fills the bill, blasting off three weeks ago after a 14-month correction and consolidation.
  • A new hedge fund will trade based on the frequency of opinion tweets on stocks and the markets.
  • With the election just around the corner, there’s a lot of uncertainty in the air. Nevertheless, the bull market is alive and well, as both of Cabot’s trend-following market-timing indicators remain positive, so I continue to recommend that you be heavily invested.

    Today’s recommendation is an old friend that is back in the limelight as the online world is increasingly hungry for software that enables machines to understand human voices. It’s a good story, and the stock is on a good pullback now.



    As for the current portfolio, there’s just one sell (for a small profit), to make room for the new recommendation.

  • The market’s tectonic plates are shifting.

    Last week, I wrote that big tech – namely, the top 20 stocks in the S&P 500 by market cap – had led the way as the market emerged from a sharp late-March/early-April downturn and stretched to new all-time highs earlier this month. Now they’re retreating, with growth stocks – as measured by the Investors’ Business Daily 50 (FFTY) – off roughly 8% in the last week, with some big names (CRWV, -55%; PLTR, -22%; APP, -17%; SMCI, -31%, etc.) plummeting much further than that.
  • After rising 25% from its December low to its May high, the S&P 500 index is finally taking a breather. I don’t expect a shocking price drop like we saw in December. Rather, I anticipate the S&P 500 receding to 2,750, which would be down 200 points from the recent high, or even 2,650. Pullbacks aren’t any fun, but they are normal, and they provide opportunities for investors to buy stocks while they’re on sale.
  • CEOs get a lot of flack for their compensation (especially the highest-paid CEOs), but how important are they to the stocks of the companies they helm?
  • Today’s addition is a familiar story – a small software company with a purpose-built solution that works better than the patchwork of legacy solutions many companies still rely on, but which don’t work very well.

    But there is another angle. This company is transitioning from an on-premise to a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) business model. The switch should accelerate growth and make the stock a lot more attractive to investors.



    Shares did very well in 2019. And there should be plenty more gas left in the tank.



    All the details are inside.