SPEAKER 01 :
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 04 :
And welcome to the Tuesday. It is the Taco Tuesday edition of the Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson of Gunderson Capital Management. I’m here with Barry Kite, our chartered financial analyst. And oil up. Market down. It’s as simple as that. That’s been the equation here recently. We’ve got the Dow down right now 300 points as peace remains elusive in the Middle East. It seems like I’ve been saying that all my life. The Dow is down 60 basis points. The NASDAQ is down 81 basis points. Some weakness in the chips. You know what, Barry? Everything that’s been way up recently is down a little bit today. That’s the way it goes when oil goes up. The NASDAQ is down 81 basis points. The S&P is down 42 or 57 basis points. And here is the biggest factor driving the market today. Oil is back above $100 per barrel. It just doesn’t seem that Iran can ever deal in good faith, ever. Crude oil is up 3.7% to $101.72. Gold is down 62 basis points. The 10-year is rising a little bit on… You know, the inflation report came in line, but I’ll get Barry’s comments on that in a minute. The 10-year is up to 4.45% this morning. So welcome to today’s Best Docs Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunnarsson. 26 years in the saddle. Oh, yeah, I’ve got a few saddle sores, sure. We’ve had some rough days in the market along the way. But when I got in, the Dow was at 3,000, and now it’s at 50,000. So I can’t do too much complaining. And we are having a very, very, very, very good year here so far in 2026, maybe one of our best years ever. But we do have a little bit of a downdraft here. in the market today. Yesterday, we had pretty much a flat day. We had a good day yesterday. We were up almost 1% as the memory. Remember the memory stocks. They tell us to remember the Alamo, but don’t forget Micron. Don’t forget Samsung. Don’t forget HK Hynix. whatever that is, over in South Korea. And, you know, your biggest problem is the Iran-U.S. talks fizzle. They fizzle, Barry. Ever have anything fizzle on you? Yes. Things fizzle over time.
SPEAKER 05 :
I don’t like that fizzling sound. I didn’t have high hopes. I mean, we mentioned that they’re not even really negotiators.
SPEAKER 03 :
No.
SPEAKER 05 :
It doesn’t seem like they really want a deal. I don’t know another way to put it at this point.
SPEAKER 04 :
No, the fragile month-long ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran reached a critical juncture Monday with President Donald Trump declaring the agreement on massive life support. after dismissing Tehran’s latest peace proposal. And you know, Iran will never ever address the elephant in the room, which is the enrichment of a rare earth mineral called uranium. And they are hell-bent on getting a nuclear weapon and using it. on people they don’t like, on people that don’t agree with them. And President Trump and others, Obama tried to stop them too, but he made a deal with no teeth in it whatsoever. And it just can’t happen. It just can’t happen because they will use it. I just don’t see any way that they’re building that for peaceful purposes. Well, okay, we have that. There is that. There’s seemingly no progress whatsoever in the Iran talks. The best proxy for that, Barry, is looking at oil prices every day, right? Because oil prices fluctuate mightily. Based on the news over there. Yeah, based on the news out of the Middle East. So with oil up 3.5% today and above $100 a barrel again, that means things are not going well. in the middle east and i would just say that the next shoe to drop or is it the next bomb or bombs to drop uh will be you know if if if they won’t listen to negotiation maybe they’ll listen to explosions and decimation and death and everything else that comes with that that just seems to be where we’re headed with all of this Now, this is not the only big world story in the news this week. President Donald Trump is set to travel to China this week. China, okay? He hasn’t been to China in a long time with his friend Xi Jinping for a highly anticipated summit. He’s invited CEOs of some of the biggest U.S. companies to join his trip. Barry, would you check with Jennifer to see if I got my invitation to fly over there on Air Force One? You know who didn’t get an invitation, by the way? I saw that Jensen Wang wasn’t invited.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yes.
SPEAKER 04 :
Was that a, you know… I saw it.
SPEAKER 05 :
I think he said he would like to go. I think he said he would like to accompany him. I don’t know if it’s a snub or a bit of a fizzle. Who knows, right? But he said that he was willing to go, so I don’t think it was any kind of schedule issue. But, yeah, it was just an interesting…
SPEAKER 04 :
A person to leave off the list. Yes, and there is a lot of controversy around not letting China have the NVIDIA chips. He probably figures that Wang would be doing deals in the men’s room with the buyers from China for those chips. I think it’s over the sensitivity of the chips. I think he likes Jensen Wang just fine. But that’s sensitive. The CEOs that are going, let’s see.
SPEAKER 03 :
Do we have a list of those? I was curious.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yes, Bill Gunderson, Gunderson Capital Management. No, no, no. I’m not on the list yet. Someone needs to call the White House that has some poll. Tesla’s Elon Musk. That’s his old friend there, Donald Trump’s old friend, Elon. Apple’s Tim Cook. BlackRock’s Larry Fink, Boeing’s Kelly Ortberg, according to multiple media reports. Other invited execs are Meta President Dina Powell McCormick. Micron Technologies, Sanjay Mehrota, hey, hey, hey, hey. Qualcomm’s Cristiano Amon, GE Aerospace, Larry Culp. There’s my guy right there, Larry Culp. Blackstone’s Stephen Schwartzman, Citigroup’s Jane Frazier, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon. Coherent, that’s interesting. I’ve been watching that Coherent stock just fly recently, Jim Anderson. Illumina, who basically came up, cracked the, they were the holy grail for putting together our whole DNA. Illumina’s Jacob Thason. MasterCard. Well, don’t leave home without it. MasterCard’s Michael Meebok. And Visa’s Ryan McInerney. And one last one, Cargill. Hargill, which is a grain company, Brian Sykes. So yeah, Jensen Wang is the one that is not on. What is Trump expecting to get out of this China trip? Well, he wants a tactical truce. He wants an extension of last year’s rare earth elements agreement. He wants some additional trade commitments. Hey, buy our soybeans, would you? Possibly new agreements related to the U.S. exports of agricultural products or energy. Hey, China, why are you buying your energy from Iran? We can buy it from Texas, from Louisiana, from the U.S. That would be a nice gesture as a trading partner. And he’d also like to see some ongoing communication and coordination on trade and finance issues. So, yes, I mean, that’s going to be a big deal. I think they leave Thursday. I think. Maybe it’s Wednesday. I’m not sure. And, you know, the guy has a lot of plates spinning in the air at any given point in time. I’m just about two blocks from Trump Tower here. I walked in there on Sunday and looked at the escalator that he came down and just thinking of all that’s happened since then. during that time. And, of course, there’s a lot of pictures in there in that lobby of Trump Tower and all this and that. There’s not real heavy security. Just anybody can really walk into that lobby, Barry, I believe. I don’t remember going through any kind of a bomb detector or anything. Yeah, they got the gift shop in there, too, if you walk in. Yeah, you know what? At one time… I had some Trump cologne that I got. It says, spray it on you for success. And I thought, well, maybe that’ll work. I sprayed some on me. The cats wouldn’t come near me for a week. And yeah, maybe. I mean, the success part worked. Well, Barry, you’re the CFP and the CFA. How about that CPI today? It came in line, but what was your take on it?
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, I mean, it’s always got to break it out really between two numbers, right? You always hear the core number, which strips out food and energy. I always joke around. The core number strips out all the stuff we have to have, right? Food and energy. And, of course, the top line number is what is getting a lot of, obviously, the headline today. And in reality… To me, it’s the core that is kind of the more worrisome. Yeah, definitely. Because the core rose 0.4% month over month. It was assumed to be 0.3%. It’s double what it was in March. And if you look at it on a year-over-year basis, it’s 2.8% core number. I think consensus was 2.7%, so it came in a little hotter than expected. And that number is the Fed’s trying to target a 2% core number, at least over the long term. And now, obviously, this is going to continue to bring questions in. Is there going to be a rate cut in 2026? Or a rate hike? No, they’re talking about a rate hike now. Right, right. Well, I’ll say the funny thing is on the headline number, I actually thought it was not as bad because… It actually came in 0.6% month over month. That number was 0.9% last month. So it actually, the month-over-month number actually went down on the top line, at the top line of the report. And, of course, you know, we know what the biggest culprit was is energy. It accounted for 40% of the increase this, you know, this month. So, you know, the long story short is. Is it transitory, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
I think so.
SPEAKER 05 :
You said temporary. I like the word temporary better than transitory.
SPEAKER 04 :
I think we have the military to defeat Iran and bring them to their knees if that’s what they want. I think, yeah. The other one, though, that was worrisome to me, and, of course, I experienced this last night as I booked my tickets for Minnesota. Airline. Airline fares up 21% from a year ago. That’s a huge increase. And I did learn we were going to go to Dallas after Minnesota on Monday. You know, like we were going to go there in June. And I found out that they’re going to have major World Cup games there in Dallas.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, I think they’re hosting the most World Cup matches, actually.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, so that ain’t going to work. And I don’t know if San Jose, we’ll have to check to see. That would be my next choice. I know they’ve got a few matches for sure at Levi’s Stadium. Well, I mean, I would think at that Levi’s Stadium, right by where we stay, that could be an issue. And I don’t know about Cleveland. Maybe we end up in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, or we end up in Cleveland or Atlanta if the others are going to be snooty like that. Atlanta has a few World Cup matches, too. I would think so. They had the Olympics. I would think Atlanta. So our decision may be very easy. Yeah. At the end of the day.
SPEAKER 05 :
Apparently, we just need to poll my 14- and 11-year-old boys, and they can tell us where all the World Cup matches are going to be.
SPEAKER 04 :
Why don’t you take them to a game, Barry? The tickets are real cheap. Oh, yeah, real cheap. You get one on StubHub. Okay, here’s the other one. The food category with the biggest jump in prices compared to a year ago was uncooked ground beef. Well, I don’t eat uncooked ground beef, so does that apply to me? It was up 14.5% year over year. I’ve noticed that just a chub of ground beef nowadays is like $7, $8. It’s ridiculous. Uncooked beef roast, which I like mine cooked a little bit, at least the rare temperature. They’re up 17.8%. And an uncooked beef steak. I know a guy that he likes his steaks uncooked. Okay. Taking chances. Yeah, up 16.1%. So, you know, that beef is just unbelievable. Where’s the beef? Well, the beef is the guy that has to eat it. How about these restaurants now? I mean, you’re paying $80 to $90 for a filet mignon. Maybe not where you eat. I don’t know. But some of the places. $80 to $90 for this little piece of meat. It’s just insane. Now, I’ll tell you another idea that’s been floated, and I don’t know if it’s going to go anywhere, but, you know, Trump has mentioned doing a federal gas tax holiday. Right, yep. And I don’t think the federal tax, I’m thinking it’s like 15 cents or something. It is.
SPEAKER 05 :
I looked it up last night. I was actually curious. I think it’s like 14.8 cents or something like that.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, that wouldn’t make a hill of beans difference driving a big SUV, gas guzzling, and a boat with two engines that goes 40 miles an hour, gets one mile to the gallon. 14 cents, that’s not going to help very much. I don’t think that’s going anywhere. And that, of course, goes to the highway tax, whatever, the Highway Beautification Act or whatever.
SPEAKER 05 :
We’ll just have a few more potholes, a little less, slow down that interstate construction a little longer.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yes. Okay, Dan Niles. He’s one of the guys I do listen to out there. He was with Wedbush, wasn’t he, before this? Is it Dan Ives? No, Niles. Oh, okay. Yeah, I’m not sure. He was with somebody. Now he’s on his own, Niles Investment Management. He says, and I totally agree with this, because he was there in 2000 when we had the dot-com bubble. And I was there in 2000 during the dot-com bubble. And he emphasized the fact that there’s a key difference this time with the AI bubble. There’s fundamental growth backing the surge. There’s actual earnings in cash. Yes, and phenomenal. I would say that the major story with my newsletter now for a couple of years has been just the explosion in earnings, bottom line earnings. It’s been something that I have never witnessed. Now, I didn’t witness that in the year 2000 because there weren’t any earnings. It was all, oh, we’re going to have a website open on Monday and we’ll be selling our product on Monday and the stock goes up 80% on that news. There was no fundamentals to back that up. He says you can be in a bubble maybe, but still have it inflate a lot more before you get to the end of that. I totally agree with that. And you know what? I don’t think we’re in a bubble. When I do the math on the forward P.E. of the market at 21 and the kind of growth that we’re expecting over the next couple of years, I don’t think we’re in a bubble. I think we’re at an elevated valuation rate. But we’re definitely not in a bubble. A bubble was what Bitcoin was in when it got to 125. A bubble was what Avis Rent-A-Car was in when it got to 300. Those are bubbles. And this S&P 500, look, the consensus target price on the S&P 500 12 months from now is $8,400. And we’re currently at 7,300. So, no, we’re not in a bubble. 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. A little downdraft going on with really nothing happening constructive in the Middle East towards peace talks with Iran. And that’s driving oil up over $100 per barrel to $101. And that always drives the market down. And I would say that the inflation report also is impacting the market a bit today. It wasn’t unexpected, but, you know, like one-tenth higher than expected. And, you know, the food prices, that’s kind of worrisome. That shouldn’t be going up like it is. Something’s got to be done there. We don’t seem to have a solution there. to uh to the cattle industry okay okay here’s fertilizer cost i mean yeah diesel prices are going up um yeah fertilizer cost is a big one now for especially for you know for farmers but yes you got to grow the alfalfa uh and the feet that’s part of the feed and uh it goes right up the chain okay the weird story of the day game stopped trying to buy ebay that seems like You know what? eBay’s way better company than GameStop is. Why would eBay want to be bought out by GameStop? But he’s making a run at it, CEO Ryan Cohen. The deal has already been rejected. They say it’s neither credible nor attractive. Okay. Well, you don’t want a deal that’s going to fizzle eventually, Barry, if it’s not credible nor attractive, right? Eventually, it fizzles.
SPEAKER 05 :
That’s the word of the day, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
Yes. Unattractive plus, what was the other word he used? Credible equals fizzle. Einstein wrote that on the chalkboard. I’m a guy that always talks about my losers in the market. Yes, we’ve talked about our winners and we crow. But you know, from time to time, things happen in the market. Now luckily, this disaster du jour is a very tiny position. It’s in our emerging growth portfolio, which is our most aggressive, high-flying, far-flung portfolio that we have. We have a very little bit of money in it. A lot of times people want to sprinkle in a little bit of that in their growth portfolio. We’ve had some major winners over the year. But today we have one that’s giving me some heartburn. I’m lucky I bought some Xanax. No, not Xanax. That’s that bad stuff. No, I got some… Zantac. No, that’s Zantac. You don’t want to be taking Xanax for heartburn. You’ll forget your middle name. Power Solutions is down 34% today. Was that your pick, Barry, or was that my pick? I don’t know. I think it was the protege. It was the junior analyst selection. It’s in all the right places. They provide power for data centers, and they’re in that space. But they came up with a less than attractive and less than credible, and the stock is fizzling down 34%. Now, let me say something about that. You talk about risk in the market. How do you mitigate risk? Well, one, especially in a very aggressive account, this is not one where you’d want to own one stock in the emerging growth portfolio. This represents a 3% overall position in said portfolio. So if you do the math, if the stock goes to zero, which is not going to do that, it’s still a $1.5 billion market cap company. The worst it can do is have a 3% impact on a $100,000 portfolio or three grand. I mean, that’s the worst case scenario is it goes to zero. So the first rule of mitigating risk is by not having too much in any one stock. And don’t be afraid to have cash sitting in your account if you can’t find anything that meets your criteria. From time to time we’ll get somebody that will write, how come I have 25% in cash? Well, you know what? You’re up. The ultra-growth portfolio is up almost. It was up yesterday 30% year-to-date. And you’re complaining about having too much cash in your portfolio? Come on. Give me a break. If I can’t find things that meet my criteria, I’m not going to force myself to buy just to be buying. That’s stupidity. And, you know, yesterday I was really determined to try to find something good. to to to sop up a little cash like you know you use bread to sop up that olive oil or whatever at the bottom of the bowl i want to sop up but i could not find anything nothing i found some that i like and maybe on a down day like today i may add them to the portfolio But there’s no rule that says you have to have all your money invested in the market. That’s kind of stupid, really. That’s a stupid mentality to have. Well, it’s not working for me. What do you want it working against you? If you’re fully invested, that means you might have some real stinkers in there in a market that, don’t forget how narrow this market is. This is a narrow market. There’s like 20 stocks that are working right now. You go to number 21, number 22, and they’re marginal at best. That’s how far it drops off from the best stocks now to the not so best stocks now. So I’m not going to force myself To buy a stock just to be sopping up the olive oil in the bottom of the salad bowl. Now, let’s take a look at Broadcom. Well, you know what? No. The next group I want to talk about, there was a lot of talk. Talk of the town yesterday was guess what group? The quantum stocks. They’re back in vogue, just like fashion here in New York City. The bag dress, the mini skirt, the go-go boots, the hairdos, right? They come and they go. And about a year or two ago, remember how hot the quantum stocks were? They were the talk of the town. People were standing in line to buy D-Wave and Quantum Computing and Rigetti. Rigetti Spaghetti is what we call that one. And the thing of this is, is these are long-duration stocks. Most of them don’t even have any sales right now. Can you imagine opening a restaurant and not having any customers for several years before the restaurant finally gets its first customer? Well, that’s the way the quantum stocks are. And I remember the day that Jensen Wang shot an arrow in the heart of the quantum stocks when he said, these things are still 20 years out. And the next day, because we owned a few of them at that time, D-Wave and Rigetti and maybe a couple others, Quantum. They were down 50% when he made those comments the next day. The Quantum stocks got absolutely slaughtered. And there was one that reported earnings or lack thereof. They report progress is what they report, right? their cash burn, how long before they go broke. And usually they announce, well, we’re raising more money because they need more money. Without sales, how are you going to pay the rent? You have to borrow the money or you have to sell stock in the company to the investors and they will pay your bills. So it’s not a good situation. I was sitting at my desk preparing my show at about 7.30 a.m. and My phone’s ringing off the hook. Some guy trying to get a hold of me. What the heck is this? It was a wholesaler from Defiance ETFs. And he was calling. He left a message about their quantum ETF. You know, that’s another way Wall Street works. When something’s getting a lot of news and it’s hot, guess what they do? They start calling all the guys that want to buy that stuff. And, you know, I’ll tell you where else I’m seeing that effect at work. This DRAM ETF, which I added to the app today, D-R-A-M, I’m sure there’s gobs of buying. I’ve seen a lot about it lately. Yeah. Okay. But what does the ETF manager have to do as all this money flows into DRAM? He has to buy the underlying stocks, right? Right. And I think a lot of the froth you’re seeing in SanDisk, in Micron, in SK Hynix, in Samsung, in Western Digital, in Seagate, et cetera, it’s because you’ve got an ETF out there now, and maybe there’s more by now. I think there’s a couple of these memory ETFs gobbling up shares. And if people are throwing money at the ETFs, The ETF manager has to turn around and throw money at the individual stocks. And that’s just the way it goes, and that’s how that works. And I think a lot of this froth right now and momentum you’re seeing is coming from some of these ETFs. on a down day in the market it can’t go up every day we’ve got a little turmoil over there in a strait called hormuz and we’ve got our president and a delegation of some of the top ceos in america headed for beijing later this week i’m still waiting for my invitation it’s a long flight i’d rather stay here anyways and so we have a little down day what i want to do right now Let’s talk just a little bit about the workshops that I teach and what to expect. I don’t know if there’s any hope for getting this one broadcast streamed. I’m meeting with my GCG partners Thursday afternoon. I think in the afternoon, evening, I think we’re going out to dinner. And that’s going to be the number one subject. Well, other subjects, but that will be a top subject, is can we get this Minnesota workshop online? for the folks all over America to watch. Wouldn’t that be nice, Barry? I mean, that would be totally cool.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, I know we can at least record it and figure it out from there. I don’t know about the live piece. You’ve got compliance and other stuff we’ve got to deal with. But, yeah, it should be. At worst, we’re going to get some snippets. I know I’m having a meeting. Jordan and I are going to be on a meeting later on this afternoon in terms of in terms of the camera and the technology piece behind it. Well, I’ve got a nice little GoPro.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, Jordan is pretty sharp. He has been a welcome addition, I’ll tell you, to Gunderson Capital Management. And you’ll meet Jordan. When you first see him, you’ll say, I don’t think he’s Bill Gunderson’s biological son. He’s about three feet taller than I am, you know. He’s a gentle giant, I call him. And you’ll get to meet Gavin. And we’ve added a new person that we’ll be introducing at the Minnesota gathering. But, you know, I start off the workshop with a little bit about how the Best Stocks Now formula and system came about. And believe it or not, as I look back on my life, it started at a racetrack in Tijuana. What? A racetrack in Tijuana? Yes. A horse racetrack in Tijuana is when I first constructed my first spreadsheet for Back before we had computers constructing spreadsheets, and I used graph paper instead. And my father, he was a blue-collar guy until he started his own business, and then he was a very successful guy as I joined his business, him and I, when I was still just a junior in high school, actually. He eventually sold that business for a pretty tidy sum to Lamar Outdoor Advertising. But my father used to take me to the horse races with him on Saturday. And while my dad’s reading the racing form, my mom’s preparing her Sunday school lesson for Sunday, Barry. dichotomy right there yeah she was a saint he was a sinner i guess you could say but i was thinking she might be praying for the horses so i mean no she would every once in a while some 99 to one shot would come in and she’d go oh i got it she had two dollars to show on it you know so she’d get like twelve dollars instead of 297 dollars and my dad said why don’t you bet him to win And anyway, so I don’t see anything wrong with that upbringing that I had because I got to spend my weekends, Saturdays, with my dad and my Sundays with my mom and sometimes my dad at church. So that was a pretty good combination of education that I got and experience that I got. And I was always a whiz at math. And I remember in the third, fourth, fifth grade, the teachers would excuse me during the math class to go out and measure the circumference of the playground or something because they knew I was so far ahead. Of the rest of the class in math, I could have probably taught the lesson. And they didn’t want me to be bored. And I do remember the teacher sent me out to measure the circumference. Yes, but the perimeter. That’s a better word because it was square of the school. And in the janitor’s office, I found a hockey puck. And I found a ball of string. And I measured the string at 50 feet. And I threw the hockey puck to my buddy. He was also really good at math. And we had that thing done in about five minutes, ten minutes. We had the circumference. We came back in. She says, well, you can’t have the answer already, Bill. Yeah, I do. You know, whatever it was, 1,280 feet circumference, whatever. And if you’re walking three miles per hour, it would take you like two minutes and 12 seconds to walk around. I was really a wiz at math. But I predicted, I had a formula that predicted the final times that horses would run. Not every kid does that. And down at Algo Caliente in Tijuana, which was really a great outing. It was a great outing. It had great food. Always mariachis greeting you as you walked in. And I’m sitting there one day, and I hit six winners in a row in the pick six. I got all six winners and won quite a pile of cash as a 15-year-old kid or whatever. I think I was 15. But the spreadsheet, the spreadsheet has evolved over the years. I have a massive spreadsheet that I invented that combines valuation with momentum and compares it against all the other stocks in the market on a relative basis. And I go over that in depth at the workshops. And I will be doing that next Tuesday, a week from today. at 7 p.m. So if you want to come, hey, you’re welcome. If you’re anywhere within the area, we’ll be at the Minneapolis Minnetonka Marriott. A lot of M’s there. And I will be teaching my methodology of best stocks now. And, of course, meeting with the folks all day Tuesday, all day Wednesday, and all day Thursday, from what I understand. Coming home Friday, I hope. If you would like to reserve a spot, 855-611-BEST. If you’d like to make an appointment with us there in person or anytime over the phone or Zoom, 855-611-BEST. And if you’d just like to see, hey, how are their portfolios? If a system, if he says he’s got a good, you know, system, I don’t call it a system, strategy. Does it work? Check the results of the portfolios in the newsletter that I publish very carefully every weekend. Go to GundersenCapital.com and sign up for a four-week trial. Have a great day, everybody.
SPEAKER 02 :
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.
