In this episode of Best Stocks Now, professional money manager Bill Gunderson analyzes the unexpected market movements following the Super Bowl weekend. Dive into the dynamics of the stock market as the Dow hits an all-time high, surpassing the unprecedented 50,000 mark, while tech giants continue to stimulate growth with massive capital expenditures. Join the conversation with Bill and chartered financial analyst Barry Kite as they discuss the catalysts behind this extraordinary day in trading and what it means for investors moving forward. Explore the parallels between today’s tech drive and the historic gold rush as Gunderson and Kite
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 Monday post-Super Bowl, February the 9th, 2026 edition of the Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management, a nationwide fee-based only money management firm. And I’m here with Barry Kite, our chartered financial analyst. After our monster day on Friday, where did that come from? Who cares? We’ll take it. The Dow is down 132, but it did close above 50,000 for the first time in its history on Friday. Today it’s at 49,983. I guess you could say 50,000 is resistance right now. The NASDAQ is up 75. It’s off to a good start after those massive spending plans by Amazon and Google and others. Setting off that gold rush there in the Silicon Valley from where we watched the Super Bowl yesterday. The Nasdaq’s up 78, 23,109. S&P up 4, 6,936. Russell, 2,000, down 10 points. Bitcoin down below 70,000 once again. It seems like any kind of rally in Bitcoin is being sold today. That’s not good if you’re a fan of Bitcoin. And we have a little bit of pressure on the bond market. Is China going to start kind of laying off their bond purchases? So welcome to today’s 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. And what a day. You know, the last thing I expected last Friday, after the week we had, You had software in a free fall, the S-A-A-S, software as a service sector, cratering. And you had crypto in a free fall. And what do we get on Friday? We get a 1,000-point move to the upside in the Dow and carries it above 50,000 for the first time in its history. You had an explosion to the upside yesterday. in the nasdaq and what set that off you know i’ll just very what was what who’s the sponsor of the the soup the stadium where they played we were right next to that stadium and levi stadium okay and how did levi The very first gold rush in 1849, hence the San Francisco 49ers, set off a massive spending spree in the Bay Area. And one of those big recipients back then, No, it wasn’t an AI company. It was a company that sold tough, durable jeans. That’s rugged country out in that gold country. I’ve ran the Merced River in a raft with a bunch of Boy Scouts. I’ve ran the… The Kings River, other rivers, the Kern River up in that area. And it’s rugged country. And those Levi’s, that’s who made the money in the gold rush. Not many of the people who came out here.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, the general store. It was the picks and shovels approach that we talk about all the time.
SPEAKER 04 :
Now you’ve got today, and they’re calling it a massive gold rush. Jensen Wang said over, I think, Friday or Saturday that the spending plans… Okay, now on the one hand, Amazon tanked on Friday because of the massive spending plan, $200 billion in capital expenditures to keep up in the AI race, to buy the things from the general store, which not levi’s or picks and shovels and mining pans but astera labs and core weave and amd and nvidia nvidia had a monster day on friday it was up five percent you would really expect that stadium i i i said to my wife wouldn’t you expect this stadium to be nvidia stadium or tesla stadium right levi stadium that’s crazy because i don’t know how many people wear levi’s these days but it’s it’s reminiscent of the original gold rush in the bay area so that’s what i find fascinating that some things never change they do change but they don’t change instead of steam engines on the southern pacific railroad running through san francisco now you’ve got waymo google google waymo cars uh you know going up and down the hills of san francisco times have changed but some things remain the same
SPEAKER 03 :
You want to buy. Is it good? I mean, from an investor standpoint, even if you didn’t have a team in the Super Bowl yesterday, at least historically, the NFC won, which that always tends to, for whatever reason, tends to do a couple percent better on average.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, that’s a weird one. I mean, I wouldn’t bank on that one too much. But Seattle was definitely the better team there yesterday. Their defense was unbelievable. But what a day, what a burger, what a week. The Dow was up 2.47% on Friday. The NASDAQ was up 2.2%. The S&P was up 2. The Russell 2000 was up 3.6%. Even Bitcoin was up 7,300 on Friday, and it got back above 70,000. But, you know, look, when you do technical analysis, a chart, a chart is just measuring. Think of all the people that own Bitcoin and are underwater in it. Let’s say they bought it over 100,000. Well, it peels off and it goes under 70, blah, blah, blah. It gets down to 65. And then all of a sudden it’s up 7,300 on Friday. What does that do? There’s an expression for it, but hey, here’s a chance to get out at least with a little bit of respect and dignity. Instead of selling it down at 62, I’m going to take this. And that’s going to happen for a while until you wash out all the people. that are in bitcoin at a much higher price than where it trades today that’s called overhead hang overhead supply uh we don’t know how many people own bitcoin let’s just say over 80 000 okay so every time it makes some kind of rally back towards 80 000 they’re gonna say thank goodness i’m out of here It’s been a bad experience. I’m not going back to that restaurant anytime soon. So anyways, the gold Russian AI is in full swings, and the picks and shovel stocks soared. Okay, so, and hey, we’ve got a new market prediction. We’ve got a new macro outlook guy. He happens to occupy the White House. He’s calling for $100,000 in the Dow by the end of his term. If you do the math to get to 100,000, the rule of 72, you’d have to do about 25% per year over the next three years before his term is up to get to 100,000. So that’s kind of like the NFC. You know, that prediction may even be wilder than the NFC prediction here that we’ll have a good year because the NFC won the Super Bowl. But Trump is one for hyperbole. And, you know, I saw that they’re holding – he’s holding back funding on a tunnel that they want to build up there, the Hudson Bay Tunnel, Hudson River Tunnel. He says, if I can have the naming rights, I’ll free up the money. He’s a consummate sales guy. You know, look, I want my name on that tunnel.
SPEAKER 03 :
Naming rights, please.
SPEAKER 04 :
We could call it the boring tunnel. Maybe, I don’t know, the Trump boring tunnel. Trump boring gets together with Tesla and they drill that tunnel underneath the Hudson River. So anyways, we’ve got a lot going on here in the markets today. I did a big earnings update on Friday and Saturday in the newsletter, and I can only say that the direction of earnings has been a beat. It’s been a beat, but that is definitely the trend. We started this quarter off expecting a 7.3% gain over the same quarter last year. Now we’re at 13%, 13%. And on those days, like last week, when the market was reeling and Bitcoin was reeling, and I’m starting to see the doomsday guys come out of the woodworks over at Seeking Alpha. writing why this is the biggest crash we’ll ever experience in the history of the market. You know, I hang my hat on earnings. And I looked at those earnings on Friday afternoon, and I saw 13%, which is up from 11% the week before. That’s the trend. The trend is your friend. That’s another old saying in the market. Well, what is the trend saying now? Who’s going to report this week? Very important. A lot of important companies coming up. What about this China urging their banks to curb U.S. Treasury exposure? Is our bond market in trouble? We’ll be right back. And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s Best Docs Now show. Jensen Wang did a pretty interesting interview on CNBC. He obviously hit the forefront of the tech industry’s artificial intelligence revolution. He said that the industry is in the midst of a generational build-out. uh… he also spoke about amazon and it’s kind of ironic that it was amazon’s bad news that set off the big uh… day in the market on friday they announced they’ll spend two hundred billion in capital spending in twenty twenty six alone largely for the a i specific needs of its amazon web services unit which wayne says that the demand there is very strong and he says the companies like the anthropic and open a i are still severely constrained by the lack of compute they need more computing power As such, there is incredibly intense demand for advanced GPUs, Wang added. So anyways, he says it’s going to take seven years to build this thing out. Well, we shall see. China urges banks to curb U.S. Treasury exposure. I haven’t looked lately at what percent of our debt that China owns, but it’s pretty significant. I think Japan is still number one at about 30% or something like that. But I’m surprised that we’re not seeing a bigger sell-off in the bond market today. It’s pretty steady. It’s holding in there. This has not really influenced… interest rates. Chinese banks hold about $298 billion in dollar-denominated bonds. as of September. So anyways, you know, there’s still a cold war taking place between us and China.
SPEAKER 03 :
It’s interesting. So they’re essentially asking their banks to curb their purchases of treasuries. And what they’d rather them do is lend to their own people, right, in terms of spurring investment. And Frankly, the banks would rather hold U.S. treasuries than lend it out. So it’s an interesting dynamic there where the banks are being told to please don’t buy treasuries, but they actually still want to.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, yeah. It’s just kind of a battle of rhetoric, a lot of it. Well, the Asian markets, the Nikkei, I’m surprised at how well it’s doing. All of a sudden, Japan’s got a little bit of… It’s like all-time highs or something, isn’t it? Yeah, I just can’t believe it, because their economy was stagnant for so long, but they’ve got some… 20-plus years. Yeah, they’ve got some new leadership over there. You’ve got a 5.6% surge after… The decisive lower house win for Prime Minister Takaichi, the broader Asian rally track late week gains on the Wall Street. So things are going on in Japan. And I did look. It’s the leading index in the market so far. And I do have a lot of Japanese stocks in the app. They have a symbol, usually have a Y in the symbol. They’re usually five letters. And there’s a lot of them. And, you know, they show up just like any other stock. If you look at the pull up a list on the app of the current top 300 stocks, you’ll probably see some Japanese stocks in there. And many of them are tradable and buyable. uh they trade uh pretty heavily and then of course there’s uh some that have a us adrs bitcoin falls below 70 000 once again ah man i just don’t know about that uh and uh i i know the trump sons there was an article about them how much money they’ve made off of just taking companies public that are Bitcoin-related. But that’s got to be hurting them. Speaking of Trump, again, Eber predicts the Dow will hit 100,000 by the end of his term. Well, you know what? That would put the NASDAQ at 45,000. That would put the Dow at 12,000, 14,000. We’ll see what kind of macro analyst Trump is.
SPEAKER 03 :
It sounds more reasonable than it does. What was it, Kathy, that said Bitcoin to $1 million?
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, and Tesla to $200 million. Yeah, that’s even another one. She’s had some crazy. Okay, earnings week ahead. Monday, Cleveland Cliffs. Well, we’re not going to hold our breath too much on the maker or the miner of iron pellets, but they are big up in Minnesota and Ohio, etc. I don’t really see anything else today. Tomorrow, we’re going to get Ford. reporting earnings. We’ll get an update. There’s talk of a $30,000 electric truck. I guess it would be a pretty mini truck. Also reporting tomorrow, Coca-Cola. And by the way, I’m going to give you an update on this earnings season here of how many companies are beating. Spotify is going to report. Robinhood. Those are a couple stocks that have been in free fall lately, both Robinhood and And the other one that I mentioned there. We’ve also got Cisco reporting on Wednesday. Cisco is a little bit of a has-been for me. Also reporting Shopify. Shopify has been in a free fall. Spotify, that was the one I was trying to think of. Spotify has also been in a horrible free fall. We don’t own any of those stocks, but their charts have just been horrible lately. McDonald’s is going to report on Wednesday. Kraft Heinz. Kraft Heinz has gotten so bad that even Warren Buffett has been selling it. And it takes a lot for Berkshire Hathaway to make itself. It’s got to be a stinker, huh? Albert Marle is going to report on Wednesday. T-Mobile, HubSpot. And then on Thursday, Airbnb, Roku, Coinbase. I would say that most of the big techs probably are in by now. Arista Networks, DraftKings. Friday, we’re going to get Moderna. Cameco, that’s a big one. CCJ. And that’s that. So now let’s just take a look at how this earnings season. It’s another good one. We’ve had like 10 in a row that have just been incredible. What can I say? I mean, the earnings, earnings, earnings in the stock market, and that’s been driving the market since 2009. When it bottomed out from the recession that we had that was induced by the big financials and the bad loans, once again, big mistakes by Wall Street, big banks back on Wall Street, packaging up those loans and creating the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, where we saw a 53% sell-off in the S&P 500. Well, it all bottomed in March of 2009. And earnings bottomed at $60 per share for the S&P 500. Now we’re looking north of $300 per share in earnings. And there’s no better explanation. So Trump, we’d have to see earnings of $600, $700 per share to get up to where he’s predicting the Dow would get. But anyways, when we come back, I just want to run real quickly through some of those numbers of how this earnings season is going. And that’s probably the reason driving the market to new highs. The Dow above $50,000 for the first time in its history. 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. 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 05 :
Because there’s something in the air.
SPEAKER 04 :
Welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Stocks Now show. We’ve now got about 60% of the S&P 500 companies that have reported actual results. 76% have beat their earnings estimates by the analysts. 73% have beat their revenue estimates. Now we’re looking for 13% growth in this quarter versus the same quarter last year. And the same quarter last year was like big growth, too. So this growth has just been incredible in earnings, and that’s why you’re seeing the markets, the Dow hitting a new all-time high. The Russell 2000 also hit a new all-time high on Friday, as did the mid-cap 400, the S&P 400 mid-cap all-time high. When we started this quarter, we were expecting 7% growth in earnings, and now we’re expecting 13%. And right now we’re on track to make almost $74 per share, which would be a new record, all-time record for a quarter. of S&P 500 companies. The old record was last quarter, $71 per share. And one year from now, we already have estimates out there, we’re looking for $83.46 per share. per share so that’s where we stand right now on the earnings front which makes it pretty hard for me to be too bearish or get too nervous when we have the sell-offs in the market but yes it is uh… stock specific it is sector specific but all in all The earnings picture for the market is still fabulous out there. The valuation is another issue, obviously, and you do have certain companies. You had Amazon last week in a big spill. AMD got clobbered on Wednesday, and then it stormed back on Friday. Still not back to where it was, however. So you have to go through some of the little ups and downs within the market and keep your eye on the big pot of gold out there. And that’s the total earnings for the S&P 500, which I have always found to be significant. Very important. There’s big news in the weight loss drug. I guess there were some commercials during the Super Bowl that were a bit controversial on the weight loss drugs. Novo Nordisk, for one. But… They’re going after hims and hers over their Wagovi knockoffs. And hims and hers is going to stop making the… You know, that was a big problem that held these two stocks down, both Lilly and NVO.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, particularly early on when you had the shortages where the compounders were actually allowed. Yeah, they were allowed.
SPEAKER 04 :
Right. And then finally, you know, they… Figured out that they’d caught up with the demand, but I think they kept making them and selling them. Well, there’s a cease and desist order out there now. Novo has filed a lawsuit against hims and hers. It’s getting whacked today, clobbered. It was down 25% when I saw it earlier. Yeah, and there’s a lot of other ones that are kind of associated. I’m sure they’re down too. But now let’s look at the two legit companies of the GLP-1s. Novo’s up 3.7% today. And last time I looked, Lilly was having a big day. It’s up $5.69 today. on that news, but it looks like finally they’ve gotten rid of those cheap knockoff competitors with the generic drugs. Eli Lilly is to buy Orna Therapeutics for $2.4 billion in cash. You know, for me, this is the way to play the gene editing game. craze. Instead of buying a single gene editing stock or an ETF of gene editing stocks, why not buy a Lilly that has massive cash flow and is buying some of these gene editing stocks with some of the cash flow that is being spun off by their big cash cow, their weight loss GLP-1 drugs. We’ve said it before, when you’ve got powerful companies like NVIDIA, it doesn’t matter what Sector you’re in, Lilly, and they’ve got these big cash cows. They can buy. NVIDIA has really become a little bit of a private equity play, too, with their exposure to open AI and to anthropic, et cetera. You’re getting a little bit of that.
SPEAKER 03 :
when you own nvidia they got a lot of irons in the fire put it that way whether and a lot of cash in the bank yeah whether and whether they’re making an investment or whether they’re trading chips for equity you know either way either way they’re uh they’re a player in a lot of a lot of different areas all of which are and you know tied to ai so
SPEAKER 04 :
Cash in the bank, whether you’re a real estate investor or a stock investor or a big publicly traded company, having a stockpile of cash ready to deploy at any given time when a bargain comes along, That helps a lot. Okay, one of the picks and shovel stocks that we picked up a while back, and man, it’s just really taken off here, is Lumentum Holdings. The symbol is light, L-I-T-E. It is in the Silicon Valley. It’s now a $41 billion company. Maybe the next time they have the Super Bowl, it won’t be Levi’s Stadium. It will be Lumentum Holdings Stadium. I doubt it, but I’m just saying that it’s more representative of the gold rush taking place right now in that area as opposed to Levi’s. But Lumentum provides optical communication photonic products for manufacturing inspection in this AI and in the life science field. So it’s definitely a picks and shovel stock. And, you know, I always, usually when I teach my workshops, I kind of go back to my roots in CanSlim back in the late 90s and early 2000. And that C in CanSlim is current earnings. That’s your quarterly earnings growth. Listen to these last four quarters for Lumentum. Earnings up 533%. Earnings up 777%. Earnings up 511%. Earnings up 298%. That’s a little bit different from AT&T and Disney and Verizon and the like. And their sales are also ramping big time. From 16% growth to 56% to 58% to 65% growth. And the stock today is hitting a new all-time high at $587 per share. It was $45 last year. This is like a 10-bagger. And we’ve got a note out or a research report. Lumentum should benefit as NVIDIA accelerates its use of co-packaged optics. GF Securities says, at GTC 2025, NVIDIA launched its co-packaged optic switches, Quantum X, scheduled in the second half of 2025 and Spectrum X in the second half of 2026. And the co-packaged is with Lumentum, L-I-T-E. So these guys wrote a nice research report up on Lumentum. That’s one that we’ve owned for a little while. And there’s another one, too, that’s in that kind of same business, and that’s Core, C-O-H-R. And we own that one, too, and it’s hitting a new all-time high today at $241 per share. That’s coherent. It’s good to be coherent. They’re back on the East Coast, Pennsylvania, which is more known for steel and railroads, but that’s where coherent. They make modular laser processing heads, fiber optic cable, ultraviolet filters. and thermoelectric modules. Coherent doesn’t have the kind of growth that light has, but 139%, 96%, 73%, 36% over the last four quarters. And these stocks don’t come cheap. You’re going to pay up, but they have massive growth, and they’re in that picks and shovel area. When… You have to see a breakdown of where Amazon, $200 billion they’ve got budgeted for capital expenditures this year. Where’s it going to go?
SPEAKER 03 :
Who’s going to be the recipients of that? The picks and shovels, and that’s where, as we’ve talked about, kind of this winter in the software world is because they’re further away from the picks and shovels, right? Yeah. they’re the ones that could potentially get disrupted by any of this technology.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yes, and Wedbush has a note out today on some of these software stocks. You know, look, they still own them, and they’re still talking them up, and there’s a couple today that they say you should buy on this big sell-off. I’m hesitant. We’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 06 :
Do what you want to do.
SPEAKER 04 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Stocks Now show. Well, the two stocks that Wedbush is talking up today are ServiceNow and Salesforce. They think they’re cheap. Of course, they’re a lot cheaper than they were the last time they were talking about it. I just don’t like the charts on either one. I don’t like the software sector right now at all. And while they just don’t seem to be in the shopping cart of these companies making these big capital spends, and the customers of Salesforce aren’t making those kinds of capital spends. The customers of ServiceNow aren’t making those kind of capital spends. One of the things I do is after you get big spending announcements like we had, let’s not forget Amazon was not the only company to announce a Just unbelievable capital spend. There was a couple others. Google was one. Remember, Google was down three or four bucks a share last week.
SPEAKER 03 :
And this is quarter after quarter. I mean, Meta, another big spender. Yeah. Hey, big spender.
SPEAKER 04 :
Spend a little time with me. There was a good old song about that. But where are they spending the money? Well, I just look at the charts of stocks. Let’s just take today for instance, okay? Let me just tell you some stocks that are hitting new highs. Not new lows. Like Salesforce and ServiceNow, you’ve got AXTI, which is semiconductors hitting a new high today. You’ve got Corning just blasting off. They’re into fiber optics. They’ve been around a long, long time, Corning. They’re headquartered actually in New York. You’ve got Tower Semiconductor hitting a new high today. You’ve got the one that I just mentioned, Light Lumentum, maybe one of the strongest charts in the entire market right now. You’ve got Coherent hitting a new all-time high. You’ve got Power Solutions. You’ve got VRT, which we’ve talked about in the past. You’ve got Semtech, which is in the chip business, SMTC. You have Teradyne, one that we own, hitting a new all-time high today. And, you know, that’s another thing about there’s a couple of schools of thought, especially when it comes to valuations. There’s those that like to buy things that are out of favor. And there’s those that like to buy things that are in favor. I’m in the in favor aisle of the market. And I might pay a little more, but you’re getting companies that are flourishing. And as long as you know you can justify the price that you’re paying and you can watch the chart to see when the tide begins to turn, the tide is not turning on any of these stocks I just mentioned. That momentum is in place. They’re going higher. They’re hitting 52-week highs while crypto, while the software stocks are hitting new 52-week lows. You take your pick. Which side of the street would you rather be on? One is called the contrarian investor. There’s a lot of contrarian investors which are also associated with the value investors, and that’s kind of Wedbush’s thesis on these stocks is you’ve got to buy them. Of course, they probably own them at a lot higher prices. Wedbush has liked these stocks for a long, long time. But they say at this price, it’s almost impossible to resist the allure like the siren song beckoning to them with those low P.E. ratios. But that’s just not my cup of tea. I prefer things that are in favor and popular and on the shopping list. All you have to do is look. We don’t know who’s on that shopping list for those big three companies, Google. But it’s companies that provide the parts and the pieces and the necessary equipment in these data centers. And that’s really what’s driving the bus. That $200 billion spend by Amazon is going to be technology. They’re not going to rent office space. They’re not going to benefit the REITs, the Real Estate Investment Trust. They’re not buying Salesforce software. No, they’re buying stuff that relates to data center. And that’s what Jensen Wang was talking about. That’s why you had the 1,200-point move in the Dow on Friday. Yeah, you don’t got to go too far to connect those dots.
SPEAKER 03 :
No. I mean, it’s pretty.
SPEAKER 04 :
It’s right in front of me here on these charts. I have one, you know, list of charts that is my whole database, 5,300. I click on it, boom, and it lists the biggest gainers down to the worst performers. And I just looked at those top gainers after this big news that we had on Friday that drove the markets to giddy heights. And you’re seeing the stocks. You know, somebody knows where they’re going, and I’m seeing it also in others. I see, oh, this one that we own in the Ultra Growth. It’s breaking out today. I mean, there’s just a whole bunch of them that obviously are at least highly suspected of being on that shopping list. Can you imagine being the salesman for these companies? Let’s say you’re a salesman at Teradyne. You’ve got to be calling Amazon today and Google and the others. Or your phone is ringing more than likely. Yeah, you’ve got some incoming calls. So all you’ve got to do is pick up the phone. This is Amazon. We need a million of these by next month. So anyways, I’m a big believer in trends. I’m a big believer in demand. Where is the demand? That’s where you want to be. And where there’s no demand, that’s where you don’t want to be. But at the same time, you always have to be, when the demand dries up, look out. I see that Samsung has got a new plant ready to go online with memory chips. What will that do? How fast can they flood the market? And will that start to bring prices down for Micron and the others? So you always have to be watching the news and the charts and be vigilant at all times. Okay, well, you know what? We’re just two weeks out. I’ll be in Arizona two weeks from today and then moving on to Houston right from there. And next two weeks from Wednesday, we’ll be in Houston for that workshop. In two days, we’ve got those one-hour appointments available. 855-611-BEST. And to see me at the workshop that Wednesday at the Houston Westin Galleria, go to GundersenCapital.com. You also get a four-week trial to the newsletter. 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 SIPC and FINRA.
