GBA Presents: House of Gummy-!

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by stonedinvestor, May 13, 2023.

  1. #391     May 19, 2023
  2. STARTING TO BREAK OUT-->

    Outlook Therapeutics, Inc. (OTLK) $1.00----> $1.33
    NasdaqCM - NasdaqCM Real Time Price.
    1.3201+0.1001 (+8.20%)

    GOOD VOL
     
    Last edited: May 19, 2023
    #392     May 19, 2023
  3. OTLK VOL>
    Volume-----> 1,112,711
    Avg. Volume ->584,114
     
    #393     May 19, 2023
  4. DE'S ACTION IS NOT GOOD TODAY-- HUGE EARN BEAT UPGRADES AND now worries about inventory builds and lack of demand...
     
    #394     May 19, 2023
  5. FINAL IDEAS FOR MY SON'S ACCOUNT-

    -DO NOT LET ME BUY ANY OF THESE!!!-

    1-IQV

    2-BFH

    3-TTWO
     
    #396     May 19, 2023
  6. IQV IQVIA Holdings Inc.

    $199.44 +3.99 (+2.04%)
     
    #397     May 19, 2023
  7. [​IMG]
    The S&P 500 will crash 30% by December as spending slumps, profits shrink, and banking problems mount, markets guru Larry McDonald warns

    [​IMG]
    Larry McDonald has a goofy ass smile.

    • The S&P 500 will plunge by almost 30% to around 3,000 points by December, Larry McDonald has warned.

    • He sees less government spending, slimmer corporate profits, and banking pressures as key drivers.

    • The founder of "The Bear Traps Report" touts energy and metals as smart bets in a tough environment.
    Brace for the S&P 500 to crash nearly 30% by December, as a triple-whammy of shrinking corporate profits, less government spending, and fractures in the financial system deal a staggering blow to stocks, Larry McDonald has warned.

    The markets guru and founder of "The Bear Traps Report" told Insider this week that he expects the benchmark US stock index to plummet from about 4,200 points today to 3,000 points by the end of this year, which would mark its lowest level since June 2020.

    McDonald made a similar call in early March, when he declared the stock market could tank 30% within the next 60 days. The S&P 500 has gained 5% since then, and is up nearly 10% this year. However, McDonald argued his prediction wasn't totally off the mark.

    "Internally we have crashed," he told Insider. "What hasn't crashed - where I'm wrong - is the capital moved out of these crash spots and into hiding spots."

    McDonald meant that investors have sold a bunch of blue-chip stocks in recent weeks, but instead of parking the proceeds in Treasuries as he expected, they've plowed them into other stocks they view as more resilient to a recession. Their picks have included Hershey's, McDonald's, Dick's Sporting Goods, and artificial-intelligence plays such as Nvidia and Microsoft.

    Indeed, about a fifth of the S&P 500's constituents are down at least 10% this year, and around half the index is in the red, SlickCharts data shows. That means the index's almost double-digit gain since January has been driven by a relatively small number of stocks.

    Worrying signs
    McDonald is a former trader and the author of "A Colossal Failure of Common Sense: The Incredible Inside Story of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers." He drew several parallels between the current market setup, and the backdrop before his former employer collapsed in 2008 and touched off the Global Financial Crisis.

    "It's a slow-moving trainwreck," he said, listing off several flashing indicators that signal pain lies ahead for investors and the US economy. "The serpent is near, the beast inside the market is telling you something."

    For example, McDonald singled out the nearly 30% drop in MetLife stock this year, and noted large insurers don't usually lag the market by a huge amount "unless something very big is happening." He suggested the decline reflects concerns about the company's vast commercial real-estate portfolio, which has likely come under pressure from higher interest rates and tighter credit.

    The veteran market analyst laid out the factors he expects to drag stocks down by 30% over the next seven months or so. He asserted that post-pandemic government largesse has helped to stave off a recession, but Republicans could soon force the Biden administration to rein in its spending in exchange for raising the debt ceiling.

    "That's going to let a lot of air out of the balloon," he said. "S&P earnings have been supported by ridiculous deficit spending."

    McDonald also made the case that stock valuations should recede given the current financial turmoil. Several banks have collapsed or been rescued by bigger rivals in recent weeks, stoking concerns that lenders might pull back to protect themselves from bank runs, and inadvertently cause a credit crunch.

    Moreover, American consumers and businesses are feeling the squeeze from historic inflation and higher interest rates, which is putting pressure on asset prices and threatening to drag the economy into a recession. The prospect of less spending and investment, stricter lending, steeper debt payments, and greater unemployment bodes poorly for corporate profits and stock prices.

    McDonald offered some advice for weathering the downturn he's expecting. He cautioned against owning the main US stock indices as they're too exposed to high-flying tech stocks. Instead, he recommended beaten-down, cyclical stocks in sectors such as energy, and hard assets such as gold, silver, and platinum.
     
    #398     May 20, 2023
  8. Good Sat.

    Up in Ct my wife reports that we have a pack of wild Coyotes - / So this spring the lack of deer has been very evident. Thank God, less flower munching... I was wondering why. I thought maybe the bear was around but indeed it's a different predator.

    [​IMG]
    Stock Market Keeps Rallying, Defying Doom Scenarios
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    Stock Market Keeps Rallying, Defying Doom Scenarios


    (Bloomberg) -- A recession will torpedo stocks. Or banking turmoil. Or a government default, or falling earnings, or a too-aggressive Federal Reserve.

    Doom-saying is never in short supply when stocks are rallying. Lately, it’s reached fevered levels. Could all the pessimism be revving up price action that just pushed the S&P 500 to its highest level in nine months? In the sometimes contrarian world of investing, stranger things have happened.

    When everyone’s leaning one way, it doesn’t take much to coax them to the other. And even after a 17% rally in the S&P 500 since October, bearishness is the rule in equities. Sentiment among money managers dipped in May to the lowest level this year, according to a Bank of America Corp. survey. While allocation to stocks crept up, in part because of price appreciation, money was shifting to the safety of technology and out of economically sensitive shares like banks.

    Hedge funds, whose caution paid off last year, are sticking to their guns. Those tracked by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. last week saw their cyclical holdings falling to the lowest level since October 2020 relative to defensive shares, according to data compiled by the firm’s prime brokerage unit.

    Whatever catastrophe they have in mind, it hasn’t come to pass — yet. As equities march higher, bears are forced to unwind positions. Regional lenders, a group targeted by short sellers during the latest banking turmoil, jumped almost 8% over five days for the best week in 16 months.

    “The longer the market goes without collapsing, the more tenuous it’s going to get for the bears,” said Andrew Slimmon, a senior portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley Investment Management. “The market extracts the biggest pain it can and the pain trade is higher.”
     
    #399     May 20, 2023
  9. Opportunity...?

    Price Performance
    In the past year, the stock has decreased 47.7% compared with the industry’s decline of 7.2%. Strong fundamentals of Bread Financial are likely to help the stock bounce back.

    [​IMG]
     
    #400     May 20, 2023