In this episode of the Best Stocks Now show, professional money manager Bill Gunderson and chartered financial analyst Barry Kite dive deep into the dynamic world of stock market analysis, focusing on the highly-anticipated earnings report from NVIDIA. As they examine the ripple effects of market fluctuations, they provide insights into the collapse and recovery of AI and tech stocks. Bill and Barry dissect the contributing factors to the economic landscape, discussing the surprising drop in oil prices and the significant movements in interest rates, all without any intervention from the Fed.
SPEAKER 05 :
Here is professional money manager, Bill Gunderson.
SPEAKER 02 :
And welcome to the Wednesday. It is the NVIDIA reports earnings after the close today edition of the Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management. And I’m here with Barry Kite, our chartered financial analyst. It looked to me the last two days like the seven-day drubbing. that the AI, the NASDAQ underwent was stabilizing, and it looked like it was about over. And so far, I mean, we’re out of the gate pretty strong this morning with the NASDAQ up almost 1%. The NASDAQ is up 153 points. But really back to where it started the year at. Maybe it’s up just a little bit now. The Dow is up a little bit here today. It’s up 30 basis points. Lowe’s has reported. The Dow up 125. The S&P is up 35 points today. And that’s a 60 basis point gain. The Russell 2000 up 1.1% today. The surprise for me… is seeing the 10-year below 4.3 for the first time this year. It’s down to 4.29%. And that’s without any help from the Fed. That just seems to be a couple of different things contributing to that. But that’s good news for the economy. And also seeing oil below $70 for the first time this year, and a long time actually, $68.93 on oil today. So welcome to… Today’s Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson. And over the years, Barry, there’s been this company and that company. I can remember when Apple was the big earnings report every quarter just to see how much their new iPhone had brought in. And over time it’s been different ones, different stocks. I would say right now NVIDIA is probably the biggest report of the quarter. The quarter is almost over, right? It’s 90% in the books, but I think NVIDIA’s earnings are more important than any other company out there these days.
SPEAKER 01 :
Well, I think you called it where they ended up having a string of them, but at that one point where you called NVIDIA’s kind of that one earnings report, I guess it seems more like around March of 2023 now, so almost two years long in the tooth here. But when they reported, you just called it kind of the most important earnings report ever. Yes. And, of course, that kicked off this almost two-year run.
SPEAKER 02 :
This whole AI explosion. Right. Right. And the fact that NVIDIA gets put into the Dow Jones Industrial Average. I’ve never seen a company…
SPEAKER 01 :
Right, once they split.
SPEAKER 02 :
That young going into the Dow. So that’s pretty an amazing run there for NVIDIA. And we’ll see where they’re at in that run tonight after the close. Just from my perspective and all the news items that I read on a daily basis, I don’t see AI fever letting up. Maybe it’s decelerating a little bit from its heyday, but… With DeepSeek out there now, and now you’ve got Elon Musk, Grok. He had to buy a lot of NVIDIA chips to put that together. And they’re going to have to keep up with the Joneses. And you’ve got ChatGPT, and you’ve got Google with their efforts. I would expect a pretty strong quarter tonight from NVIDIA. Well, the tech stocks were down once again yesterday, but in my note that I sent out, I said that, you know, they seem to be stabilizing to me after a pretty good drubbing, a good seven-day kick in the pants, which really was led by Palantir. It was the news that the government leaked memo that the government going to spend 8% less on defense this year, or that’s the plan. and that really sent Palantir south and the entire AI sector. Now, today, looking underneath the surface of the market, the nuclear stocks are just on fire today, and the AI stocks are on fire. Now, NVIDIA could either throw radiation or gasoline on that fire after the close tonight, or they could douse it, right, with a big dose of water. I saw the weirdest thing yesterday. You know, I live on a saltwater river. I don’t know if there was a fire by us or they were practicing. I’ve never seen this before, but here comes a seaplane landing on the river behind me, scooping up water and taking off. And then another one coming right behind it. And I thought, God, I could put water skiing behind this guy. It was quite a sight to see. And they probably did it ten times.
SPEAKER 01 :
Really? They do some of those controlled burns over on that big place over there.
SPEAKER 02 :
So something was going on. And, you know, so, I mean, NVIDIA could land and scoop up a bunch of water and douse it right on this burgeoning fire that’s growing in the NASDAQ this morning. You never know. The bad news is we’re back to where we began in 2025, easy come, easy go. I’ve seen times like that. I sent in my note, I said, this is the 1,997,627,000 correction that I’ve seen in the last 25 years, so I’ve been through them. This one was pretty swift and pretty hard kick to the gut. Oil, now below $70 per barrel for the first time in a long time. Now, is that Trump’s efforts of drill, baby, drill? Or is the economy slowing? Is it the consumer sentiment numbers? I don’t know, but that’s good news for the economy, getting oil under $70. gasoline is going to be cheaper at the gas pump you’re going to have a little extra coinage in your pocket afterwards to go out to dinner get yourself a one dollar egg mcmuffin i see uh mcdonald’s is kind of like in your face with these egg surcharges we’re going to offer one dollar egg mcmuffins yeah their chickens must not have uh have the bird flu huh Well, I wonder what percent of eggs in America end up at McDonald’s every day at the Waffle House.
SPEAKER 01 :
I’ve seen that number before for McDonald’s, and I’ll find it. It’s a pretty remarkable number.
SPEAKER 02 :
It’s got to be a pretty. I’m sure they get first pick, you know, Gunderson and a dozen eggs that last me a month. You know, I’m at the bottom of the heap on that supply chain. McDonald’s, they get all they want, I’m sure. And also, surprisingly, when Trump took office, the tenure was at 4.8 up around there. It’s at 4.3. It’s come down 50 basis points without the Fed. And, you know, that was one of the strategies that our Charleston Treasury Secretary had, was we’re going to drive down interest rates on our own by becoming a more responsible government. Now, whether it’s that… or it’s a weakening economy and a flight to safety or a combination thereof, having oil under 70, having interest rates under 4.3, that’s the lowest point this year. These are good developments, both of these, for the economy. Okay, so five-week low yesterday is what we hit in the market. Trade and tariff drama and consumer confidence, I would say, are the three things, factors, and, you know, some individual stocks. Palantir was the leading tech stock up until a week ago. It’s still one of the best tech stocks out there right now. But, you know, when they get way ahead of themselves and any kind of a warning comes out, you see what happens. And that could happen with NVIDIA today.
SPEAKER 01 :
We don’t know. And the interesting thing is we really don’t even know how much it’s going to affect Palantir. And, I mean, you’ve shaved off, you know, a quarter or close to a quarter of the stock price. Yeah.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yes, yes. So anyways, I did quite a bit of buying yesterday. I was very busy buying yesterday. And for new people coming in, I can think of several of the nuke players like Constellation Energy, Vistra. That was good timing. They are way up today. Oklo, et cetera. And I did another, I did quite a bit. I probably made seven or eight buys yesterday. So if you’re on the free trial, the four-week free trial, we had some fun yesterday.
SPEAKER 01 :
You got some emails yesterday, didn’t you?
SPEAKER 02 :
Yes, they got a lot of emails coming into their box yesterday. You’ll find that there are some days when I’m very busy in the trading because the conditions are right. I took advantage of these pullbacks, which obviously tells you that Bill Gunderson is still bullish on the market. We don’t have an earnings problem on the market. We don’t have an economy problem on the market. From time to time, the market gets ahead of itself and has to correct. It gets too exuberant. and has to come back to earth a little bit. We’ve had some earnings here today. We’ll go through those a little bit later. I remember seeing TJ Maxx, Lowe’s, which is a big one, Lucid Group, which is probably the third biggest American EV player. Workday, Intuit. We’ll go over all those a little bit later in the show. But when we come back, there’s a lot happening. There is a lot happening in the world, in the country, and in the market. We’ll be right back. And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s Best Stocks Now show. Well, when NVIDIA reports today, analysts are expecting 64% growth In year-over-year earnings. So, you know, if you go back to 2023, they were 220% growth, okay? So, yes, it’s moderated. But to add another 64% on top of four quarters in a row of triple-digit growth, It’s still just phenomenal what NVIDIA has accomplished. And I still go back to NVIDIA being a graphic chip maker for gamers. I mean, that’s where it really cut its teeth. And who would have ever guessed that it would have exploded into this AI stock? than it is today. I mean, it kind of came out of nowhere. The street is also looking for a 73% surge in revenue year over year. So, yes, decelerating, but still unbelievable, unbelievable growth in this whole AI business. Okay, and then we’re also today we’re going to get Salesforce reports. That’s a pretty big one because it’s a member of the Dow.
SPEAKER 01 :
And software aspect of AI.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yes. Teladoc’s going to report. Snowflake is going to report. Lowe’s has already reported. Beyond Meat, eBay, Agilent, and we’ve got Budweiser earnings are in. So that’s about it. I mean, it’s going to be a pretty big evening.
SPEAKER 01 :
So I got the egg number for you, by the way. Okay, what percent of eggs does McDonald’s? They use 13 million eggs a year. Well, okay. That’s a lot more than we eat at our house. That’s over a million dozens. Yeah, okay.
SPEAKER 02 :
That’s a lot of egg cartons. They’ve got to be pretty fresh. I’m sure they turn them over pretty quickly. Okay, Trump says Zelensky meeting on deck as U.S.-Ukraine reach tentative mineral deal. And, you know, I mean, you go through those rare earth minerals and all the uses for them, which they’ve been going over quite a bit, especially military use. Okay, that’s the biggest one that kind of goes under the radar there. the rare earth that’s needed for a lot of the very sophisticated type of military technologies, let alone all the rare earth that is in all the things that we use on an everyday basis. I mean, the deal is he wants half of their rare earth minerals. And a lot of that, 40% of what Ukraine has in rare earth territory is now in really Russian territory. It’s probably going to end up being in Russian territory. So it’s all part of the deal. One side has leverage, the other has very little leverage. They put their cards on the table. I’ll see your raise and I’ll raise you this. That’s what’s going on in the background. But anything that would stop the killing.
SPEAKER 01 :
Well, those rare earths, a lot of those rare earth minerals tend to be in countries that we’re not necessarily the most friendly with, too. No, Kazakhstan. It’s a limited supply already.
SPEAKER 02 :
But China has by far the most of the rare earth. Okay, so yeah, McDonald’s gets customer-friendly with a $1 Egg McMuffin deal and no surcharges for eggs. Take that, Waffle House. Tesla’s market cap falls below $1 trillion as European sales drop. We talked about that yesterday, okay? That’s a big problem. Their sales in Europe were down 48%, number one.
SPEAKER 01 :
In China as well. That’s the other piece.
SPEAKER 02 :
Number two is China because China now has, just like Huawei has crushed Apple’s sales, BYD has crushed Tesla’s sales. So Elon has a Tesla problem. I mean, he’s got a lot of irons in the fire and other companies, but his public company is Tesla.
SPEAKER 01 :
Well, you almost have to have that robo-taxi work. If you don’t have robo-taxi work, then there’s a lot of execution risk. If you don’t hit that, then I think all is for naught.
SPEAKER 02 :
Well, one seeking alpha author, I don’t agree with him, but he’s somewhat right. He says if Tesla’s robo-taxi rollout does not succeed, the market will likely adjust Tesla’s evaluation rate to be more in line with traditional auto companies. Well, I don’t see that happening because GM is like a 10 multiple. If you slap a 10 multiple on Tesla, you’ve got a $38 stock, and it’s 298 right now. But it will definitely ratchet downwards from the multiple that it’s getting right now. Now, if you take a look at Lucid, which I’m going to say is probably number three, Tesla, Rivian, Lucid. Lucid’s down 8.4% today. That doesn’t bode well for Tesla. And I would say this about Tesla. There is a TSLD that Granite Shares puts out, which is short Tesla. And, you know, I got the symbol wrong. I’m not sure what the symbol is. You’d have to look it up. It’s Granite Shares TSDD. It’s double short Tesla. So, you know, over the years, Tesla has been one of the biggest shorted stocks of all time. And if you believe like I do, they’ve got the wind in their face, some severe headwinds. TSDD could either hedge if you’ve got a lot of shares of Tesla, or if you’re negative on the whole EV thing kind of falling apart. We had another piece of evidence on Monday when we see ChargePoint. basically on the verge of becoming defunct. It’s hanging in there, but it’s 68 cents a share or something like that. So that just shows you that the bloom has come off the rose big time in the EV demand. Supermicro, guess what? They finally filed their delayed report. They made the deadline. And that stock, last time I looked, was flying higher today.
SPEAKER 01 :
I think it was up 20% in pre-market.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, 22% right now. And our friends over at Granite Shares, who were kind enough to invite us to the bell-ringing ceremony of the NASDAQ, they have a two-times… uh super micro computer uh maybe it’s one and a half i don’t know if it’s one and it’s smcl smcl i think i got a good memory there it’s up 45 percent today you can you can whip those symbols out yes you know and that and baseball players and kentucky derby winners over there granite shares two times x long smci is up 45 percent now imagine if you had bought some options which sometimes are leveraged, what, 10 to 1, something in that neighborhood. You’re killing it today with your SMC. You know, I always figured that this was all really caused by a short seller. I don’t remember who it was. It was probably, I don’t know, Hindenburg or Heisenberg.
SPEAKER 01 :
I think it was a Hindenburg report, if I’m not mistaken. You had the auditors resign. It just looked weird.
SPEAKER 02 :
It smelled bad, but I figured it was going to end up okay, and it has. I mean, SMCI is still a shell of what it once was, but it’s up 22% today. And they’re still growing at a very fast clip. We’ll be right back. This is Bill Gunderson. Thank you for tuning in to today’s Best Stocks Now, Best Inverse Funds Now show. I put several hours of research in during the wee hours of the morning each day to bring you the very best cutting-edge stories that I can. To get two free weeks of my newsletter, go to GundersenCapital.com. To talk to us about our fee-based only money management services, call us at 855-611-BEST. Now, back to the second half of the show.
SPEAKER 04 :
And back here to the second half of today’s Best Stocks Now show. I’ll tell you another trend.
SPEAKER 02 :
There’s been some big movement in the world, you know, sentiment-wise, going away from one thing to another. BP is going to pivot back to oil and cut. their green spending in strategic reset, but still the stock drifts lower. Well, you know, look, we’re seeing that, obviously, the election of Trump, that was one of the issues, the green energy, and we’re finding that a lot of the green energy funding is not ending up in green energy funding. I’m the guy that was, believe it or not, me, a money manager from San Diego, was the guy that I got tipped off through some good sources that Solyndra was a big warehouse sucking in billions of dollars from the government and not having a viable product and ended up on the Megyn Kelly show. you know, reporting about it. And sure enough, I mean, that building was empty about a month later. And all the billions that went into it from the federal government went up in smoke. There was nothing there. And, you know, I think the election in Germany over the weekend, you know, he was the leader of the Green Party. The previous guy, Scholz, how much Scholz I believe it was, And the new guy is more, I would say, center-right, the Christian Democracy Party. And you’re seeing the, like we just talked about, the E.V. fervor really dying down quite a bit. We’ve seen the switch to nuclear away from solar and wind. I read that one of these big Blackstone or BlackRock just closed a $10 billion or $100 billion private equity fund in renewable energy. Unless they bought nuclear, I would not want to be invested in that thing because it just has not really worked out.
SPEAKER 01 :
Well, and we talked about, I mean, during that whole time period, we talked about it years ago on the show about the fossil fuel industry being underinvested by like $3 trillion because they were making it, whether it was the green initiatives or what have you, in terms of just encouraging investment away from fossil fuels. And BP, Shell, both of them were kind of big proponents of that, and they’ve divested a lot of those investments over the last few years.
SPEAKER 02 :
Remember those CEOs saying that, you know what, this is going to come back to bite us at some point, especially the refineries. Now, in California, our friend Governor Newsom wants to take over the refineries, which that happened in Venezuela, by the way. And they ran all their oil business right into the ground. So anyways, look, the pendulum swings back and forth, but it has definitely swung back hard away from the wind and the solar, which are the two main sources of the green energy and the electric car. definitely have swung back hard the other way as people have seen the limitations on it.
SPEAKER 01 :
And wind has been really the one that’s gotten pushback. I mean, solar is what it is, right? But the wind piece, I mean, that’s really been a debacle. Yeah. In terms of how that’s just the technology and things falling apart. Yep.
SPEAKER 02 :
Well, Lowe’s has the same problem that Home Depot has. I mean, you can look at, we went over the 10-year performance of Home Depot yesterday, and it’s almost exactly the same. Lowe’s and Home Depot are equivalent to each other. Will they ever merge at some point? I don’t know. I doubt it. But over the last 10 years, you know, Lowe’s is a 14.5% average annual return. But that doesn’t include the recent, it does include, But you ought to see the recent years, how much that has dropped. Over the last five years, Lowe’s has been about a market performer. 16% a year, which isn’t bad. It’s not bad. But I think it’s the recent trends. Now, Lowe’s is up today 3%. Home Depot ended up being up 3%. And I just got done cutting boxes. I got my first delivery. I got some gardenias, a couple big gardenia plants. I think I paid $50 per plant. They’re going to be well taken care of, I can tell you that. I’m going to bring them in my room every night with an electric blanket, and I’m going to feed them just straight nitrogen.
SPEAKER 01 :
Sing to them. You’ve got to sing to them and talk to them, too.
SPEAKER 02 :
Yeah, at that price, $53 a shot. And then I’ve got some azaleas, okay? We’ll see, you know, if the deer eat them. I do like deer jerky, and, you know, you kill a deer out of season around here, and you’re probably going to go to prison. So I’ve got to be careful with not losing my temper with a deer that eats a $47 azalea. Over the last three years, Lowe’s has only delivered 6.4% a year. All right, 6.4%. That’s one half of what the S&P 500 has. Over the last 12 months, it’s up 6%. That’s an F plus momentum grade and a B minus performance grade. So if you own Lowe’s and Home Depot today, I would just say it is what it is. They’re both single digit growers. And if stocks follow earnings and earnings go up by single digits, you’re going to get single-digit returns, all things being equal. And so obviously we do not own Home Depot. We do not own Lowe’s. I spend a ton of money at Home Depot. My wife spends a ton of money at Home Depot. But as far as being growth companies anymore, those days are gone. I mean, they’re very slow growers. Companies max out. And they don’t really get the glamour multiples that Walmart gets, that Costco gets, because, you know, they’re more low-margin building supplies. And it is what it is. So even though Lowe’s is having a decent day, they had a decent report, they had comparable sales growth, I would say that right now is probably their busiest. It’s kicking off their season, okay? We’re finally past the freezes here. We’ve had a few here in South Carolina. I hope there’s no more coming. So Bill Gunderson is full speed ahead with moving the tomatoes outside. I’ve got to acclimate them a little bit. out in the weather first. The lettuce, we’re eating homegrown lettuce. We had some beautiful butter lettuce last night right out of the garden. That’s delicious. But it’s time, okay? And Lowe’s is going to crank up and Home Depot, and you’re going to be making a lot of trips over the next few months and cleaning things up. You should see the garbage bags, those big Lowe’s bags full of waste. I weeded my entire garden. from my lunch break yesterday inbev sores how about that bud bud this buds for you they’re over their bud light uh mistake bud light mbev which by the way you think that uh inbev you think that budweiser it is st louis but it’s not an american company anymore belgium owns Budweiser. They bought it, and of course they have other brands, Stella, Artois, Artois, and others. Budweiser’s up 10% today, or 8.4%. But it’s been a lousy stock over the years. Okay, how lousy has it been? Well, this is how lousy it’s been. Budweiser, the king of beers, B-U-D. I remember one time we painted the billboard when I was younger with my father. And it was the can, you know, with all the sweaty, you know, all over it. It’s sweating. And underneath is all of that writing, Budweiser, king of beers. And I remember what it said. There’s quite a bit, you know, actually, that it says down there. Most people don’t read it. But on a big billboard, you’re going to see it. Anyways, Anheuser-Busch, over the last 10 years, an investment in Anheuser-Busch has lost, lost 6.4% per year. That’s Ambev, bud. Lost 6.4%. Over the last five years, it’s lost 3.8%. Over the last three years, it’s lost 3.2%. Now, you see, the app doesn’t lie. You could hold the CEO accountable here. Say, Mr. CEO, you have done terrible. Terrible. You’re probably one of the worst CEOs out there. It’s not like beer sales have dropped off the cliff. Terrible. Terrible stock. Over the last 12 months, down 13%. Most people wouldn’t realize that, but there it is. There’s the numbers right there. Is it a value play? Not really. 58% upside potential. We’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 04 :
White bird in a golden cage On a winter day
SPEAKER 03 :
Do what you want to do with whoever you are.
SPEAKER 02 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Docs Now show. I think the best thing we could… Oh, no. First, before we do that, I set aside. I have to go down to Sarasota and visit my sister. And while we’re there, while I’m there, I’m going to set aside two days. to meet with folks. So it will be first come, first served. It will be Tuesday and Wednesday, March 25th and March 26th at the Westin Hotel. Barry, have you ever been to the Westin? That’s that big one that used to dominate that intersection.
SPEAKER 01 :
I think we’ve been there one time where we were right across the street from it, one or the other. Yeah, maybe the Embassy Suites. It’s a monster. Yeah, I think so.
SPEAKER 02 :
It’s a monster hotel. I really like it. It’s real nice if you’re going to come meet with us. You pull right up in front of the hotel. I cover the valet parking, you know. You can park and they’ll go park your car for you. And when we’re done, they’ll come get your car and open the door for you or I won’t tip them. And I’ll be in there in the lobby area. There’s a nice quiet place there. And here’s how you reserve a spot for that because they will, I’m sure, will fill up. Tuesday, March 25th and Wednesday, March 26th. Tuesday and Wednesday, March 25th, March 26th. Call us at 855-611-BEST. Talk to Edie. I don’t know if I’ve warned Edie yet, but she knows how to do this. She’s been through this drill many times with us. And once we’re done with the Sarasota trip, we’re looking at Cleveland as our next destination. I’ve always wanted to go to Cleveland. And we’re going to go to Cleveland, where we’re now heard daily, up in Cleveland. And then our third trip this year, hopefully all accomplished in the spring of the year here. And we’ll be up to Detroit, the Bloomfield Hills area there in Michigan. Looking forward to all of that, and then we’ll have more trips later this year. But the first one, March 25th, March 26th, Tuesday and Wednesday, from 7 a.m. till 7 p.m. Get your vitamin D. We’ll fit you in there. March 25th, March 26th, if you’d like to meet with Gunderson, 8-5-5-6-11 best. 8-5-5-6-11 best. Okay, I think I want to look inside the indexes today because we have a nice update. In the S&P 500, super microcomputer to the rescue. It’s up 18.6% today. Intuit, now that’s an important software stock. It’s up 13.1%. They own Credit Karma. They own, obviously, what’s their tax thing? TurboTax. They own the QuickBooks. So pretty important software, which is an indicator of business, right, the business environment. It’s up 13%. NRG Energy, which is pretty much on the outskirts of town, but part of that nuclear sector. NRG is up 11.6% today. Arista Networks is up 4.7%. That’s an important AI stock. General Motors is up 4.6%. They raised their dividend. I’m going to run out and buy General Motors GM because they raised their dividend. I have no interest in that stock. NVIDIA up 4.1% today, Barry. Optimistic, optimistic. Broadcom up 4%, Micron up 3.9%. The loser today, S&P, advanced auto parts. When’s the last time you were in an advanced auto parts store? It’s down 13.8%.
SPEAKER 01 :
Last time I was in one of those, it was for windshield wipers, and then I figured out just pick them up at Costco from then on because they were about twice as much as I really wanted to pay for them.
SPEAKER 02 :
I think my last time I was getting on the freeway on the on-ramp, and some guy’s pointing at my tire or something. I go, what the heck?
SPEAKER 01 :
That’s never a good sign. No, no.
SPEAKER 02 :
But I found out it was just like my shirt or something. My jacket was hanging out there. People are funny in South Carolina. They’ll point out things like that. Now, okay, the NASDAQ. Let’s take a look at the NASDAQ. Our friend the NASDAQ. What has TQQ averaged over the last? We figured out it was 36% per year or something like that. Workday. Big news from Workday. You know, look, is that not indicative of the business environment? I mean, Jeff worked in this industry, the software industry. He knows it goes with business cycles. When business is good, people are using Intuit products. When business is good, they’re using Workday. When business is good, they’re using Salesforce. So I think this bodes well for Salesforce’s earnings tonight that these others are doing well. Meta is up 3.2%. Today, and the Chinese stocks are doing pretty good. JD.com is up 8.2%. And if we look at the Dow, which is my least favorite, NVIDIA is the biggest winner in the Dow today. It’s up 4.1%. Apple is down 1.8%. So not much going on there one way or another in the Dow. Okay, we are out of time. There’s a lot going on. The whole world’s going to change at about 4.15 p.m. today, Eastern Standard Time, when NVIDIA reports earnings. Okay, and right now it’s up 4.1%. We could either see those planes that land in the river and scoop up water and then dump it on a fire that’s getting started, which we kind of have in the tech sector today.
SPEAKER 01 :
Get your black leather jackets out for good luck.
SPEAKER 02 :
Or they’re going to drop gasoline on that fire after the close. Yeah, I need to get a black leather. I used to have a nice leather jacket from Tijuana. It was quite nice. Tijuana is known for leather jackets. Jackets. Now, we still have the four-week trial going on. We had a lot of fun yesterday. I hope you ate your vitamins and your Wheaties yesterday because I hit you with about 10 alerts yesterday. Some of them were stocks we already owned that I was picking up for new clients. Timing is everything in the market, obviously. You can’t always get that right, unfortunately. But I try to do my best. That four-week try, you go to GundersenCapital.com to grab an appointment. Two days only. They will go fast. Tuesday, March 25th. Wednesday, March 26th at the Westin Hotel in Sarasota, one of my favorite places to go. Call 855-611-BEST or just skip the appointment. Get an appointment over the phone. Talk to us about money management at 855-611-BEST. Say hi to Edie. She’s the one that does all the appointment setting. 855-611-BEST. Have a great day, everybody.
SPEAKER 06 :
This show is not a solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Bill Gunderson or clients of Gunderson Capital Management may have long or short positions in stocks mentioned during the show. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Gunderson Capital Management is a fee-based registered investment advisory firm. All accounts are held at Charles Schwab. Schwab is a member of SIPC and FINRA.