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16,493 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account"
16,493 Results for "⇾ acc6.top acquire an AdvCash account".
  • It’s a bull market, which means it’s time to dive in, not stand on the shore worrying about what could be under the waves.
  • Earnings season is now in full swing, but central bankers stole the show this week.

    On Wednesday the FOMC hiked by another 25bps (as expected) and Fed Chair Jerome Powell gave the market just enough for the bulls to remain in control, for now.

    The highlights: First, he said he thinks the Fed can get inflation down to 2% by 2025 while avoiding a recession. The Fed’s staff no longer predicts a recession.
  • This week, we comment on results from General Electric (GE), Mattel (MAT), Polaris (PII), Vodafone (VOD), Volkswagen AG (VWAGY), Western Union (WU) and Xerox Holdings (XRX).

    Next week, twelve companies are scheduled to report.

    We also include the Catalyst Report and a summary of the August edition of the Cabot Turnaround Letter, which was published on Wednesday. We encourage you to look through the Catalyst Report. This report is a listing of all of the companies that have reported a catalyst in the past month. These catalysts include new CEOs, activist activity, spin-offs and other possible game-changers. We source many of our feature recommendations from this list. You will find it nowhere else on Wall Street.
  • This week Chris and Brad talk about the latest Chinese GDP numbers and whether it’s safe to invest in China, Tesla’s earnings release, and what they’re seeing with Regional banks now that they’re reporting. After that, they break down FAANG stocks, their popular ascent as market shorthand, and whether Microsoft is “sexy” enough to sit at the cool kids’ table.
  • Thursday brought an eye-opening reversal in the market, with a big gap up on Meta’s earnings results followed by a sharp reversal as interest rates backed up, and that was the tell-tale day of the week. That said, coming into today, the major indexes are all flat-ish on the week and are obviously bouncing this morning, so hardly a disaster.
  • The good times are here again. The S&P 500 is up over 19% YTD and is now within just 4% of the all-time high. Stocks are in a strong uptrend that began in the beginning of May and appear likely to move still higher.

    Inflation is crashing. The Fed is about out of bullets. And there is no recession in sight. Things could always discombobulate down the road. But there doesn’t appear at this point to be anything ahead in the next month or so that will change the current positive narrative.
  • As earnings season approaches the midway point, and following the Federal Reserve’s announcement of a 25-basis point interest rate hike last week, the market continued its ascent. For the week the S&P 500 gained 1%, the Dow rose by 0.65% and the Nasdaq added 2%.
  • As earnings season approaches the midway point, and following the Federal Reserve’s announcement of a 25-basis point interest rate hike last week, the market continued its ascent. For the week the S&P 500 gained 1%, the Dow rose by 0.65% and the Nasdaq added 2%.
  • Signs of rotation and institutional investment in defensive sectors could be setting the stage for late-summer market volatility. Here’s how to prepare.
  • The market came under some pressure last week as the S&P 500 fell 1.16%, the Dow lost 2% and the Nasdaq declined by 1%. And while the market lost ground, I would note that it was a holiday-shortened week, and option volumes were down dramatically.
  • Despite the holiday trading action on Monday and no trading on Tuesday, things have been a bit dicey this week, with the major indexes (especially the broader indexes) down as the market’s old bugaboo—interest rates—spike toward new multi-year highs. Moreover, this week, we saw some leading stocks take hits as well, as some of the laggard areas of the market (like financial stocks) took the selling in stride.
  • This was a quiet week for our stocks. Earnings season starts next Friday, with Wells Fargo (WFC) reporting, followed by Nokia (NOK) and First Horizon (FHN) the next week. Based on the preliminary calendar, the earnings deluge starts on Tuesday, July 27.
  • The market came under some pressure last week as the S&P 500 fell 1.16%, the Dow lost 2% and the Nasdaq declined by 1%. And while the market lost ground, I would note that it was a holiday-shortened week, and option volumes were down dramatically.
  • Summer travel season is in full swing, and airline stocks are taking off as pent-up travel demand fills companies’ coffers.
  • In this week’s video, Mike Cintolo talks about the market’s under-the-surface improvement that he’s seeing; no indicators have changed, which will need to happen for him to extend his line in a big way, but there’s no question most stuff has seen improvement and more stocks are beginning to act properly. Mike did a little buying this week and is hoping to add more should the market be able to build on the recent action.
  • This week Chris and Brad talk about the latest Chinese GDP numbers and whether it’s safe to invest in China, Tesla’s earnings release, and what they’re seeing with Regional banks now that they’re reporting. After that, they break down FAANG stocks, their popular ascent as market shorthand, and whether Microsoft is “sexy” enough to sit at the cool kids’ table.
  • WHAT TO DO NOW: Remain optimistic but keep an open mind. At this point, our market timing indicators remain bullish and we’re seeing little abnormal action among leading stocks—that said, the Fed/interest rate situation refuses to go away, and near term, some more shaking of the tree is certainly possible to raise the fear level. Tonight, we have no new buys or sells, but we’ll place Inspire Medical (INSP) and Monday.com (MNDY) on Hold and see how things progress. Our cash position will remain in the 30% range.
  • 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.
  • Ahead of the long holiday weekend the market had yet another good week. The S&P 500 gained 1.75%, the Dow rallied 1.5%, and the Nasdaq rose another 1.9%.

    This week in an attempt to diversify the portfolio we are adding an energy play.