In this episode, Bill Gundersen breaks down the state of energy stocks with an in-depth look at solar and natural gas. As solar developments make headlines, Bill discusses their long-term impact on data centers and the broader energy market. He also shares intriguing insights into companies shifting their business models towards Bitcoin investments. Plus, stay tuned for the latest updates on stock performance across various sectors.
SPEAKER 02 :
He’s been seen on CNBC, the Fox News Channel, and the Fox Business Channel. His articles can be found on MarketWatch, Seeking Alpha, TheStreet.com, and many other places. He’s the author of the weekly Best Stocks Now newsletter and the inventor of the Best Stocks Now app. He’s president of Gundersen Capital Management. Here is professional money manager Bill Gundersen.
SPEAKER 05 :
And welcome to the Tuesday morning. It is July the 22nd edition of the Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson broadcasting from an unknown remote location somewhere in the continental U.S. We have a mixed market so far here this morning with the NASDAQ down. I’m seeing the AI stocks under pretty heavy pressure this morning. The NASDAQ is down 83 basis points right now, or 172 points. I’ve got to believe that there’s a little bit of a downgrade taking place there. And, you know, it’s a very crowded trade also. The Dow, on the other hand, is up 57. Got some earnings reports from Coca-Cola, Philip Morris, a few others. The Dow closes in on a new all-time high. The S&P is down 18 points to 6,287. The Russell 2000 is flat right now. The 10-year Treasury interest rates are pretty flat right now. The 10-year right now is at 4.36, so down a little bit. We’ve got gold up again today. It had a very strong day yesterday. Good day for the gold stocks yesterday. Gold is up another two-thirds of a percent today. Silver, which has been on a tear. It’s getting very close to $40 per ounce, $39.49. And Bitcoin is up $819,000 to $119,504. So welcome to today’s Best Stocks Now show on this Tuesday, July the 22nd. This is Bill Gunderson, professional money manager for the last 25 years, and I’m here with Barry Tite, our chartered financial analyst. And, Barry, we saw new all-time highs yesterday in the NASDAQ, which was up 78 points, the S&P up 9, but we’re seeing some heavy selling pressure today. I’ve got to believe there’s some kind of influential market analyst calling some kind of, you know, issues or warnings maybe on the very crowded AI trade.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, and valuations too, right? I mean, you’ve hit it for a couple of months now just in terms of where valuations are and the reason to be cautious given the experience we’ve seen in the past when you get some elevated PE ratios.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yes, and it’s a very crowded trade. Now, the question is, and the key to all of this is, is nobody knows how high momentum will carry these stocks, this sector, whether it’s the nuclear sector, whether it’s the AI sector, whether it’s the chip sector. The valuations are definitely very, very rich right now. And the thing that’s keeping those stocks afloat is momentum. And we know that momentum is a fleeting thing. You know, a football team can have some great momentum. A horse can have some great momentum. And it doesn’t take much to lose that momentum. And once you lose it, it’s kind of hard to get it back. So, you know, the momentum for me shows up mostly in the charts on a daily basis. That’s why I always watch the upwards progress of these charts. But at the same time, I’m looking below what’s underneath at very important support levels. And cracks through those support levels many times are the beginning of that loss of momentum. So we have to watch this very, very carefully. We have to be on our toes all the time, especially as valuations get high. You know, you could have thrown a dart back on March 8th of this year when we had the S&P at 4,800. Most people, even the most loftiest target prices on the S&P 500 this year were maybe around 6,300, and that’s where we are. And we’ve still got a little under six months left to go in the year, Barry. Now, I am seeing some growth. revisions higher in the S&P 500, but some of them are ridiculous. I saw, for instance, Jeffries today raising their target price for this year on the S&P 500 to $5,800.
SPEAKER 03 :
I saw that yesterday, and I was like, do we need to catch up? $5,800, like, what do they expect, right? Of course, they’re using…
SPEAKER 05 :
you know type of uh we better we look pretty silly with our current valuation we better up at some and they’re using a 20 pe too by the way so that’s uh you know that’s yeah and the market’s using a 22 right now and that’s too rich how long can the market maintain that 22 that that’s the big guess you know i’ve seen it go to 30 before uh but again that’s why we watched that uh That’s why we watch those charts every single day. It pays to be a chart watcher, and it pays to be a guy who does valuations on all the stocks in the market that you’re able to do a valuation on. Well, you know what? We’ve got the Fed. Has he spoke already? That was at 8.30 a.m. That could be what’s upsetting the market, too, here today. You had Jerome Powell. speaking at 8.30 a.m. Now, that could be part of why the market’s down, the NASDAQ and the high flyers. And then at 1 p.m., you’re going to get the Fed’s Bowman speech. He’s one of the guys out there. And they definitely influence the markets and any kind of negativity on rate hikes or rate cuts coming in between now and the end of the year, most of the market expecting two. But when those guys speak, the market definitely does react. Okay, after the close tomorrow, is tomorrow Tesla’s earnings? I believe it is.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yep, we’ll get Tesla, and I think we get Google at the – I think it’s at the close tomorrow, if I’m not mistaken. But, yeah, you had – looking, of course, your headline of the newsletter this week in terms of earnings off to a hot start. I think you had 90% of companies beat estimates last week, and we’ve got 125 total companies – reporting this week in the S&P 500. Busy week of earnings and a good blend. It’s not just the financials like we usually start out with in terms of earnings. We get a couple of magnificent seven companies in terms of Tesla and Google this week, and we get a lot of Raytheon, RTX, and we get a number of defense names, consumer names all across the board this week, so it’ll be interesting.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, and today we’ve already gotten quite a few consumer staples, and I was joking with my wife yesterday. I said, you know, all those stocks that I bad mouth, uh, not that they’re bad companies. They’re just single digit. Yeah. We had a bunch of them transfer in yesterday. Like I’ve been monitoring 153 stocks that we own across the board here at Gunderson capital. And yesterday I saw 183 was the, was the list. I go, Oh, somebody transferred in a bunch of stocks. I won’t mention any names obviously, but, uh, And guess what? I told my wife, I said, this poor guy must have been listening to my radio show and looking at his portfolio and seeing, oh, that’s one Bill hates. Oh, that’s another one. He either called his broker and said, hey, pal, you know what? You got me in all these soggy stocks. I’m moving on. Or he did it to himself. I don’t know. But all the usual names were there, Procter & Gamble and the And the like. I could go on and on. But anyways, I told my wife, you know what? Our message resonates. And, you know, unfortunately, the vast majority of investors out there, if you’re with one of these big nationwide firms, they’re in all of these 2%, 3% growth stocks. Growth goes in the quotation marks. I don’t really call it 2% or 3% growth stock. I call it a dividend payer. That’s pretty much what that is. And usually that slow growth shows up in the returns of the stock. And we’ll have a few examples today. Coca-Cola, for instance, reported today. We’ll take a look at their track record on what they’ve performed, what they’ve done to investors other than energize them in the morning with their Diet Coke That’s certainly helpful, but as an investor, I want to see some returns in my stocks, too. Anyways, we’re also going to get, I saw a few other interesting ones tomorrow. GE Vernova. Oh, boy, AT&T, that’s always fun. That gives me something to rag on. IBM is going to report tomorrow. They’ve actually done fairly decently recently. ServiceNow, Chipotle. and a few others. And then Intel on Thursday. I can hardly wait for Intel. We’ll be right back. And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s Best Stocks Now show. Just looking at a few charts this morning. The ones so far that jump off the page at me. AEHR, which is a smaller chip-related stock. Toll Brothers, which is a home builder. A very nice earnings report from them today and a very nice breakout in that stock. Believe it or not, the solar stocks are having a very good day today. And I’ll tell you why. Zuckerbox is going to build one of the biggest solar farms in the world in Texas. And it’s going to provide all the power to one of his data center plants. Well, we’ve been saying that solar can’t keep up or supply the energy for those plants. Apparently, I don’t know how big the solar farm is. Maybe it’s half the state of Texas, Barry.
SPEAKER 03 :
Think about the scale. I mean, when you say the biggest, you put these two things together and it’s hard, no pun intended, it’s hard to compute in my head when you’ve got you know, what, the largest solar project, right? And then, of course, it’s going to power one data center? Just one? One data center. Just one. Okay.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah. I think a nuclear power plant could probably power 27. I don’t know what the – you’d have to do the math on that.
SPEAKER 03 :
But it is something you can ramp up quickly. It is something you can ramp up quickly. That’s the difference. I mean, of course, you’ve got GEV, which is going to report this week. They can – You just add that on to a current power plant and fire it with natural gas, and it’s producing power pretty quickly in terms of ramp up. Solar would be kind of, I guess, you can ramp solar up a little faster. And then, of course, further, further out, as we talk about long duration, is some of those nuclear, building a nuclear power plant and actually having it come online.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, exactly. So anyways, the SEDG is doing well today, which is SEDG. And the other one is the one that’s getting the most activity out of that solar farm. Oh, let’s see, which one was? Well, DQ out of China is getting a lot of activity. of action out of it but uh no it’s the one that uh what’s the tech what’s the technology huh in phase yeah in phase is the one that’s getting the most action in that from that uh announcement by zuckerbucks okay uh the other funny one there’s two more charts i want to mention here this big lorry which is bh they own steak and shake Now, I’ve never been to a Steak and Shake. Have you ever been to a Steak and Shake in Florida?
SPEAKER 03 :
That’s about as close as we get to, and it’s not even comparable to In-N-Out, but it’s about the closest you could get in the southeast hemisphere in terms of milkshake and combo with a burger.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, but, you know, their business model is now buying Bitcoin. And that’s kind of Trump’s business model with his Truth Social. He bought, or the company bought, $2 billion worth of Bitcoin. And I’m seeing all these companies, you know, just stocking up. MicroStrategy, obviously, is the leader, one of the top-performing stocks over the last five years. It is the top-performing stock. And their main business model these days is buying Bitcoin. And, you know, a few others. I saw this morning a European biotech. A biotech. Guess who they’re investing their money in? GameStop. So go figure. A biotech investing in GameStop, which has basically also changed their whole business model. That’s Ryan Cohen. who also owns Chewy or manages Chewy, he’s also investing heavily in Bitcoin. That’s his business model. Now, the legit one here today, Agnico Eagle, which we own, that’s a beautiful chart on Agnico Eagle, AEM, it’s up 2.5% today. It’s in gold, okay? You know, I’ve always just wondered, if push comes to shove, And, you know, someone’s got a gun to your head, and you pull a gold coin out of your pocket saying, you know, we’d probably shoot you anyways. But let’s say you had to get out of Dodge. When we were in San Diego, a lot of Vietnamese refugees that got out of Vietnam, they got out because they had gold sewed into their clothing and were able to bribe. I’m just wondering if they’d have handed a guy their Bitcoin credit card, right, for Robinhood. I think you’d probably get shot in the head. What’s this? This ain’t going to cut it. I don’t know. You just don’t know. Is Bitcoin really going to be that value? We’ll see. We’ll find out. Nico Eagle is a big miner of gold. And the gold had a very good day. And the gold stocks, I thought maybe they were done for the year, but they’re getting a second life here. Maybe some of that AI money is going back into gold again. But AEM is also a good chart today. Okay, now the European trade chart. It sounds like it’s going to be 15% to 20% somewhere in there. And, of course, they’re going to retaliate with 15% to 20% of their own. That’s what it sounds like. But it sounds like they’re not making a whole lot of progress. And we’re coming up, we’re just nine, ten days away from August 1st, which is that deadline. So it’s kind of all eyes on Europe. That seems to be the one they’re working the hardest on right now. Now, as far as biotechs go, here’s the downside of owning a biotech. REPL is down 80% today as the FDA rejects its lead drug for skin cancer, which, you know, I mean, it would be nice to find something to help with skin cancer, which is a pretty common occurrence. And that one…
SPEAKER 03 :
That’s the pitfalls of the biotech industry. A lot of times it’s either kind of like code, a zero or a one, right? It either makes it or it doesn’t, and that’s a chart that looks like it had a bad announcement.
SPEAKER 05 :
It may not come back. I had a friend in San Diego. She was the human resource manager, did all the hiring and firing for a small biotech in San Diego. And one day, I mean, the results came back and everything was rejected, you know, by the FDA. She had to tell everybody, your job ends, your last day is this Friday. As they basically closed down and shut their doors, it was all over. All the money they had raised, all the laboratory equipment, all the work they did, the scientists did. All in one fell swoop, it came to an end. So you have to be careful there. The U.K. government gives final green light to the Sizewell nuclear power plant. So you’ve got Europe. In Europe, you’ve got France is heavily involved in nuke energy. And now you’ve got the U.K. and the company involved there. I added it to my database this morning. It’s called the Centrica, and the symbol is CPYYY. Well, I guess because, because, because. But I did answer, I did put that stock, CPYYY, in the database, Best Stocks Now. It is a $10 billion small cap company. but they’ll be building a nuclear power plant in the UK. We’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 04 :
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 GundersonCapital.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 1 :
We’ve got to get together soon.
SPEAKER 05 :
And welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Box Now show. And earnings season continues. As Barry said, 125 S&P 500 companies will report earnings this week for the S&P. And so by this Friday, we should have a very good idea. I said it was off to a good start. And the evidence The facts that I use for that is we started the quarter with expectations for 4.8% growth in earnings versus the same comparable quarter last year. And after the first week of earnings, that number went up to 5.6% as the companies pretty much came in across the board stronger. than expected earnings. And so we’ll see. Who knows? Maybe this week we’ll go up to seven and a half, seven. I don’t know. We’ll find out this weekend. Okay. Natural gas has been under heavy pressure. You know, it’s very difficult. You know, it’s hard enough to invest in oil. But natural gas is even more volatile because it’s so plentiful. I think that’s the biggest issue with natural gas. It’s very plentiful. And it doesn’t take too much to fill that supply chain with supply and drive prices down. But I see that the EQT, which is probably one of the better natural gas stocks out there, CEO Toby Wright says that the U S needs to cut permit time for natural gas, uh, natural gas projects or risk losing the AI rates. Well, we just talked about, uh, Zucker box is building an all solar data center in Texas. And, of course, the race is on. They’re scrambling to get more nuclear power online to have all these data centers. But the third and fourth would be natural gas, would be another one. But one stock that we own in our new value and growth, our value relative growth portfolio, take a look at Peabody Energy today. Look at that chart. I picked that one up a while back in that portfolio, which is about a little over halfway built out so far. I aim to have 35 to 40 stocks in there when it’s fully invested. We currently have maybe 23, 24-something, and one of those is Peabody Energy, BTU, which is actually a coal flake. And let’s not forget that Trump believes that there’s got to be a bridge between our current state of energy and future energy, whether it’s solar and wind or nuclear, which takes even longer. But in the meantime, there’s got to be a bridge to power all of this stuff. BTU is up 8.6% today. It’s one of the bigger winners in the market, and we own the Peabody BTU in the value. Why? The PE ratio is 6. It’s expecting 685% growth this year in earnings, and it’s trading at a PE of just 6. headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri. Peabody Energy, looking pretty good. Who’s paying the tariffs? Well, the tariffs are there. They’re in place. I’m seeing it show up here and there in things that I buy on a regular basis. It looks mostly like the U.S. importers are bearing the brunt of the tariff costs so far. And as I’ve been saying, you know, those tariff costs are spread out amongst the manufacturers that manufacture the product, and they probably bear the least of the burden because it costs so much to manufacture a product. But they, I’m sure, do bear some of that burden. But it’s that middleman, the importer. There’s the real brunt of who bears the burden. the brunt of those, uh, tariffs. And it looks like the importers, then of course you’ve got, uh, the actual, uh, consumer themselves. And, uh, Wells Fargo has been saying that, you know, that’s going to start showing up in the inflation numbers. It hasn’t yet. Okay. It has not yet. Uh, but, uh, that’s where that, uh, that’s where who pays those tariffs. Okay. The 10 stocks fueling the NASDAQ rally in 2025, and these are probably all the stocks that are under pressure today. Number one, Palantir, 102%. Who’s the guy who said, I think we know this guy, who said at the closing bell of the NASDAQ back in early January that my top pick for 2025 was Palantir? Not bad, Barry, up 102%, the number one performer in the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ so far this year. Number two, Zscaler, up 60%. Number three, KLA 10 Core, up 50%. Strategy Incorporated, which is Michael Saylor’s company built on cryptocurrency, it’s up 48% year-to-date. DoorDash is up 44%. The fastest-coring restaurant stock out there in DoorDash. Constellation Energy, number 6, up 42%. Lamb Research, number 7, up 41%. CrowdStrike, number 8, up 40%. MercadoLibre, number 9, up 40%. And number 10, Netflix, up 37.3%. Well… We were just talking about steak and shake and In-N-Out burgers. And it’s not even lunchtime yet, Barry, here on the East Coast. We’ve got an hour and 15 minutes. Did you know that Tesla opened up a futuristic diner in Los Angeles? And he’s planning more. I also saw, speaking of Los Angeles.
SPEAKER 03 :
Do we have robots? Do we have robots serving the food?
SPEAKER 05 :
Yes, they have robots. They have a drive-in theater, a little drive-in theater. They have a Tesla burger with electric sauce. They have 80 V4 supercharger stalls, audio sync directly to Tesla speakers. It also serves up a full menu. So anyways, and I also did see, speaking about burgers, did you see that the CEO of In-N-Out Burger is moving the headquarters of In-N-Out to Tennessee?
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, moving to Tennessee, I think the word was still didn’t say, still didn’t commit to building some in and outs here on the eastern seaboard. But, yeah, moving, when I was in Nashville, when I first moved to Nashville, Nissan had just came from L.A., So Nissan moved their headquarters from L.A. to Nashville, an area just south of Nashville called Cool Springs. But, yeah, all of those people came over, and a lot of them I don’t think have left. So taxes is better, and the cost of doing business is better.
SPEAKER 05 :
He’s obviously a billionaire. I mean, there was that plane crash that killed most of the family, and she survived. I think she’s a granddaughter of the founder. She’s a billionaire. And her reason for leaving California was it’s too difficult to do business in California. So I hope Gavin Newsom’s listening. I don’t think it even matters to him. They really don’t seem to care. But, I mean, that’s kind of a gem of a company. that’s leaving California as far as their headquarters go. And, of course, a lot of tech has left California for Austin, Texas, and a few other places. Well, the railroads continue to consolidate. BNS, which is the combined companies, when they combine, you had Burlington Northern and Santa Fe, to create BNSF, they hire Goldman Sachs looking for a merger partner or whatever, and CSX seeks bankers as Union Pacific Rail sparks a rail M&A race. So I know that rail is not what it once was, but there’s obviously still a need to use, especially in transporting a lot of goods. That would take a lot of trucks to transport. So, you know, it wasn’t that long ago that the stock market was driven by the transportation index, which included the railroads, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
The old Dow theory, right? The transportation of transports. Exactly.
SPEAKER 05 :
Well, Google’s AI model gets a gold medal at the Global Math event. And I’ve noticed that Google’s stock has been pretty perky. I think we’ll talk a little bit about Google and Embraer, the metal company, Coca-Cola, and BYDDF when we come back.
SPEAKER 1 :
Music
SPEAKER 07 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Docs Now.
SPEAKER 05 :
The first talk I want to talk about here in this last segment is Embraer out of Brazil, where They continue to try to hash out some kind of an agreement down there. And, of course, that seems to be more political than anything with Brazil going, the current leader Lula going after Bolsonaro. But anyways, the Embraer is caught up in the middle of it. But I see the news on Embraer today, ERJ. that they hit a record $29.7 billion backlog in Q2. So there’s a lot of demand for the planes that Embraer produces. The company delivered 61 aircraft in Q1, which is up 30% year over year. So we continue to hold our Embraer in the value portfolio. And it’s definitely, I think, on a relative basis right now. The forward PE currently is at 22. Let’s see, that’s the PE. The forward PE, yeah, about 22 or so. that’s relatively inexpensive so this could be a good buying opportunity and bro they certainly have the backlog that’s going to keep them busy for quite some time now well speaking of hopping on planes we’ll hop and speaking of hopping on planes we’ll be in detroit two weeks from today you’ll be doing a uh a workshop there uh in bloomfield hills right yeah two weeks from today and uh The word is, if it’s filling up, you better call Edie quickly, 855-611-BEST, 855-611-BEST, and we’re looking at adding another day. We’re going to have appointments all day Tuesday, all day Wednesday, two long days, and it’s looking like we’re going to have to go into Thursday, which is fine by me.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, let’s do it.
SPEAKER 05 :
We’ll meet the folks. But if you want to grab a spot, I know it’s two weeks out, but, boy, those went quick. 855-611-BEST. Now, maritime law, you know, growing up in Point Loma in San Diego, we had a huge tuna fleet. We had a port. We had submarines. We shared an ocean border with Mexico where you get into, you know, like how many miles out until you get into international waters and all this and that. You had Top Gun pretty close? Yeah, I had friends that when they graduated from high school, they got their law degrees in maritime law. And you go down around like Shelter Island or whatnot, you know, you’re getting into some pretty complicated business. You know, when you’re taking tuna and feigning a bunch of tuna in Mexican waters or whatever. You know, that’s pretty – well, those days are kind of over. You know, you have to be out in international waters. It gets pretty complicated. But where it’s coming into play today is these companies that are looking for rare earth under the ocean. The rare earth stock sold off yesterday, the metals company. uh that’s a seabed mining company there’s worries that president trump’s recent order pledging to open international waters to mining conflicts with long-standing law of the sea treaty which could expose tmc to legal risk so now you’re getting into some some deep water pardon the pun oh man uh you know i mean that comes with two also i mean When they recover these boats that went down with loads of gold doubloons on them and whatnot, you’re getting into some tricky waters there, and that’s hitting these rare earth stocks right now. BYDDF is having a good day. They’re going to slow down their productivity a little bit. And let’s just go over a soggy stock right now. We don’t own Coca-Cola. You know, many days it helps me through the day with that Diet Cherry Coke. You know, when I looked at about 500 charts, it’s time for a Diet Cherry Coke. A little pepper up there. But as far as an investment, okay, KO has not exactly been a knockout stock, and yet It’s all owned by the big institutions. They just load up on Coca-Cola. Never mind that over the last 10 years, you could say this. Okay, look, I’ve gotten an 8.9% return over the years, over the last 10 years from Coca-Cola. That’s not bad. That’s doubling my money every seven and a half, eight years. But the problem is, I mean, if you compare it with the market, which we define as the S&P 500 in this case, Coca-Cola has well underperformed the market. The market’s averaged 19.7% per year, Coca-Cola 8.8%, and it continues to underperform the market. Over the last 12 months, it’s up 10.6%, market’s up 13.8%. And over the last three years, Coca-Cola has only delivered 7.5, S&P 21.6. And the answer as to why is quite easy. It’s because they don’t have the earnings growth to keep up with the S&P 500. With the average company out there in the S&P 500, So when you have sub-average growth, you’re going to get sub-average performance.
SPEAKER 03 :
73% institutional ownership, by the way. How much?
SPEAKER 1 :
73%.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah.
SPEAKER 05 :
So, I mean, you’re just not going to move a big aircraft carrier like that without the growth. It’s just not there. Now, Raytheon has reported it’s down 1.5%. You would have to say that of the American defense stocks, the big ones, Raytheon is definitely the biggest one because of their Patriot missile franchise, shooting down all of those incoming rockets. Think of how many that Israel has burned through. But you know what? It’s still a tough industry. Now, Raytheon over the last 12 months is up 49%. I mean, it’s had a hot 12 months. The S&P is 13.8. But over the longer haul, you know, it’s been a pretty sluggish performer. And the last thing I would look at here would be their valuation. Five-year upside potential, only 62.7. So it’s very subpar. I like 80% or more upside potential. Well, there you go. There’s quite a bit of data information for you to chew on here from today’s show. Definitely a rough day for the big tech leadership stocks in the market today. And we’ve got to watch that momentum. It can be fleeting. And those technical charts very, very closely here going forwards. To get the whole enchilada offer from us for four weeks, go to GundersenCapital.com to set up an appointment with us to get out of those soggy stocks. 855-611-BEST. 855-611-BEST. Have a great day, everybody.
SPEAKER 01 :
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 SIBC and FINRA.