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 Gunderson Capital Management. Here is professional money manager Bill Gunderson.
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome to the Friday 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, certified financial planner, and CMT. He’ll explain that to you someday. We are back from our Bloomfield Hills, Detroit trip and broadcasting from our home here in our home office in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina. And we have green on the screen today. It’s been a pretty good week in the market, actually. The Dow right now is up 255 points, which puts it at 44,223. Not an all-time high, but it’s inching closer and closer. But we do have a new high in the NASDAQ today, up another 155 points. The NASDAQ has had one heck of a week. A lot of good earnings driving the NASDAQ. 21,397 on the NASDAQ. And the S&P 500, it’s either at a new all-time high or very close to it. It’s up 40 points right now, 44 points. That puts the S&P 500 at 6,384. I saw the interest rates, the 10-year up just a couple of basis points. We’re in the 4.27 range right now. Gold is having a good day. Gold’s up almost 1%. Let’s see, gold is up 1.3% right now. Yeah, hit an all-time high at 1.3%. Wow, 3,498. We still have exposure to gold. It’s been one of the most consistent performers so far this year. Crude oil is up 1%. $64.49 and Bitcoin is up $7.26 to $1.17 to $2.39. So welcome to today’s Best Stocks Now show. with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management. I’m here with Barry Kite, our chartered financial analyst. And just as we were leaving Detroit area, they were putting up the checkered flag at our hotel on Kingsley there, getting ready for the big weekend there, the annual Woodward run. of classic cars. The Woodward Cruise. I almost wish I could have stayed around and watched that. That’s going to be something, but that’s a big deal. Obviously, much of Detroit revolves around the auto industry. I would say of the people we met with, we met with a lot of folks and the people that came to our workshop, I’d say 70 or 80 percent of them are connected to the auto industry. And I learned so much from each of them, right? Yeah.
SPEAKER 04 :
It’s just, I mean, how everything’s interconnected. And, I mean, it’s just, you know, it’s industry. I mean, it’s design, industry, engineering.
SPEAKER 03 :
I mean, it’s pretty amazing. I think what one man, Henry Ford, did to that town there, would Detroit be what it is today without Henry Ford and his little invention there called a car? The Model A. So anyways, I always love going there. And I can’t wait to go back. And we met some really good people. I mean, we had so much fun. And that’s one of my favorite things in the business is to connect and to talk to folks. Real folks, working folks, saving, paying their homes off, trying to grow their retirement funds. boots on the ground yeah boots on the ground and everything that comes with that and uh the markets had a pretty good week i would say so far here uh this week we’re seeing new highs we had some good earnings reports uh this past week palantir being one of the best And the soggy stocks, as usual, reported soggy earnings, the McDonald’s and the Disney’s of the world. And, well, we’ll see where we’re at with earnings today. As of last Friday, we were looking for a 10.8% increase in earnings this quarter for the S&P 500 versus the same comparable quarter last year. And that’s very, very good because when we began the quarter, it was only 4.8%. So we’ve had 83% of the companies beating their estimates or sandbagging. We’ve had 83% of the companies sandbag the analysts. You’d think the analysts would catch on and add a few cents. They’re playing the earnings game well, right? It’s consistently about 70% or 80% of the companies that beat estimates, unless we’re going into a recession, which would be another indicator if you start to see. So anyways, the trajectory of earnings estimates and forecasts is upwards. What happened to that? Oh, the tariffs are going to clobber earnings. The market’s going to take a huge haircut. We’re going to go into a recession. You even had one company this past week, Shopify. If ever there was a company that would feel the impact of tariffs, it would be Shopify.
SPEAKER 04 :
When you at least think their customers would, you know, in terms of their clients with all these boutique stores and selling anything and everything, you would think that they would be more affected by it. It was surprising.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes. And then on the other hand, I mean, direct companies that have direct ties, the auto parts industry directly connected to the tariffs. Now, that’s a different story a little bit. But yes, there’s definitely going to be some forking out of money by the consumer. to cover some of these tariffs now on these other countries in order for them to sell their goods into the U.S. Does the consumer absorb 100% of a tariff? I think it depends upon the product. In some cases where you’ve got a tariff directly on a product, the seller of that product’s got to turn around and lay it on the consumer because you’re in thin margin territory already, and they certainly are in no position to absorb the tariff. But all in all, it’s had very little, if any, impact on S&P 500 earnings. Now, these 500 companies come from all walks of life. And we’ve only seen a few companies say, well, the tariffs are really going to have a major impact on our business. But as I look at it as a whole, we started out with 4.8% estimated growth, and we’re at 10.8%. So it’s accelerated to the upside. that earnings growth year over year. And today we’re pretty much going to have the final number, not quite, but pretty close to it. There’s still some companies that have to report. I think NVIDIA is still out there that has to report and several others. But about 85%, 90% of the companies are in now and have reported their earnings. And I’ll have a really good rundown for you in the newsletter. Hopefully we’ll get it out tomorrow afternoon. And, of course, you can get a four-week free look at the All Everything newsletter with the portfolios in it. Our portfolios are having a very good year. This was a good trip because we met with a lot of happy clients. That’s always good. If we’d have met with them back in March, it might have been a little bit different story because the market, the S&P went down to 4,800. Here we are back to 6,400. You’ve had a 30% move off of the low in March, and the analysts were wrong. The pundits were wrong once again, and we were right about the market.
SPEAKER 04 :
And usually when we go on the road, something wild happens, right, in terms of the market. The only thing that happened wild this time around was more on the airline side. I was there for… I was four for four on delays for the four sites.
SPEAKER 03 :
We were only delayed 90 minutes, so I feel blessed. We got home around 7 p.m. So anyways, let’s take a look at what’s going on. I’ve got a lot of young, promising companies to talk about here today. This seems to be the day for young, promising companies to report their earnings today. And there’s some very interesting ones, and they’ve had a lot to say about their future. So we’ll get into that, these companies and what they’re saying and where they’re at in their trajectory right now. Yesterday, the NASDAQ was up about 35 basis points. We had a fairly decent day yesterday. There seems to be a lot of controversy swirling around Intel right now. Trump, it’s the CEO, Lip Bhutan. Well, he used to be the CEO of a very good semiconductor design company, Cadence Design. And there was some controversy while he was there. There was a criminal investigation. There’s alleged ties to the Chinese Communist Party by him. So I don’t know where that’s all going to go. We don’t own intel. But, you know, Trump is involved in this, telling him he needs to resign. And the board is saying he’s not going anywhere. In the meantime, Intel’s floundering at about $19.85 per share. We’ll be right back with a lot more on a lot of young, promising companies in the market today. And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s Best Docs Now show. Another trend that we’ve seen in our recent visits to Motown, the Motor City, is the real cooling off of EV manufacturing and plans. Ford delays the launch today of a new electric truck. and van model till 2028 as it plays small ball they confirmed that they are delaying the launch of two next generation electric vehicles a full-size electric pickup truck well they already have the ford lightning It was to be the successor to the F-150 Ford Lightning and the next E-Transit van. They will not be made until 2028. The delay is due to its focus on developing smaller, more affordable electric vehicles. That’s a problem, man. To buy a van that’s all electric, that’s an expensive deal. And to buy a full-size truck that’s all electric, that’s an expensive thing. Ford has struggled to make the current EV lineup profitable with losses exceeding $1 billion in the last reported quarter. and a projected $5.5 billion loss for its EV division in 2025. How do you like them apples? Those are some big losses there. No wonder they’re delaying. these projects and of course on our way to the airport yesterday you go right through Dearborn and right by Ford headquarters there which is pretty cool the history there and you know the impact that Ford has had on that area and of course GM and others Stellantis now used to be Chrysler and I love the history there in Detroit. I want to go back. I want to go to Greenfield Village again. I went there many years ago and really enjoyed it. I’m kind of a history buff myself, especially of Americana. Americana, what great history. that we have and the inventions and the industry and the people that have come out of our great country. SoftBank acquires Foxconn’s Ohio EV facility to potentially boost their Stargate project. In other words… They’re going to repurpose it. Repurpose that. That’s right. So this ties into the story that we just talked about with Ford delaying by two to three years their new Ford full-size pickup and their transit van all electric.
SPEAKER 04 :
Well, and the problem I don’t like is that they were basically forced into that $5 billion loss, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
They were forced into it by the ignition.
SPEAKER 04 :
Fuel standards, yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, absolutely. And we did learn on the trip, we have one client that works with exhaust systems. We learned that rhodium is even way more expensive than gold or platinum. It is the most expensive rare earth, and it comes originally from the country formerly known as Rhodesia. I don’t know. I think Rhodesia might be the Congo. I might be named the Congo now, but I do remember Rhodesia. and the leader of rhodesia and all the trouble that they went through but rhodium is a very expensive and we learned from another waiting for that question on jeopardy i’m just now that i know what rhodium is i’m ready and we learned that obviously you have to color if you’re an artist or in the graphic arts or in pottery or whatever and you need to add color red is by far the most expensive color uh… to uh… to buy and i know that from being the days i had in the billboard industry we would open up one of those cans of the cadmium red and it’s like butter i mean the consistency is like butter it’s beautiful And of course, you’ve got to put the color in there to color it. We also learned that Henry Ford, the reason he only made black cars because it was the cheapest. If he would have went to red or blue, it would have cost a lot more money. And he even saved the carbon from what, the lamps that lit the factory?
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, the soot on the oil lamps in the factory and put that into it to get the black in the paint.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, he would buy clear paint from DuPont because it was the cheapest and then add the black soot to it.
SPEAKER 04 :
Everything was recycled. I mean, it was an efficient operation.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes.
SPEAKER 04 :
The crates that came over, they would take those apart, put those in, and those would be in the floorboards. That’s interesting. Yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
I think Henry was a little bit of a cheapskate, maybe, would be the word. SoftBank, again. Efficient. Yeah, he was efficient. I have a little bit of that in my blood myself. SoftBank acquires Fox’s Ohio EV facility. So I don’t know what they were building there. But Foxconn is the one that announced earlier this year that they’re going to invest billions here in America on this whole Stargate project. And it looks like they’re going to repurpose that whole thing. SoftBank had approached Apple about doing some business here, but Apple has also convinced Trump that, please, there’s not going to be an all-U.S.-made cell phone. It’s not going to happen, and he seems to be okay with that. So anyways, there’s more of an update there on SoftBank’s investment in the U.S. and more bad news for the EV industry. Okay, there’s news on MP Materials. Talk about young companies that are reporting today. MP is up 3.5% on 10 million shares have traded so far. That’s like five times normal volume. And MP is giving a lot of updates on their own rare earth initiatives. And, of course, MP Materials has investors here. Huge investors. Apple invested $50 million in the company because rare earth is very important to Apple. And the Department of Defense invested big bucks into MP Materials because… It’s also used in weaponry, the rare earths. And MP Materials is going to accelerate their U.S. magnetics expansion. And they did report a pretty decent quarter. Their sales were up 84% year over year. And their earnings were up 24% year over year. And they’re finally turning profitable. The stock’s hitting a new all-time high. It’s $12 billion in market cap. It’s in our emerging growth portfolio. That’s where it belongs. Emerging growth portfolio, which has done really well this year. You can get the newsletter and see how well that portfolio is. Well, you know, I’m just going to let you look it up yourself in the newsletter, how well it’s done this year in 2025. And MP, one of the winners in that portfolio here so far this year, it’s up almost 200% right now this year. We’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 08 :
But nothing’s been a wrong time.
SPEAKER 03 :
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 06 :
Call out the instigator because there’s something in the air.
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Docs Now show. Now, in my lifetime, I remember a couple of defensive lines in the NFL called the fearsome foursome. I remember the Detroit Lions had a fearsome foursome. These were pass rushers, Barry. This is before your time. But Bill Glass, Dennis, Darius McCord, Alex Karras, and Roger Brown. Who doesn’t remember Alex Karras, one of the great… He used to scare the heck out of quarterbacks, and he loved to sack quarterbacks, and had quite a career… As an actor later on, he was in Blazing Saddles and a couple other things. See Mongo? Mongo. Well, we have a fearsome foursome, and that is combining, say, hey, I want the fearsome foursome. That’s a combination of the Gundersen Premier Growth, Ultra Growth, Emerging Growth, and Relative Value, all four of those. In my IRA, that’s what I want to do. I want to have a little bit. And it usually leans, so you end up with a few of the Emerging Growth stocks, the MP Materials of the world and others. You end up with some of the aggressive growth, which… That portfolio has done really, really well since inception. You can look it up. It’s now six and a half years. You get a little bit of the premier growth and the value. That’s a potent combination. I’m going to dub it the fearsome force. And then when we were at the restaurant, Barry, there in the hotel, the Kingsley, the Joe Murr’s, which I think is a fantastic restaurant, They had on the menu a trio. Do you remember seeing the trio on the menu? It was three filet medallions, and each one had a little different sauce on top. There was Oscar. There was, I don’t know, I think maybe Au Pevoir or something like that. and maybe a brandy peppercorn or something like this. Well, we also offer out the trio, and that’s three of the four. And you end up, by the end, when it’s all fully invested, you’re going to end up with about 30 to 35 stocks once I fill it up. And they come from the different portfolios. So we’ll call that the trio from now on, Barry, when you offer it to folks and talk about it.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, we had the wishbone.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, I don’t like the wishbone. That’s too slow for me, you know. We’re not running the option offense. No, I like the trio and the fearsome foursome. Okay, and then I’ll come up with one for the duo because the premier growth coupled with the ultra growth has also been a pretty potent one-two punch. And a popular one, yeah. Yes, and then the L.A. Rams had a fearsome foursome, too. That’s the one I knew really well. Lamar Lundy, Merlin Olsen, Deacon Jones, and Rosie Greer, who also had a bit of an acting career. You had me thinking of the Purple People Eaters. Yeah, now Minnesota had the Purple People Eaters, but since we were just in Detroit, well, kudos to Alex Karras, who was quite a character. on the detroit lions for many years now okay let’s talk about some other young promising companies here that are seems to be young promising company day in the earnings reports today and companies in the news we talked about mp materials flutters down a little bit today I thought they had a fantastic report. Flutter is in the sports gaming business. Flutter’s down 9.3%. Even though their earnings were up 45%, their sales were up 16%. Very strong quarter. FanDuel did very well. A couple of their other franchises did. uh… but there must be something there that they quite didn’t like about the report so anyways the stock is selling off a little bit today we still consider it and i see a couple of firms raising their target prices but despite that the stocks down nine point three percent you know a lot of times AMD reported their earnings i think was it earlier this week and the stock was down six or seven percent but it bounced hard to the upside And a lot of times these best stocks now, when they pull back like that, it’s time to go into them. That gives you an opportunity to go into it. Flutter is definitely looking for 51% growth in earnings. By 2026, comparing this year with next year, and I thought they had a really good report here, but the market didn’t quite like it enough. It wasn’t good enough for the momentum guys, and they’re leaving it today. But we’ll see if now you get some value investors coming back in there. to buy some shares of Flutter. The other one that I don’t own this one, but this one has gotten a lot of publicity because it was one that Nancy Pelosi had loaded up on. She’s a very astute investor, by the way. She’s about as sharp as they come when it comes to investing. Let’s say she has a crystal ball. Yeah, I mean, she’s quite good. And Tempus AI has kind of been dubbed the AI stock of the medical industry. They’re creating intelligent diagnostics through practical applications of AI in health care. They’re not real profitable yet, but they do have sales. They just reported earnings that were up 65% year over year and sales that were up 90% year over year. Now, that’s the kind of stuff that best stocks now are made of. And Tempus AI is smaller. It’s $10 billion. It would show up in my emerging growth portfolio if I were to take a position in it. I’m thinking we might have taken a position. Yes, we did. We took a position in it earlier this year and had to let it go because it started to plummet during the tariff concerns. And we haven’t gotten back into it. But definitely on that promising, very promising, they raised their guidance for 2025. The symbol is T-E-M, T-E-M, Tempus, T-E-M-P-U-S-A-I. If it’s good enough for Pelosi, you know, it ought to be good enough for you. The other one that’s in the news today along those lines, and it’s in the heart of AI, which seems to be all the craze on Wall Street today, is no longer, are we going to have an AI city like Detroit’s the Motor City? I mean, the city was built around the automobile industry. Now we’ve got AI. Who knows? Maybe it’s going to be Texas. Maybe it’s going to be down there in the Texas area, the AI capital of the world. SoundHound is another promising young company, and that’s in Santa Clara. That’s right there where we’re going in five weeks. We’ve got penciled in. September 15th. September 15th. We all agreed on that date. And now it’s just down to Edie procuring the workspace for us and the meeting space to do a workshop. There’s several hotels, big hotels in that area in Santa Clara, and that’s where we’ll be going.
SPEAKER 04 :
We’ll be going coast to coast.
SPEAKER 03 :
Coast to coast, yes. And, you know, our little COO has never been to California before. And so we’ll get to show her around some of the great sites there. So SoundHound reports earnings today. Sales up 217%. Earnings up 25%. Stock is breaking out. It’s up 30%. This is down in the very small cap, micro cap range. This is a candidate for our emerging growth portfolio. But this is probably the biggest winner in the market today. We do not own this stock. Sound Hound AI. And, you know, being able to modify voices. Let’s say you have a young salesperson and people don’t really respond. They go, so this guy sounds like he’s in 12th grade or 10th grade or whatever. modifying voices you know and other sounds of all kinds of things mimicking this mimicking that is definitely a big part of ai uh i would like to sound a little bit more like marlon brando you know barry uh you can’t refuse you know that guy i don’t know but anyways uh I’ve heard some people on radio that I say to myself, that guy should not be on radio. He’s got a terrible voice. There’s just something about it, you know. But SoundHound, I guess, can take care of it. That’s really the stock of the day, up 30% here out of the gate this morning. Now there’s an update, and we’ll wait until we come back to talk about this one. Now we’re talking nuclear here. And we’re talking those small modular reactors, which could be playing a big role in the future of energy in America. And it has reported earnings this morning and given an update on their small modular reactor technology. We’ll have that when we come back. This is the Best Docs Now show.
SPEAKER 05 :
Go where you want to go. Do what you want to do. Whoever you want to be. Go where you want to go. Do what you want to do.
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Docs Now show. And we’ve got, it looks like, a couple others here. I want to talk about this small modular reactor, new scale. All right. Outlines their increase in spending. They’re hoping to have their first SMR contract by the end of 2025 as regulatory and supply chain tailwinds grow. That’s not good. We’ve got to clear the deck of… greased the skids on the regulatory front for these companies, but the supply chain, that’s not good. John Lawrence Hopkins is the CEO of SMR. He highlighted NuScale’s position as the only SMR technology with U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval. And he noted the second approval for its 77 megawatt electric design in Q2 2025. You’d have to look that up now. How much will 77 megawatts power? That will be a crucial step in moving NuScale and our exclusive commercialization partner, EntraOne, closer to meeting demands of energy users in need of clean baseload power.
SPEAKER 04 :
I actually did the math because I think it’s so neat that one of those, I think it’s called an Aurora unit or something of that nature, but it essentially can power 77 megawatts. It’s a little over 42,000 dishwashers.
SPEAKER 03 :
Okay, who needs 42,000 dishwashers?
SPEAKER 04 :
I don’t know, but in my head, I’m like, well, it’s not. How many AI servers will it? I feel like you just walk around with it in a backpack. I mean, it’s pretty interesting. When they talk about the amount of power it will generate, I mean, it seems it’s pretty amazing that we’ve gone from those, you know, huge, you know, huge, you think of a nuclear power plant, right? Those big, you know, concrete, you know. The shape and everything, and of course now it’s like you have these modular reactors, and it’s like putting a Generac next to your house, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, well, they’re forecasting having hard contracts in place by the end of this year. They’re all U.S.-based customers. That would be interesting to see who ends up buying some of these reactors. I would think that the ones buying from the nuclear power plants would be interested in this and running their data centers. So this is one that we’re going to continue to follow. SMR and also Oklo and also Nano and a few others there that are trying to develop and commercialize and sell. smaller, modular reactors. And what was the story? Who was telling us? Now, I knew this to be true. Our submarines in the Navy are run by powers the whole submarine, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
The ball in there is smaller than a basketball, basically.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, runs the whole submarine. Why aren’t we employing this technology more and more and more? I think we’re going to. if a if a a space the size of a basketball can power a uh a submarine why are we messing around with windmills giant windmills that would not fit in any submarine by the way yeah and we’re gonna solar panels don’t work underwater you know and uh yeah i mean like you said we gotta have we’re gonna have to have i mean the need for power right i mean you’re
SPEAKER 04 :
Basically, we’re going to have to have a solution, right, because we’re not going to be able to generate as much power as we need based on what we’re currently doing.
SPEAKER 03 :
Where’s Roger Penske, you know, putting that into an Indy racer now that he owns the Indy 500 racetrack? Of course, he’s a Bloomfield Hills guy, Roger Penske. What a remarkable guy he is. Now, I remember the first turbocharged car. in the indianapolis it was bill elliott i think he got out in front and never looked back and that thing everybody was just amazed that that car hummed it purred uh as it went around the track bill yeah bill elliott’s why we got restrictor plates on uh in in uh in daytona i think he went around the track at like 218 or 230 something like that turbocharged engine where’s an smr charged A Formula One race car. That’s what I’m investing in. Okay, the next one that I want to, this will probably be the last one we’ll get to, is Rocket Labs. Boy, do we live in the Jetsons. As I used to go to Disneyland as a kid and ride on the rockets to the moon. And the PeopleMover and the electric Autopia cars, you know, monorails, GEs. We’d go around and watch what’s coming in the future at GE. We’re there. We’re there and beyond all of these things that we only dreamed of. Now you’ve got a company by the name of Rocket Labs operating. RKLB, which we do own in the Emerging Growth Portfolio, they manufacture rockets and spacecraft intended to get to orbit and remove barriers to commercial space. They’re a vendor to a lot of the rocket companies. They reported earnings. Their sales were $144 million for the past quarter. That’s up 63%. They still haven’t turned the corner of profitability, however, and that’s why you’ll find that we actually own it in our emerging growth portfolio. But believe it or not, this is a $21 billion company. And headquartered, it’s kind of strange to see their headquarters is in Long Beach, California. Now I’m thinking, and Jeff would know this also, I remember my father being a Boy Scout master and camping out at Terminal Island. which doesn’t sound very good place boys were going to terminal island to spend the weekend and we might not come back lord of the flies it could be terminal but that was the name of it and i want to say it was some kind of a military facility of sorts i was just a little seven-year-old at the time but rocket labs is headquartered in long beach california Which, you know, there’s a lot of aerospace, by the way, in Southern California. Lockheed Martin has a huge presence there. Top Gun. In Southern California. Top Gun was in San Diego. We had General Dynamics in San Diego, which employed a lot of people. And a lot of defense stuff. But Rocket Labs is up a little bit today. It’s been hitting new highs here recently. And we are out of time. But that’s another one. RKLB, young, small, promising company. All right, I can’t wait to see where we’re at with earnings so far in this quarter. That will be in this week’s newsletter. I’ll update my 12-month target price for the S&P 500. And as always, we’re on the prowl for young or even mature best stocks now that are clobbering the competition and disrupting industries. The newsletter, get four for a week, GundersonCapital.com. To set up an appointment with us, 855-611-BEST.
SPEAKER 02 :
…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.
The Future of Investment: Beyond Traditional Models