Dive into the latest edition of the Best Stocks Now show with Bill Gundersen, where today’s economic insights and trends take center stage. From the complexities of an inverted yield curve to Talon Energy’s market-rattling acquisitions, explore how these dynamics reshape investment landscapes. This episode also critiques CoreWeave’s aggressive stance in AI, alongside Waymo’s strategic expansions amid Tesla’s competitive drive in the burgeoning RoboTaxi industry. Engage with this intricate weave of economics, technology, and strategic foresight.
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 03 :
And welcome to the Friday, July the 18th edition of 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 certified financial planner. And as usual, there’s some stunning stories in the market here today. There seemed to be more recently. Trump always seems to bring around a lot of stunning stories. Some of them are related to him, but they’re definitely market-related. The Dow is down 133. We’ve got a mixed open, 44,351. The NASDAQ’s hitting a new all-time high once again today. It’s up 23. It’s at 20,909. That’s another new high, and we’re closing in on 21,000 there for the NASDAQ. The S&P is hitting a new all-time high. It’s hit most people’s target price already. We’ve still got a little under six months to go. The S&P is up seven. That’s an all-time high at 6,305. Interest rates are down a few basis points here this morning. And we also have gold is up about a half a percent, a little bit of lift there. And oil is up 1.2%. And Bitcoin is about flat here so far today on this Friday, July the 18th. So welcome to the 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 we did get news today that we’ll be coming to Atlanta soon. I think in a week we’re going to be at the 3 o’clock time slot there in Atlanta, which is about a five-hour drive here from us. A very large hub in the southeast, a very busy city. We were in Atlanta for several years, and the station got repurposed for something. I don’t know what it is, Latin Disco or something like that. But anyways, we’ll be coming back to Atlanta on the Big Talker there, 1160, I think it is, in Atlanta, which is the answer. To all your questions, it’s the Salem Station, the news talker. And we’ll be in that 3 o’clock slot. So you’ll still be hearing this morning news, but that’s okay. I mean, hopefully it stays fresh throughout the day. We had a mixed day yesterday. Tech had a good day yesterday. The NASDAQ hit a new all-time high yesterday. The S&P 500 hit an all-time high yesterday. And that’s how we ended, and that’s where we begin today. And there’s some stunning stories, really, in the market here today. First, we go to the U.K., where I have some roots in North Umberton, England, the very north of England, and also from Renfrew, Glasgow, Scotland. That’s my mother’s side of the aisle. The UK is moving closer to lowering the voting age to 16. You know, I just don’t know about that, Barry. Do kids have their wits about me? I didn’t when I was 16. I still barely have my wits about me, and I’m way over 16 now. But they’re looking at lowering that voting age to 16 years old. 16 is pretty wild.
SPEAKER 01 :
I don’t know about that one.
SPEAKER 03 :
Coming to America, I’m sure, in the near future.
SPEAKER 04 :
What’s the impetus for that, I wonder?
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, you know, I think kids in that age tend to be much more liberal-minded. And this is being pushed by the Labour Party over there in the UK. So I think it would help. The liberal cause having the 16-year-olds voting. We had the building permits, housing starts rise more than expected in June, even though interest rates are pushing 7%. They’re not at 7%. They’re under 7%. And I think we said several weeks ago that, you know, people are just kind of accepting these high interest rates. thanks to Jerome Powell, 10 rate cuts by the European ECB and none by our banks, our central bank, and we’re up around 7% on a 30-year mortgage, which takes a lot of people out of the market too high. Building permits nonetheless and housing starts rise more than expected in June. It would seem that all of the economic reports we’ve had, Barry, over the last couple of weeks have all been, On the positive side, in exceeding estimates, whether it be the unemployment claims, whether it be the PPI, whether it be the CPI, which was showing no inflation, well, we seem to be getting a lot of good reports on the economy. Well, the earnings and economy.
SPEAKER 04 :
And the economy just made resilient. I mean, when you look at interest rates, I mean, the three-month is at 4.34 U.S. three-month rate, and the U.S. 10-year is at 4.43, which means we’ve pretty much been in a flat to inverted yield curve for a while now. And as you mentioned, there’s only one way to kind of un-invert that, and that’s, of course, lowering that short-term rate. And the economy remains resilient and earnings continue to grow.
SPEAKER 03 :
No, he’s worried about inflation. He can’t sleep at night worried about inflation. You know, here’s your stunning story. Stunning story number one. This is one we own in our area. Ultra Growth Portfolio, which is having a heck of a year, by the way. Don’t take it from me. Get the newsletter and find out how it’s doing so far in 2025. But it has been on a tear. And one of those stocks we own in there is Talon Energy. Talon Energy has an interesting past. They went through a bankruptcy. They were in the energy business, and now they’re a key player in the nuclear business, which is a very hot sector. in the market, if you haven’t noticed. And Talon, T-A-L-O-N, is the symbol there, which is headquartered in Houston, Texas. But a lot of their projects, infrastructure, are located in the mid-Atlantic, in the Pennsylvania-Baltimore area, which is becoming a very important corridor for AI. And Talon announced today that they’re buying a power plant in Pennsylvania and another one in Ohio for $3.5 billion. I can’t remember the last time we saw all this M&A taking place in the power markets. But, you know, I think Talon probably has nuclear ambitions in those two states. And this stock on that news, now Barry, explain this. Normally when a company buys another company, the stock goes down. But they’re obviously getting some good assets here and they may be able to expand their nuclear footprint. Talon is up 20% today. T-L-N. And, of course, we are heard in Houston every day. You’ve got a big winner down there. Talon is not your run-of-the-mill standard utility that runs electrical lines and supplies the lights to downtown Houston, et cetera. They’re more of a nationwide, more along the lines of Vistra. More along the lines of Constellation Energy. And the biggest winner in the market today, as far as I can tell, up on 13 times normal volume.
SPEAKER 04 :
In an integrated play. And as you mentioned, like Vistra, I mean, these two plants are gas-fired plants. The neat thing about… You know, gas versus – you know, nuclear is the fact that you can bring new power online faster. That’s why GEV has blown up because they make those turbines that you can literally just stack onto the – to the current, uh, you know, power plant, uh, their, you know, gas, uh, fired turbines. And so, um, and, and particularly this one appears to be a pretty, uh, you know, two of the most efficient natural gas power plants that were, uh, that were in that portfolio. And, And Talon was able to get them, and that builds off the good news from last week where they inked that deal with Amazon.
SPEAKER 03 :
Man, there’s a lot of stuff happening in Pennsylvania this week. No doubt. And, of course, Ohio is becoming a major hub also. Now, when a stock goes up like this after an acquisition, that has to mean it’s an accretive acquisition, right? It’s good to buy companies that will be accretive and add to your earnings and not subtract to your earnings. That’s the goal of M&A is to buy a company that will drop to the bottom line and add value to your company. And obviously the street loves this deal. I’ve never seen a power company buying out a couple others and up 20% on the news. That is very, very unusual. But you know what? This is a red-hot sector, this need for power. Red-hot. We’ll be right back. And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s Best Stocks Now show. I just want to go back to that Talon Energy, which is as simple as TLN on the New York Stock Exchange. There is just a little bit more color that I got out of that story as to why it’s up 20%. Here’s what one of the analysts, or no, here’s what the company is saying, the addition. of the facilities to Talon’s portfolio enhances Talon’s ability to offer reliable scalable that’s an important word scalable that means they can really expand it grid supported and regionally diverse well yeah you’re in Ohio and you’re in Pennsylvania so you’ve got the diversity there Low carbon capacity to hyperscale data centers. There’s a key sentence, phrase right there. You mentioned data center. Boy, are data centers taking over America or what? And large commercial offtakers. So, you know, those are all the buzzwords right now coming from Talon. And that’s why the stock is up 20% today. And it is one, you know, we only own in that ultra-growth portfolio. Those are ultra… You know, refined, we have a refining system, refining out the garbage and getting down to the real crux of the matter, the best stocks now in that area of the market. We currently own just 18 stocks in that portfolio, and one of those stocks is Talon. which has been very good to us. And this portfolio, it’s done pretty well since its inception. You look it up yourself, okay? Look at the return since January 1st, 2019, when I started this portfolio for Seeking Alpha and standardized it and where it is today, and then compare that with the S&P 500. That’s the ultra-growth portfolio.
SPEAKER 04 :
And it’s a story about short duration versus long duration. I mean, there’s really only one way to expand power quickly, right, in terms of bringing new power online, and that’s with turbines and natural gas, nuclear being the longer duration play there. And so, you know, what they’re doing is they’re getting some assets if they can, you know, scale up the, scale up the natural gas piece, right, a fired portion of their power business, and then they’ll have, obviously, could be a bridge to some of those longer-term assets that will eventually come out.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, and, I mean, they obviously didn’t pay too much. I mean, that’s the whole key there. If you pay too much for those assets, then you wouldn’t have a stock that’s up 20%. But they obviously got a deal that made sense. Got to be some synergy there, right? BlackRock was the seller, and I’m sure BlackRock was happy, right? I mean, they probably made a nice little profit, too, off the whole deal. Okay, the next stunning story to me, but we were right on this one. Back on May the 5th, a company, well, earlier this year, let me see when it went public. Let’s see, CRWV went public on late March at $40 per share. and i started reading and i looked at the sales growth and i said wow this is a big deal here this is a good one and we normally don’t buy a stock that doesn’t have earnings yet but that sales growth was stunning and on may the 5th we stepped up to the plate it’s one thing to pull the trigger to buy it’s another thing to pull the trigger and sell But we did buy CoreWeave in this ultra-growth portfolio. That’s helped the performance this year in CoreWeave. We sold half of it 18 days later after we bought it on May 23rd for a 94% profit. You know, when I bought it, I said to myself, this is the new kid in town, and AI is the one they all want to take to the senior prom. And now they’ve got a new one, and they were all gushing over it. But I kept the other half. I said, you know, when you make 93% in 18 days, that’s a gift. That’s a gift from God. You know, you better take it before it disappears. Well, it continued to go north after I sold it, but that’s okay because I kept the other half, which was the gravy part of the holding. And I sold it on June the 26th, so I held it for about seven weeks. Sorry about the short-term gains there, clients. You’re going to have to pay some tax to Uncle Sam if you’ve got a non-sheltered account there on those gains in CoreWeave. I sold the rest of it at $158. At that level, we bought it at $52. It more than tripled in seven weeks. I said, thank you, goodbye.
SPEAKER 04 :
Me and a client were discussing this trade yesterday, actually, Bill. What? I said a client and me and a client were discussing this trade yesterday for those reasons.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, okay, do you see this news on it today? Yeah. CoreWeave gets a reduced rating due to its over-reliance on Microsoft NVIDIA. This comes from HSBC Bank, which is a huge U.K. bank with tons of exposure to Asia. You see the price target that they put on CoreWeave? Did you see this? $32 price target. It was trading at $187 not too long ago. That was the all-time high. We sold it at $158, and I’m happy, you know, and now it’s at $126. So it’s down $32 from where we sold it. But if HSBC is right, now I don’t know what valuation methodology they’re using. but they’re giving all kinds of reasons they uh they say they’re over reliant on microsoft as a customer and nvidia as a supplier as nvidia is the only supplier for coreweave gpus So they have limited bargaining power at CoreWeave. And we believe that CoreWeave has weak bargaining power with Microsoft, which accounted for more than 70% of its 1Q, Q1 25 revenue. And that’s called, you know, people do look at your income statement and they want to know, do you have one client that’s 70% of your business? Because it’s a good thing on the one hand if it’s Microsoft. But if Microsoft decides to go shopping, it’s a bad thing, obviously, to have too much exposure to just one client. But when I saw that $32 price target, I thought, wow. That’s a gutsy call there by HSBC. I’m just glad to be out of the stock and to have taken my profit on it. It’s nice to watch it from afar. Yeah, we’ll watch this. This is now a tug-of-war between the momentum folks in Silicon Valley that think Corweave’s going to the moon and a bank headquartered in the United Kingdom with global exposure whose analyst says, you know what, it’s worth $32. Good luck with it. It’s at $125. That’s just quite a bit of downside risk there. Well, when we come back, stunning story number three. Guess where they’re finding rare earth now? We’ve got a new hotspot for rare earth, and it’s not too far from Las Vegas. I’ll give you a hint, and I’ve been there. We’ll be right back. This is Bill Gunderson. Thank you for tuning in to today’s Best Stocks Now, Best Inverse Funds Now show. Now, back to the second half of the show.
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And welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Docs Now show.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, you know, the stories this week, Barry, I mean, if you were to just pick a few phrases, Pennsylvania, definitely, you know… I don’t know that the GOP will ever lose Pennsylvania again with what Trump’s done for them. I’m sure that he’s got a little bit of an agenda there, bringing all that business to Pennsylvania. It seems to be the key swing state. The other story has been Rare Earth. We’ve been to Las Vegas looking for rare earth. We’ve been to Greenland looking for rare earth. And I’ve got another location here I’m going to talk about and another company that’s involved here. We’ve talked a lot about energy and power. data center, fueling all of this, driving all of this, this need for energy. So it’s been a wild week. There’s been a lot of good stories. We’ve had a good week here in the market. But now we’re going to go to Utah. All right, that’s where my ancestors, those Scottish and English ancestors, crossed the Big Pond, the pond, Back in the mid-1800s and made their way to Tooele, Utah, where they were early settlers there in the state of Utah. My mother graduated from Tooele High School. The day she graduated, Barry, she moved to California. She was anxious to get out of Toledo. She’s gone. Yes, but I still have a lot of ancestors and relatives up that way. But that’s where now the next rare earth. Now, unfortunately, the Tooele area gets the spent nuclear fuel, okay?
SPEAKER 1 :
That’s what they get.
SPEAKER 03 :
They get the waste, the nuclear waste. Over on the other side of the state, and, you know, I’ve been to Lake Powell many times with my father and mother, and we used to haul our little fishing boat there and go up the river and find a little nice place to camp out and picnic and fish and water ski and all that kind of good stuff. But There’s a little town called Page, which is on the Arizona side. And let’s see, there’s the White Hill Mountains, which is right on the edge of the Navajo Indian Reservation. So those of you that know that area probably know where I’m talking about, the White Mesa Mill in Utah. It’s right in the corner, not too far from Colorado, too. Four states come together right in that area.
SPEAKER 04 :
That’s a spot where you can stand in one spot and touch four states, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes. Now, the name of the company, of course, now they’ve been around for a long time, Energy Fuels. This is an easy symbol to remember, U-U-U-U. Sounds like a Linda Ronstadt’s flong, but it’s not. U, U, U, U is the symbol because it’s the first letter in uranium. And, of course, those states, I think they call it four corners, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, actually five, Wyoming and New Mexico, right there. And if you draw a line, it’s not that far from the Las Vegas Mountain Pass area. UUUU surges to a three-year high as it begins heavy rare earth production. That’s a buzz term right there, rare earth. The stock has had a big week. It began producing heavy rare earth element oxides on a pilot scale at its White Mesa mill in Utah. The company said it could be in position to produce separated heavy rare earth oxides on a commercial scale as early as Q4 2026. So look at that. I mean, that’s more than a year out from existing seed sources. And if a production decision is made in 2025 from its permitted Donald project, coincidentally named Donald, by the end of 2027, Energy Fuel says it’s now in the process of producing diprosium oxide. I think I’ve seen a little bit of that in my backyard. I’m going to get my shovel out this weekend. At a minimum purity of 99.5%. and potentially exceeding 99.9% purity. Now, you can type that in, Barry. Ask a co-pilot. Ask a chat GTP, what is diprosium oxide used for? Diprosium oxide. And it expects its first kilogram of diprosium oxide within the next 30 days. uh so anyways you have another player energy uh fuels operates the only u.s licensed uranium mill okay that means they process the uranium It’s used in rods.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, used in rods because it has the ability to absorb neurons or neutrons. Yeah, not neurons.
SPEAKER 03 :
I knew that. I was thinking neutrons. From which it also produces critical materials such as vanadium. And I’ve got a vanadium story for you here in a bit. and rare earth element oxide. So you, you, you, you. Now, last year, when I was more active in my trading account, I’ve been too busy with everybody else’s account. You know, mine always gets neglected, my little portfolio. My father, you know, I… He was a well-known artist, and we didn’t have any paintings in our home. And my dad used to say, well, you know, I paint all day, and the last thing I want to do is come home and paint. He says, that’s like a mailman coming home and saying, I think I’ll go for a nice walk. That’s back in the days when they used to walk with their little stroller bags full of mail and everything. But anyways, one of the stocks I bought in that portfolio, and I still own it because it hasn’t done much. What? Look at this today. That’s beautiful. There’s a critical mineral material called vanadium. And back when I was doing my research on nuclear plants, vanadium is needed in the shell to protect that from radiation getting out. And I bought some of this Largo, which is LGO. Now it’s headquartered in Toronto, Canada, but they are engaged in the mining of vanadium deposits in Brazil. Okay. And Largo had a huge move yesterday, and it’s up 15% today. Maybe I’m finally going to get back to what I paid for it, Barry. I think I paid $2.50. It’s back to $1.77. I haven’t looked at it here today until just now. But remember that word vanadium, which UUUU is mentioning today. And the other play on vanadium is Largo, L-G-O, which is a Canadian company engaged in the mining of vanadium. And so anyways, lots of crazy things happening. All of a sudden, Rare Earth has become… When I was growing up, Rare Earth was a band that played a bunch of Motown songs. They ripped off, you know, and did their own little version of them. Speaking of which, we’re headed there. Edie reports to me that we’re booked. So we’re going to add another day to the concert tour on Thursday. Yes, you filled it up. I’ll stay around. I’ll stick around if it’s got to be me. I don’t mind doing it. I love meeting with the folks.
SPEAKER 04 :
I don’t think I’m heading out until Thursday either.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, those one-hour spots on Tuesday and Wednesday, I told you, I warned you, are all gone. But we’re going to add Thursday. So get on the phone right now. In the next 10 minutes, the first caller gets a vial of vanadium. No, I’m just kidding. Anyways, we’ll be there on Thursday now, and Tuesday’s the workshop. So it looks like Detroit. Man, I was going to go to a Tiger game while I was there. They’re playing Minnesota. Yeah, they are. Maybe we’ll make it. Maybe we’ll make it, slip in a Tiger game. Okay, now my next big story. Goes back to Pennsylvania. Now, Jeffries, which is a big firm, bigger than us, they’re Goliath. I’m David with my little sling. And they say the biggest winner coming out of Pennsylvania this week is PPL. Now write that one down. That’s a traditional, that’s the traditional electricity generator utility in that area of Pennsylvania. I mean, they are headquartered right there in Allentown. Billy Joel had a little song about that. They also produce power for Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee, and the U.K., Let’s keep our eye on PPL. I’ve added that to my watch list. Maybe they’ll become a big player in nuclear in the hottest state in America right now. No, it’s not Arizona. They’re the hottest by temperature. But for stocks, it’s Pennsylvania this week. Congratulations. When we come back, I’ve got a big robo-taxi story.
SPEAKER 05 :
Go where you want to go Do what you want to do And win whoever wins
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Docs Now show. And I have a RoboTaxi update for you. You know, it’s pretty hard to argue that Google doesn’t have the big lead here as far as I’m concerned. You know, I saw him running all over the Bay Area, obviously, when I was out there. And we’ll be out there in probably late August, early September. I can’t wait to get back there. But Waymo doubles their footprint in Austin as the robo-taxi battle heats up. And they take a dig at Elon Musk. They’re going to double their service area in Austin in a strategic push to stay ahead of Tesla. Waymo’s robo-taxi coverage in Austin now spans 90 square miles, more than double its previous footprint, as it aims to cement its lead with what it calls the city’s only fully autonomous 24-7 ride-hailing service, which is a veiled dig at Tesla, which only offers invite-only supervised rides, Barry, You know, you can vote as a 16-year-old, but you’ve got to have a supervised right. Between 6 a.m. and 12 a.m. Don’t we call that a learner’s permit? Isn’t that a learner’s permit? So they’re way ahead in my book of Tesla. Now, you never count Elon Musk out. But, you know, I mean, Waymo also has that exclusive partnership with Uber, which is pretty darn valuable. Yeah. They now offer autonomous rides in new neighborhoods that include Crestview, Windsor Park, Franklin Park, Sunset Valley, The Domain, and McKinney Falls State Park. So there’s your update on Robotaxi. And don’t count Google out. You can’t count them out in AI. You can’t count them out in digital advertising. You can’t count them out in Robotaxi. They are a major platform to be reckoned with. But we’ll see. You know, you’ve got Tesla there breathing down their neck, but Tesla seems to be well behind. Waymo Waymo seems to be the leader the de facto leader right now in robo taxi Okay, I see Microsoft gets a target price raise. By the way, Microsoft’s been hitting new highs, all-time highs, which reminds me, let’s catch up here. Have they hit $4 trillion yet? Not yet. $3.8 trillion. And NVIDIA has been hitting new highs all week long. They’re at $4.2 trillion. Jensen Wang has opened up a $400 billion lead on Bill Gates’ Microsoft. Don’t count Microsoft out, though. They’re a major player. And let’s not count Meta out. They not only stole Apple’s boss, head honcho in the AI space, But they took his team, two of the prominent members of his team. So, you know, he’s opening up his checkbook is Zuckerberg, Zuckerbucks. And we do own Meta. And Meta is really rating top talent in AI.
SPEAKER 04 :
And the 27, I mean, to me, look at the 27.28, essentially a 27 forward PE ratio for Meta. I mean, and their earnings are 25 bucks a share.
SPEAKER 03 :
Look at Google’s forward PE, too. It’s not that bad. What is Google right now? G-O-O-G-L is the one I trade in.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, that’s 19.
SPEAKER 03 :
There you go. I mean, that’s very reasonable prices. Okay, the one that is disappointing us today, I list my winners and my losers, and I thought it was a fantastic report from Netflix. They beat by 12 cents, and they raised their 25 guidance. Barry, you’ll have to dig into that and tell me why it’s down 5.3%. We’d be way up today if it wasn’t for Netflix. We’re having a good day.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, the report was a beaten raise. They raised revenue guidance, raised earning guidance, beat the estimate.
SPEAKER 03 :
What in the heck? What do they got to do?
SPEAKER 04 :
I don’t know.
SPEAKER 03 :
Find rare earth minerals, invest in a uranium mine like Apple did. I mean, what does Netflix have to do?
SPEAKER 04 :
Buy some power companies like Talon, I guess.
SPEAKER 03 :
Buy some nuclear power, something like that. But anyways, I thought it was fantastic. I’m not too worried about it. But the stock is selling off. They’re looking to make $32 per share this year. They’ve been growing their earnings by 25% per year over the last five years. And this quarter they reported their sales were up 16% year over year. Now that’s hard to believe.
SPEAKER 04 :
I’ve been watching their Cold War documentary ever since Iran, ever since we sent those bunker busters in there. I’ve been watching a documentary on the Cold War. I think it’s called Turning Point or something on Netflix, and about four episodes in, and it’ll blow your mind.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, I’ve got a 12-year-old granddaughter who’s trying to big-time her mother to watch the Squid Games. Is that a Netflix property? Oh, yeah, that’s a little – I don’t know. mom said no mom should probably say no 12 year old slammed her door moped the rest of the day mom looked it up and said the F word 27 times
SPEAKER 04 :
It’s a little blood and definitely some violence in there, too.
SPEAKER 03 :
And even you say no. Well, I’m going to tell her that because I was on the no side of the fence, too. That’s not good for a 12-year-old at all. But I guess it’s a big hit. But keep it away. You know, maybe they’ll move the vote to 12 at some point in time. But you can’t watch squid games, not on my watch. Anyways. Okay, well, you know, we’re out of time. We never got to 3M like anybody cares. Well, you know, it’s Minnesota Manifest. American Express. Schwab reported earnings. All these soggy stocks. Truist Financial and Schlumberger rounds out. The lineup. Okay, I’m working on the newsletter the rest of the day, doing a little trading. Maybe we’ll find something. You’re going to see some new stocks in this week’s newsletter. I was pretty busy this past week. Very busy, in fact. We’re going to look into Thursday. Actually, we have to check if they have that space available for us. They should. Book an appointment. We’ll get you in there. We’ll do the… interviews in the parking lot if we have to on thursday all right gundersoncapital.com to set an appointment with us or to reserve a spot to that workshop or talk to us anywhere from america 855-611-BEST have a great weekend
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.
