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15,057 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account"
15,057 Results for "👉 acc6.top 👈🏻 buy a subscription Telegram account".
  • Strategy (MSTR) has lost 63% from its all-time high, which has evaporated the company’s premium to its Bitcoin holdings—but is that a good enough reason to buy MSTR?
  • Stocks are rallying after Trump’s win, but small cap stocks are outpacing them all. Here are three small cap sectors that are faring particularly well.
  • This week brought news that some of the U.S. government’s stimulus package funding has been delegated to some very unique places in Massachusetts: $1.5 million to fix a lighthouse on an uninhabited island, $123,000 to terrorist-attack-proof a party cruise ship and $95,000 to study pollen samples from the Viking Era.
  • Last June, I wrote about the world of drinking stocks. Today, I provide an update on the group, including one of the best pure beer stocks to invest in, along with another recommendation. But first, here’s why I think that Budweiser’s (BUD) new name is brilliant.
  • For the second straight week growth stocks got hit hard, which weighed on the Nasdaq. Though interestingly, as money rotated out of the 2024 leaders, it raced into slow and steady stocks that have been left behind in years past. By week’s end the S&P 500 had lost 1%, the Dow had gained 1%, and the Nasdaq had fallen 3.5%.
  • Market Gauge is 6Current Market Outlook


    Not much changed with the market last week, as the major indexes finished up a fraction of a percent, remaining in the trading range of the past three months. That said, there’s no doubt that individual stocks are acting better, especially the liquid leaders that are generally a good barometer of institutional sentiment. Not only are most well-traded growth stocks holding firm, some have actually emerged to new highs on earnings. We’re not ready to change our Market Monitor yet (the intermediate-term trend remains slightly negative and there are tons of earnings reports this week), so it’s best to pick your spots on the buy side, hold some cash and practice patience with your resilient performers.

    This week’s list has a bunch of good-looking charts from a variety of industries. For our Top Pick, we’ll go one of the liquid leaders that’s just emerged.PayPal (PYPL) exploded out of a 15-month base last Friday on its heaviest volume since the day of its IPO. We think it’s buyable here or on dips.
    Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
    Copa Holdings (CPA) 0.0093-8985-84
    Domino’s Pizza (DPZ) 339.47165-160151-148
    FMC Technologies, Inc. (FTI) 0.0032.5-3129.5-29
    HDFC Bank Limited (HDB) 0.0075-7268-67
    ICON plc (ICLR) 0.0084-8277-76
    Match (MTCH) 0.0019.5-18.517-16.5
    Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) 423.92127-123112-110
    PayPal (PYPL) 147.0044-4240.5-39.5
    Steel Dynamics (STLD) 0.0026.5-25.523.5-23
    Zayo Group (ZAYO) 0.0031.5-30.529-28.5

  • For the first time in a while we started to see big investors floor the accelerator last week, with some names really letting loose on the upside. Moreover, even the “non-AI” nascent leaders that perked up earlier in May are acting fine, with most digesting gains in normal fashion. All of that is to the good—though the top-down flaws that we’ve written about are all still out there, too, with relatively few stocks hitting new highs, a good number of blowups each week and most areas of the market still struggling. Right now, we’re keeping our Market Monitor at a level 5, but we’re watching things closely—if more leaders emerge, it would certainly add to the bullish side of the ledger.

    This week’s list has a bunch of solid growth and earnings-related plays from a variety of industries. Our Top Pick is practically a blue chip name from the software field that’s emerging from a solid launching pad.
  • The market has been singing a more bullish tune lately and small caps are back in the headlines.

    That’s because small caps enjoyed a nice rally after last week’s CPI and PPI data came out and the 10-year yield retreated.

    Market observers have seen that the market rally has been broadening beyond just the Magnificent 7 and that small and mid-caps (SMID-caps) have been getting in on the action as well.
  • The small-cap indices (Russell 2000 and S&P 600) have been totally uninspiring over the last three weeks, which is sort of odd given that the Fed cut interest rates by 50 basis points almost exactly three weeks ago.

    Theoretically, lower rates should benefit small caps given higher exposure to variable rate debt, which requires lower interest payments as rates decline.
  • For growth stocks, buying low usually doesn’t mean you’re getting a bargain. It usually means you’re buying a laggard! That’s right—believe it or not, in the market, strength tends to lead to strength, while weakness tends to lead to weakness.
  • Here are earnings updates on three of our stocks, and there’s drama at another.
  • EV mania has been supplanted by AI mania, but industry fundamentals are still strong and the electric vehicle ecosystem is still growing. Is that enough to make this Chinese electric vehicle company a buy?
  • In today’s note, we discuss pertinent developments for some of the stocks in the portfolio, including Agnico Eagle Mines (AEM), Alcoa (AA), Centuri Holdings (CTRI), Dollar Tree (DLTR), GE Aerospace (GE), Intel (INTC), Pan American Silver (PAAS) and Toast Inc. (TOST).

    Intel’s prospects hinge on the success of its 18A process node, which has the potential to be a major catalyst for its turnaround.
  • 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.