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15,161 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account"
15,161 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account".
  • Revolve (RVLV) announced Q3 revenue of $244.1 million, up 62% and ahead of the $228.6 million (+60%) analysts had expected. By segment, REVOLVE grew by 56% (to $204.2 million) while FORWARD grew 95% (to $39.9 million).
  • This health-care data stock reported after the close yesterday with results that beat lowered expectations.
  • One stock reports strong fourth quarter and moves from Strong Buy to Hold; a second falls on temporary problems.
  • I’m raising my rating on Cardinal Health (CAH) today to Strong Buy. CAH appears in the Growth & Income Portfolio.
  • Some of the many reader responses we received from the tractor story issue.
  • It’s a new bull market! The S&P 500 has rallied over 20% from the low, the technical definition of a bull market. The index is also up about 12% YTD. Are stocks topping out or are we off to the races? Despite inflation, the Fed, and increasing forecasts of recession, stocks have defied conventional wisdom and rallied strongly. That’s impressive. But this rally is incredibly thin. Ten primarily large technology company stocks are responsible for all of the index gains YTD. The other 490 stocks have collectively gone nowhere.
  • After a four-and-a-half-year bear market, gold stocks are back with a vengeance. If you own gold stocks, here’s what I would advise doing with them.
  • While the market has rallied roughly 25% off its closing low from March it’s not exactly a roaring bull market. We are where we are because the Fed and Treasury are lobbing money-filled grenades in all directions. Near-term market fundamentals are weak, but looking out a few quarters (or more) things should improve drastically, and that’s what the market is trying to factor in. On balance, it’s time to be conservative, but to take shots here and there. This month’s Issue of Cabot Early Opportunities offers up five options that look good right now.
  • Back to the market, there’s more good news than bad from my perspective. Employment and hiring are good, the lessening of tariffs on $75 billion worth of U.S exports to China is good, interest rates remain low (many economists see a rate cut coming too) and there are plenty of good earnings reports to get excited about.
  • With the 4th of July holiday last Tuesday it felt like 75% of the country was on vacation for the week and whatever happened in the market was a mirage.

    This week things came into sharper focus. And the bull argument firmed up with the better-than-expected June CPI reading yesterday morning. The annualized 3.0% CPI inflation rate is the lowest in more than two years and came in below estimates of 3.1%.

    That report helped the S&P 600 Small Cap Index, as represented by the iShares Core S&P Small-Cap ETF (IJR), jump up to its highest level since March 10 and move convincingly through the 100 level.
  • There have been a number of conferences going on lately, so today’s update is partially focused on what our attending companies had to say.

    There were no really big reveals, but also no change in tone from the management teams I listened to – and certainly nothing edging toward the more negative side of the scale.

    Big picture, I’d say leadership teams continue to be somewhat conservative. Given that we only have a couple weeks left of Q3 they should have a pretty good handle on how the quarter should shake out (and the year for that matter).
  • Thank you for subscribing to the Cabot Turnaround Letter. We hope you enjoy reading the August 2023 issue.

    In this letter, we include our Mid-Year 2023 updates for our stock market and high yield bond market outlooks. After being totally wrong with our stock market outlook for 2023, what do we see for the rest of the year, and why? We were nearly spot-on with our high yield bond market outlook. How does this market look to us now?

    Our feature recommendation this month is Kopin Corporation (KOPN), an obscure optical display company that previously was run like a hobby by a brilliant scientist. Its primary output was a chronic stream of operating losses and share offerings that heavily diluted its investors. Now, under completely new leadership, the company is being run like a for-profit commercial enterprise with a vast market opportunity ahead.
  • We discuss earnings from Adient (ADNT), ESAB (ESAB), Frontier Group Holdings (ULCC), Gannett (GCI), Ironwood Pharmaceuticals (IRWD), Janus Henderson Group (JHG), Kaman Corporation (KAMN), Molson Coors (TAP) and Western Union (WU).
  • It’s tough to make money in a sideways market like this one. But soon enough, a breakout is coming – history tells us that this bear market (18 months old in the Nasdaq) is on borrowed time. When it does, it will happen fast, and that’s when the real money is made – at the onset of a new bull market. To be prepared for its eventual arrival, we maintain a full 20-stock portfolio. And today, we add a familiar growth stock that got pummeled last year but is on the fast track to recovery in 2023. It’s a new recommendation from Mike Cintolo in his Cabot Top Ten Trader advisory.

    Details inside.
  • Tyler Laundon, chief analyst of newsletters Cabot Early Opportunities and Cabot Small-Cap Confidential, shares information on technology stocks that he likes today.
  • Want to find winning growth stocks to jumpstart your portfolio? These eight tips have helped me uncover some of the market’s biggest winners.
  • Top Stocks to Make You Money Now, Regardless of Investing Style | Nancy Zambell, Chief Analyst of Wall Street’s Best Investments and Wall Street’s Best Dividend Stocks, talked about where to make money, no matter what your investing style is. PLUS she shared the best top Growth, Value, and Income picks so far this year!
  • While the market began to show some encouraging signs later in May and into early June, the past week and a half has been a mess. The S&P 600 Small Cap Index slipped back to its May low near 1139 on Monday and was holding OK there, until today.
  • Closed-end funds or CEFs (also called closed-end investment management companies) have become popular among income investors for their large and reliable distributions. Many CEFs are primarily focused on producing income and generate big distributions by holding income investments like dividend stocks, REITs or municipal or corporate bonds. Others boast their...