Join Bill Gunderson as he delves into the latest market trends, focusing on the impacts of recent corrections and the potential ripple effects from government layoffs and tariff talks. Discover insights into the performance of key stocks like MicroStrategy, Tesla, and Meta, while exploring Gunderson’s expert opinion on structural market conditions and the broader economic landscape. Tune in to hear his take on the stewardship of finances and the importance of strategic economic adjustments.
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, the freaky Friday. It is the end of February, the last day of February. This is the Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management. And right now seeing a little bit of stabilization in the market after one of the swiftest kicks in the rump. You got to go clear back to 2020, the COVID year. We’re going to go through some numbers here today, but right now the Dow is up 200 points, 46 basis points to the upside. The NASDAQ is down just 17, all right? The NASDAQ has gone through the swiftest correction. You got to go back again to the COVID year. NASDAQ down 1814 right now. That’s eight basis points. The S&P is up six points. That’s 11 basis points. to the upside. The bond market continues to behave itself quite nicely. In fact, it’s down to 4.23% today. We haven’t seen that for a while. 4.24% right now. Crude oil is at 69.38%. Gold is down to 28.46%. And I’ll tell you, How about the crypto crater? Is crypto, is crater spelled with a K or a C, Barry? I’m pretty sure it’s a C. The crypto crater, Bitcoin is down another 2483. That puts it at 82,387.
SPEAKER 05 :
And it got as low as 25% down.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes, so welcome to today’s Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management. This is the 1,670,230 umpteenth correction pullback I’ve seen in the market. This is one of the swifter ones. That’s always nice. I can usually tell by my stomach level how swift they are. God, look at that. The whole bottle of Tums is gone. No, just kidding. But it’s rough on me. It’s rough on everybody. But I just don’t see any major structural problems with the market right now. I think it’s all rhetoric and… You know, I think probably the tariff talk has a lot to do with it unnerving the market. And I think the government layoffs, I think those two things together are probably adding up. There’s nothing wrong with earnings, okay? We are getting the valuation trimmed a little bit in the market here. And I’m going to go through some numbers. But yesterday was a horrible day. I mean, it started off okay. But by the end of the day, the NASDAQ was down 531 points, all the way down to 18,544. And the numbers work out something like this right now. Let’s see. I did that in my little message that I sent out this morning. I’ve got to find that. Well, anyways. Oh, no. There it is. The NASDAQ is now down 8.1% from its recent peak. But, you know, the thing is, that’s in nine trading days. Or not even nine trading days. I think that’s in seven trading days. The Russell 2000 small caps is down 12.4% from its recent peak. Bitcoin is down 21.7% plus whatever it is today. So it’s approaching a 25%… From the 109 high with 109,000. And it’s down to 83,000.
SPEAKER 05 :
All those kids that were predicting crypto as their top performer in 2025…
SPEAKER 03 :
Wow, they’ve got some explaining to do. And again, I would say the big cuts and layoffs in government and the tough tariff talk. I saw a statistic yesterday. Applications for unemployment benefits filed by federal employees almost tripled last week. So I think we were right in saying that the big jump you saw in the initial jobless claims is a lot of that was federal employees that are being laid off. No gain without pain. I mean, $40 trillion in debt or $37 trillion headed to $40 trillion is unsustainable. Something has to be done. You can’t continue on that course. And we all knew… that there would be pain. Trump, Musk, everybody, they all said it. There’s going to be some pain. There’s going to be some very quick and drastic actions taken, and that’s what we’ve seen. I just saw this morning that they completely shut down the Consumer Protection Bureau or whatever CFPB, I think that was one of Elizabeth Warren’s little dream agencies in the market. They laid off everybody, and I think that USAID was a complete layoff. and they’re not done yet I mean they’re going through every department now it’s a controversial thing yes okay not everybody is all for trimming government unnecessary spending a lot of people think it’s causing disruption I’ve heard stories about the VA I’ve heard stories about the FBI with Patel coming in and cleaning houses, causing a lot of confusion, is causing a lot of chaos. But, you know, the bottom line is, is the bottom line, right, Barry? I mean, look, you don’t have to be a CFA, right? to know that you can’t keep taking in four trillion and spending six trillion and you know we threw gasoline on the fire during covid to drive the spending up to six trillion a lot of that was meant to be temporary to get us through that covid year but the problem is the spending has remained at six trillion and it was bad before that i mean We were spending $1 trillion more than we were taking in before COVID, and now it’s jumped to $2 trillion more. I mean, we can’t even fathom.
SPEAKER 04 :
It’s not a new problem, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
We can’t even fathom what a trillion is. I mean, it’s almost beyond our comprehension. And now you’ve got 37 of those trillions sitting out there. It just seems to me, I think, here’s my bottom line. I think you have to be a good steward, no matter what your responsibility is in life. your home you need to be a good steward over your home you need to be a good steward over yourself your health over your personal finances your family your personal finances your gardens uh… everything that uh… you have responsibility for i think good stewardship is just a true principle and we have been terrible stewards not so much us Look, we’re the chumps that work hard and send our taxes, get those taxes taken out of our check every week. And, you know, I write a big check every October 31st at midnight, 1159 p.m., whatever it is, to get my check in there to the government. They should be wise stewards. And you cannot even compare. close to saying they’ve been wise stewards. They’ve been terrible stewards over our money, which is even more sacred money. You know, it’s one thing to be a steward over your own things, but you should be even a wiser steward over other people’s things. That’s the way I look at my job. I’m a steward over other people’s money here. To me, that’s more sacred than my own savings and my own money because, you know, other people are depending on me. And the government needs to get their… needs to get things in order unfortunately barry it’s gone so far off the rails that look at the pain we’re inflicting and incurring to just try to get it back on the rails that that’s the way i see it and i know other people don’t agree with me uh you know the alternative would be status quo
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, you almost have to break it and put it back together versus fixing it, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
I mean, you almost have to start over.
SPEAKER 05 :
I mean, that’s the issue, particularly, and you can tell in some of these. you know, portions, some of these parts of the government where they’re essentially dismantling, right, almost the entire or the entire agency.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes, it’s just, and, you know, some of the stuff they’re doing while they’re on work hours and, you know, I also believe in being a good employee, right?
SPEAKER 05 :
Well, you want to be a good fiduciary, right?
SPEAKER 02 :
Oh, yeah.
SPEAKER 05 :
To the business in general. Exactly.
SPEAKER 03 :
We should all be pulling in the same direction. Okay. Here are the 10 NASDAQ 100 stocks with the largest percentage declines over the past week. The past week. App loving. App Lovin’, obviously one of the biggest winners in the market over the last few years. Now, we’ve cut our position considerably. In a couple of short reports. If we didn’t ever cut our position, it would have been half of the emerging growth portfolio. Well, when we come back, we’re going to go through this list at some of the drubbings that some of these stocks have taken. In the last week, we’re talking one week. A little over a week. We’ll add a couple days to that. We’ll be right back. And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s Best Stocks Now show. App Lovin’ down 28.8% in the last week. MicroStrategy, who has built their house, the foundation of that house at MicroStrategy is crypto, mainly Bitcoin. MicroStrategy down 25.9% in the last week. Tesla. taking it on the chin, Mr. Doge. And I don’t even know. I mean, the secondary crypto coins like Dogecoin, yes, it’s kind of ironic that the guy behind Dogecoin, remember how he used to tease all the time about Dogecoin, D-O-G-E, and he ends up running a department called Doge, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
Department of Government Efficiency.
SPEAKER 03 :
I don’t think there’s any accident that he chose that D-O-G-E. Well, MicroStrategy is down 25.9%. Tesla is down 20%. In the last week, we unloaded our Tesla a while back. It broke the support levels. Palantir, my top pick for the year, and it was the biggest winner in the NASDAQ up until a week ago. Now it’s gone through a correction of 20%. I still own Palantir, obviously. Marvell down 19.4%. Constellation Energy. A very popular nuclear stock. We still own our Constellation. It’s down 19.3% in the last week. NVIDIA down 14.3%. So we’re down 10% in the last week. And I mean swiftly. Like eight days. Eight days. I did not have any hedges. I didn’t have any inverse funds in place. It happens so quickly it will make your head spin. That’s all I can say is when I got in the business, the Dow was at 4,000. It’s now at 45,000. I’ve seen many times my head has been spinning watching swift corrections, all kinds of things over the last 25 years. But I think you have to separate what’s a systemic change in the markets. I’m not seeing that. I’m not seeing us going into a recession and into a bear market. But I’ve been talking about how overpriced the market was. And sometimes it’s a game of chicken, Barry. I mean, it’s like, okay, we know it’s overpriced, but it’s still going up, and we don’t want to miss out.
SPEAKER 05 :
Well, and there’s some built-up leverage in the system, too. I mean, whether it’s in some of these two-times, three-times ETFs, or if it’s just particular names where you’ve got a ton of… you know, call activity in and so, you know, when, you know, the market moves faster than ever nowadays and it tends to overreact, right, in both directions.
SPEAKER 04 :
Both directions.
SPEAKER 05 :
At certain, you know, certain points in time and, This week, you certainly had a quick, swift hit to the market, especially a name like Palantir, where, frankly, folks who were ever buying that for a long period of time, they just bought it and it went up every day, right? And so it’s a different feeling when it starts going the other way, which can accelerate selling, especially when leverage is involved.
SPEAKER 03 :
And it all began with Palantir, really, when they, late in the day, that was the turning point. I can go back and… About 3 o’clock, 2.30 in the afternoon, a memo was leaked from HEGSETH, the new Department of Defense Secretary. And, you know, then I see them submit the budget, and they’re calling for an increase in defense spending. That’s the budget they just… At least it’s gone through the first hurdle. I didn’t see that 8% cut to defense spending.
SPEAKER 05 :
To me, they just need to spend it. At worst, just spend it more wisely. I’d like to see some cuts, but first, if you’re going to get this budget, be efficient with it and invest well. Right, be a good steward. And, you know, in my case, you could probably get more for whatever you’re spending already.
SPEAKER 03 :
Absolutely. Okay, now the good news. January Core PCE Price Index, which, you know, that’s a very highly anticipated report. It does seem like inflation’s under control. I mean, it came in at, let’s see, 2.6% year over year. That’s not bad.
SPEAKER 05 :
And that’s the Fed’s version. That’s what the Fed looks at. So it’s really a mixed bag. We’ve got kind of a surprisingly hot CPI and PPI number. And then, of course, what’s built into the PCE actually had some – Less rise.
SPEAKER 03 :
Now the rub is, the bad news to all of that is, if these tariffs go through, U.S. buyers will need 25% more cash to buy Canada or Mexico goods. Well, the whole thought there is you won’t buy Canadian or Mexico goods. You know, you’ll buy U.S. goods. So that would be the extreme, the worst-case scenario where the 25% tariff Now, some things, are you dependent upon anything from Mexico, Barry? I mean, can you switch from Corona to Budweiser for a month or two?
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, or just not. But, yeah, the avocados, that’s the one thing that comes to mind.
SPEAKER 05 :
I can give up avocados if I have to. I can find a substitute for that, but, you know, To me, it’s all the stuff that I don’t know is actually from one of those places.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, you’re going to find out soon. I am. Okay. You’ll see it in your pocketbook or it won’t be there. If there’s five things on the shelf and one’s from Mexico, one’s from Canada, the other three are from America, I’m going to choose the American brand. Canada, I can’t think of anything I’m dependent on from Canada. Maybe some of the lumber I get from Home Depot. I did buy some tomatoes. Tomatoes are Mexican this time of year.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, but I got some tomatoes yesterday, and they’re actually from Canada. Tomatoes?
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, they’re a hothouse. Yeah. Okay, and that’s the other thing. I mean, the U.S. can make up. There’s nothing we’re really, really dependent upon because now we can grow things out of season. And a lot of this stuff actually comes from chili in Argentina. Chili is a big producer of, like, watermelons this time of year, stuff like that. So I don’t see the tariffs as being a big deal. Canada and Mexico, where I see the problem is China. You know, it was 10, and now he’s going to see that 10 and up it to 20, from what I understand. I know I buy a lot of Chinese goods. Everything that comes to me from Amazon says made in China on it, okay? I think we’ll be much more careful shoppers if all of a sudden… So that could hurt inflation going forward. But right now, inflation seems to be under control. I saw the inflation numbers in Germany, 2.3%. But here’s the other thing, too. Okay, well, I’m going to talk about this when we come back. We have a tremendous amount of leverage over Canada and Mexico. They’re going to have to cave. Look how fast they caved the last time, okay? Okay. Without U.S., Canada and Mexico, they would go into severe recession, even depressions, without the U.S. as a customer. So even though all these numbers are being thrown around and the market’s reacting to it… That’s the shot fired over the bow, 25%. Where it ends up could be much less than that, and it’s not like we’re totally dependent on anything. 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. Call out the instigator because there’s something in the air. And welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Docs Now show. Okay, a number that pops off the page to me here. Canada’s monthly GDP, 0.3%. I mean, it’s basically a non-growth economy. And Canada has very little leverage. As much as we love, we have a lot of listeners up in Canada and a lot of followers up in Canada. But their economy has not been growing very much. over the last several years, and unfortunately, I mean, the U.S. has a lot of leverage over Canada. Canada’s going to have to meet whatever, I mean, whatever circumstances that he’s imposing upon, whatever conditions he’s imposing upon them, it seems like they’re going to have to come through. I noticed that Mexico turned over 23 drug lords yesterday after Trump, you know, turned over.
SPEAKER 05 :
I saw that, yeah, it was a tweet. Yeah, because I think he put a message on True Social. It was basically about the fentanyl crisis and that things are still coming across both of the borders. And he essentially used that as a reason why, hey, March 4th, here’s what we’re doing.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, March 4th. I think that’s basically the number one issue. Well, and the trade deficits. He wants to even them up a little bit more. He wants them buying as much of our stuff as we’re buying from them. Reciprocal trade, I guess that’s a new term that I haven’t heard until I think he invented it. Canada’s monthly GDP, very weak. And so they, you know… Tariffs against, 25% tariffs against Canadian goods would just really, isn’t Coors owned by Molson? Coors is owned by Molson, which is a Canadian company. And, of course, the lumber, I look around South Carolina, we certainly don’t need lumber. We’ve got more lumber than we could use in a lifetime around here.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, what we don’t have is mills. That’s the problem, and that was the problem during COVID was mills, right? I don’t know the last time a large mill was actually built in the U.S., and that’s where the big problem is. We’ve got plenty of trees.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes, and Mexico seems to come around. I mean, when faced with those 20, they really depend on the U.S., big time for their economy so they’re going to have to come around i mean i see that as being the market is pricing in that the tariffs are going to go through and it’s going to put our economy into a recession They’re painting in the worst case scenario. I don’t see that happening. I see Canada and Mexico coming around. Now, Europe is another story. Europe, I think, will stand their ground a little bit more. Although the U.K., you know, their prime minister was here yesterday, Starmer. They work things out, and it doesn’t look like he’s going to place any tariffs on the UK. But the rest of Europe, France, Germany, and all the others that trade with us. And then, of course, there’s China. I mean, that’s kind of the elephant in the room, really. And I think he’s speaking to China through Canada and Mexico. See what we did to them? We’ll do it to you, too. Okay, and now here’s the other big point in all of this. We just got the numbers out today on the U.S. international trade and goods deficit. We took in $153 billion in January more than what we sent out. Okay, we have a minus $153 billion trade deficit. The consensus was for $117 billion. So that’s going to get his attention. And, you know, why, in Trump’s mind, why should the largest country, the strongest, you know, economic engine capitalism, you know, in the world, have such a huge trade deficit? That’s enormous. That’s an enormous trade deficit. And obviously it has not started to narrow yet, as evidenced here by these January numbers, which are still holdovers from the previous administration. But eventually, probably starting now, they’re going to be Trump’s numbers, okay? Because now he’s… at the wheel of the trade deals. Okay, now we get into some individual stocks. All of these stocks are down 10, 15% in the last week. Let’s begin with Meta. Meta is becoming a big player in AI. And in fact, Meta is now going to release their own standalone AI app.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yes, that’s interesting.
SPEAKER 03 :
Which is much like ChatGPT, which is much like DeepSeek. And I don’t think Meta gets enough credit.
SPEAKER 05 :
I think if you go to what I saw. Grok. I saw that actually on, yeah, on X or whatever. There’s that bottom middle button I think is Grok. So, yeah, it’s coming everywhere, right, from all different companies here.
SPEAKER 03 :
If you don’t get the right answer from ChatGPT, try Grok, okay? And if you don’t give them, try Meta’s version of it until you get the right answer. Okay, so Meta has gone from 740 to 660. Let’s see, 80 divided by 7, that’s about a 12% correction. I’m pretty good at math in my head. 12% correction on Meta so far, all right? And Meta, I’ve heard many people say that of the magnificent seven, it’s the best. I would agree. I think the growth and the valuation, the combination thereof, the performance, I do think that Meta is the best of the fabulous seven. And you’re buying it now 12% cheaper than you were just, okay, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11 trading days. In 11 trading days, that’s about a percent a day. So anyways, Meta now is a major player in AI.
SPEAKER 05 :
Yeah, and remember Meta before that, right, had what, an 18-day win streak? Yeah. I think it was like the longest since 1990 or maybe ever.
SPEAKER 03 :
All good things must come to an end, yes.
SPEAKER 05 :
Right.
SPEAKER 03 :
Okay, Eli Lilly has held up well during this. In fact, as I look at the top ten ranked stocks in the app, I’ll tell you what’s really done well underneath the radar. European financials. Now, I know you don’t have a lot of exposure to European financials. We’re talking Deutsche Bank. Commerce Bank, ING out of Switzerland, and several others. In fact, the number one stock in the app is Commerce Bank, which is a German bank. For what reason the European financials all of a sudden caught fire? I guess that’s just where maybe the hedge funds are parking money until the heat blows over here in the U.S., They’re low P.E. when you’ve got an extremely high P.E. market. You can go into some of those low P.E. European banks. ING, for instance, has a P.E. ratio of 8. Deutsche Bank has a P.E. ratio, it’s 14. But these stocks are hitting new highs. Eli Lilly has held up well, obviously. It has nothing to do with the tech sector. Lilly is investing big time in cancer drug candidates. It’s nice when you’ve got a big checkbook from your ZepBound franchise to make deals looking to the future. But they did a deal worth $1.25 billion, Magnet Biomedicine, to develop cancer drugs. The other thing I’ve noticed is while Tesla has sold off wickedly, the Chinese EV stocks have had a major rally. They’re down today, but they’ve been going gangbusters while Tesla’s been going down. One of the reasons why is they’ve been allowed into the European markets They’re selling electric vehicles for $30,000. And Europe is still on that green energy thing. Norway is going to be 100% non-combustible engine cars here at some point in the near future. And China is helping drive that growth in electric vehicles. And, you know, I mean, obviously at a $30,000 price point, Tesla is up against it in Europe. Their European sales were down 48% year over year. Okay, Dell reports earnings. You know, Dell is a soggy stock in my book. Michael Dell, even though it’s got a little bit of new life with the AI. But, you know, they’re still a single digit grower. I thought they had a pretty good quarter. But, you know, you’ve got a stock that, you know.
SPEAKER 05 :
The PC still matters.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, it doesn’t. The PC still matters for them.
SPEAKER 05 :
And it’s not a great time for them.
SPEAKER 03 :
And they’re trying to get into the enterprise. Everybody is into the data center business. We’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 07 :
We’ll see you next time.
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Docs Now show. Bill Gunderson is headed to Sarasota March 25th and March 26th. That’s a Tuesday and a Wednesday at the Westin Hotel, the big behemoth down there on the corner. You all know where it’s at. And I have a limited number of slots available to meet with you while I’m there. I have a sister down in that area. I need to check in on her. She got hit pretty hard in the last hurricane. I don’t think she’s back in her house yet. We forget about all that stuff that hit. Florida got hit twice. It’ll be time for another hurricane season here soon enough. Oh, my goodness. So anyways, if you would like to reserve a spot, I haven’t even checked with Edie. But we’re about a month out on that. March 25th, March 26th, Tuesday, Wednesday, Bill Gunnarsson, 855-611-BEST. 855-611-BEST. We’ll get you through to Edie to reserve a spot with myself down in Sarasota, March 25th, March 26th. Okay, I want to spend the last bit here talking about the nuclear sector. I’m still a big believer. Yes, it has sold off. Some of those nuclear stocks are down 15-20% in the last 11 days. I just don’t see anything that’s going to change the trajectory of our need for more energy. I saw Jensen Wang say that even since ChatGPT came out, now we need 100 times faster than back then. 100 times faster than back in those days. So it’s crazy the energy needs that we have. And I just don’t see any other choice. Natural gas, yes. But I think nuclear is going to be a big player. So I’m still a big believer in Vistra, VST. which sold off yesterday. It’s down 25% from its high. Vistra has a lot of exposure to properties, and they’re out of the Texas area. I have a lot of, I like Constellation Energy, which is on the East Coast, obviously. Three Mile Island, I like that a lot, too. I still like Oklo. I think that the small modular ones are going to be big players and whatnot. So I’m still a believer in the nuclear sector, even though it’s volatile. Sometimes it gives off radiation, Mary, and sometimes it glows in the dark because it’s so overheated. There’s no middle ground. It doesn’t pay a 2% dividend and, you know, go up 6% a year, blah, blah, blah. it’s got a little bit of a volatility to it.
SPEAKER 05 :
Well, when yesterday was just a perfect example was, you know, I mean, we had Vistar report well, was up 7%. I mean, and they’re certainly a more diversified group of power company. But, you know, the next thing you know, we’re on the show and they’re down 7%. That’s a 14% swing. Same thing with Oklo. I think we started the day, started the day at, you know, 38 and some change at open. And then, you know, By the time we’re doing the show, 30 minutes later, they’re at 84 and some change.
SPEAKER 03 :
I like those smaller ones, too. But the smaller ones I either own in the incubator portfolio or some have crossed over into the emerging growth. Nano Nuclear NNE is another one that’s interesting. The one that’s coming up with the new fuel, Lightbridge, is interesting. Let’s see, Nano, there’s one other. Oh, SMR, Smart Modular is interesting out of the Silicon Valley. So I’m not pulling the plug on that. What I don’t like, I see Redfin reported. Oh, Talon is another one, TLN, which reported today. I don’t like anything with the home building business, the building sector. Interest rates are still 6.7 on that 30-year mortgage. Redfin stock tanks after below consensus Q1. I would say a depression has gone through the real estate sector.
SPEAKER 05 :
I think last year, I think we had a number come out a couple of days ago. I think it was the worst year for home sales, I think maybe ever, or as long as they’ve been keeping up with it.
SPEAKER 03 :
Because, you know, look, we had interest rates down around 3% on the 30-year. And so, you know, and you had the refinancing boom. You had the boom in the mortgage business. Unfortunately, that’s been a sector where people have really taken it on the chin. is the real estate sector. So I’m still not warming up to that one. I’ve got to see interest rates go way down before I would warm up to anything in the building sector. And that was one of the best sectors in the entire market there for quite some time, building supply companies, because of the shortage of homes. That was the big number one driver. Now they seem to be building apartments everywhere, as the average age of the apartment dweller, I think, has gone up to 45 years old now. It used to be down in the mid-30s. So the apartment sector has held up well, but the overall construction, building, real estate, new home builders, and mortgage markets, still not very healthy whatsoever. There’s just other areas of the market that look better than others. Okay, you know what? The free four-week trial is still in place. My assistants asked, are you going to do it again through March? Yes. I think people need help more now than ever, really.
SPEAKER 05 :
Certainly with the volatility as of late. Yes.
SPEAKER 03 :
So I’m continuing that. A lot of people have come on over and have subscribed to that for $89 a month to try to keep you on track in the markets and get you through the tough times. There’s going to be tough times in the market. But, you know, I believe strongly that if you’re in the right things, that eventually that wins out, even though they can go through some swift corrections. But other things, if you’re in the wrong things and they tank like a red fin or whatever, those were the wrong things to begin with. But right now we’ve kind of had the baby thrown out with the bathwater and a lot of these areas of the market. And there’s actually a lot of really good buys right now in some of these best sectors now of the market. So go to GundersenCapital.com. I’ll be sending out the newsletter as soon as I can. Sometimes it goes into Sunday morning if it’s a really busy week in the market. uh it adds a lot of time to uh you know the newsletter to get it done and get it out the door but i want to make sure it’s the best information i can possibly get to you before i send it out go to gundersoncapital.com to set up an appointment with us uh either sarasota or uh over the uh telephone the zoom whatever 855-611-BEST that’s 855-611-BEST 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.