In this episode of the Best Stocks Now show, professional money manager Bill Gundersen dives into a broad array of financial headlines shaping the market landscape. From the recent tariff announcements by the Trump administration targeting Mexico and Canada to a potential rise in inflation, Bill breaks down the ripple effects these moves could have on various sectors. With the added pressure on interest rates, financial analysts like Barry Kite weigh in on what this could mean for investors in the coming months. Listen in as they explore key movements in the stock market, particularly the impact on indices
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 03 :
And welcome to the Tuesday morning. It’s Tuesday, November the 26th, live edition of the Best Docs Now show. with professional money manager Bill Gunnarsson. I’m here with Barry Kite, our chartered financial analyst. We have a very mixed open on the market with one index doing rather well and one not doing so well. The Dow is on the downside today. It’s down 262 points, 60 basis points. It hit a new all-time high yesterday, however, and the Dow’s at 44,474. It’s getting Amgen’d today. Amgen is the one that looks like it’s bringing down the Dow. On the other hand, the NASDAQ is starting to get some momentum here. It’s up 102 points right now. That’s 54 basis points. A pretty good day for the chip stocks. I saw NVIDIA having a pretty good day so far. Over at the S&P, we’re up 21 basis points. We’re up 12 points. The small cap Russell 2000 has now gone negative. It is down 15 points. The 10-year, which had a huge plunge yesterday, greeting our new Treasury Secretary Scott Besant with a little bit of applause there, we’re up today four basis points to 4.30 points. Bitcoin is getting hit hard today. Bitcoin is down $4,500 right now. to 93,404. Actually, it’s come up now. Now it’s only down 1,983. 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 Kydar, chartered financial analyst. A pretty full day of news, interesting news, too, on today. A lot of individual stocks today, some good, some bad, as always. And we left off yesterday with a besant bounce, they called it, the besant bounce. New Treasury Secretary was applauded on Wall Street. You had a 14 basis point drop in interest rates yesterday. And then there was big news after the close with Trump announcing on day one 25% tariffs against Mexico and against Canada. And another 10, I don’t know where we’re at right now on the product. Where did we leave off with China? He’s adding another 10 just for good. I’ll see you 10 and I’ll raise you 10. And we did close at an all-time high yesterday on the Dow, 44,736 as we close in on 45,000 on the Dow. I would say that yesterday the growth stocks did not participate in the rally in the Dow. It was mostly banks, small caps, and interest rate sensitive stocks. That makes total sense because you had a 14-point drop in interest rates yesterday. It should have helped the tech stocks, but it didn’t. All the action went there to those other three instead. Energy and tech pretty much had a weekday yesterday. And, of course, tomorrow will be the last trading day of the week, I think. I think Friday’s a half a day, right? Yeah. It’s tomorrow a half a day.
SPEAKER 04 :
No, yeah. Friday will be a – I don’t know if it’s cut short, but I know it’s open on Friday. Thursday obviously closed. We do get a bunch of economic data tomorrow because they front-ended the calendar. I think we get PCE index, so that will be a big piece of data tomorrow in terms of the – uh pce inflation index uh that’s what uh the feds preferred uh you know inflation calculation we get a little we get a gdp revision tomorrow just a durable goods handful of uh of course our normal initial jobless claims which usually come on thursday they’ll be out tomorrow so What an economic buffet for pre-Thanksgiving tomorrow.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, imports from Mexico. All right. Let’s take a look here. What are Mexico’s top imports to the U.S.? I’m thinking avocados. I’m thinking tomatoes.
SPEAKER 04 :
Autos are up there. That’s why if you look at GM today, I think GM’s taking it on the chin.
SPEAKER 03 :
Vehicles, yes, electrical equipment and components, machinery, nuclear reactors and boilers, mineral fuels, oils, distillation products, beer, plastic items, gems, precious minerals. Mexico is the top trade partner, believe it or not, of the United States. It is, right. So passing China. Kind of by a good bit, right? We’ve taken more from Mexico than we’ve taken from China. Mexico exported $421 billion to the U.S. You add a 25% tariff on that, that’s a lot of money. Now, you’ve got to remember, these tariffs are bargaining chips. And I think the one against Mexico is for not cooperating there on the border. And I think that’s going to get Mexico’s attention very, very quickly because that’s going to happen on day one. Trump’s going to demand cooperation from Mexico. Instead, Mexico has kind of been playing along with the cartels and whoever else are bringing all these people in.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, I mean, that was the pressure that he put on them last time, was the fact that you can’t have these people essentially coming all the way across your country. even from Central America and South America, but the threat was if you don’t cull the migrants, then you know, we’re going to essentially put those tariffs on you. So, yeah, as we’ve mentioned most of the time, it’s a negotiating tool, and it’s hard to know what’s going to stick and what’s not going to stick, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, it begins at 25%, okay, and then we negotiate from there. Canada is getting the same exact treatment, 25%, because I don’t know that Trump likes the leader of Canada all that much. But Canada, obviously, is a very rich and natural.
SPEAKER 01 :
Yes, Justin Trudeau.
SPEAKER 03 :
I think he’s up for election this year. Canada, very rich in natural resources, agricultural products, wood, lumber, obviously. It could drive up the price of homes, paper. They also have a lot of base metals, gold, iron, steel, tools, etc. A lot of critical minerals for the EV batteries. But now they’ve got a 25% tariff placed on them on day one when Trump comes in. And, you know, I think he had to get Scott Besson in line and called as his new Treasury Secretary. And I know Besson is pro-tariff. So that’s definitely going to be a tool that he is going to use. And, of course, that’s an inflationary tool. Okay, so that’s why you’re seeing the bond market and interest rates trickle back up a little bit. I mean, if they were to fight back and put tariffs on us and, you know, if it just became a tariff war, that becomes very inflationary. It drives up prices on everything from avocados to vehicles, you know, and everything in between. So anyways, that was pretty big news last night. And it stokes trade fear wars. And it stokes inflation. And I would say that it will definitely impact the Fed going forward. They’re not going to be so anxious to give those rate cuts because that fear of inflation is back. Okay, we have a lot of earnings that came in that we’re going to go over. Some not so good. One looks terminal to me. I don’t know that Kohl’s is going to survive. That thing is now down under $2 billion in market cap. Tonight is going to be CrowdStrike. That’s pretty important. CrowdStrike is a very big player in cybersecurity. Hewlett Packard, how do you spell soggy? Hewlett Packard, very soggy stock. Dell Technologies, Workday, good company. Best Buy has already reported in. Analog Devices has reported in. It’s lifting the chip sector a little bit. Kohl’s has reported in. Nordstrom’s going to report. Dick’s Sporting Goods had a good report. We’ll get to that here in a little bit. So I guess the big one today, CrowdStrike. And then on Friday, there will be a few earnings reports also. Trump is looking to appoint an AI czar. to oversee AI policy efforts. And here’s the reason why. Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, they want to use AI to go after the federal budget and look for fat and help them decrease unnecessary spending. And they’re going to use a lot of AI and a lot of volunteer help to do it. But at the same time, you can’t have AI running wild. So Trump looking to appoint an AI czar to oversee AI policy efforts. We’ll be right back.
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And welcome back here to the second quarter of today’s
SPEAKER 03 :
Best Stocks Now show, well, it is prediction time. As we get ready to end, we’re down to just a little under five weeks before the end of the year. I would just say that the consensus target price for the S&P 500 right now is right around 6,600. And we’re right around 6,000 right now. So that would imply… the potential for 10% upside to the S&P 500 next year. And again, it’s based on earnings, earnings, earnings, earnings. And I see another one weighing in today, Barclays, which is out of the UK. They upped their 2025 year-end S&P 500 target price to $6,600. And they’re raising it from 6,500. And like I say, I would say that’s about the consensus right now. A lot can change between now and then. It’s a very active world. It’s not a very passive world at all. But at least based on what we know now. multiples, earnings estimates, etc. Most of the big firms, we talked, I think, about Wells Fargo and a few others last week that were at $6,500. Now you’ve got Barclays at $6,600.
SPEAKER 04 :
Well, everything you just mentioned in terms of the tariffs, right, some of that’s going to play into it. It’s certainly going to play into earnings, I’ve seen, kind of going back to the last go-around in terms of some tariffs where you had material stocks didn’t do well. You can kind of – look back a little bit to how they affected certain industries and companies in the past and kind of extrapolate that going forward as well.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes. Okay. Now, another question mark with the new Trump administration coming in is whether or not they will repeal the $7,500 federal tax credit for buying an electric vehicle. Okay. And I think it’s probably going to happen, which will hurt the EV industry. California’s Gavin Newsom is going to bring it back, if Trump gets rid of it, in his state. and give a $7,500 tax credit, but get this, Barry, it won’t apply to Tesla. I saw this.
SPEAKER 04 :
It won’t apply to Tesla. I mean, I’ve heard Elon say, in reality, taking that $7,500 away could actually benefit Tesla from a pricing power standpoint simply because… they’re able to roll those off of the line most efficiently and have the largest margins right on their vehicles at the moment. So it’s kind of an interesting dynamic there where taking them federally away could help Tesla. And then, of course, you’ve got Newsom going. Everybody but Elon. Is that legal?
SPEAKER 03 :
I don’t see how that could be legal. Look, how many Teslas are there in California versus the other brands out there? It just shows you how Musk has moved from being in favor. Of course, he’s always kind of had it in for California with a lot of the fines they’ve given him. He moved his headquarters out of California. He still does production there in California. Musk says Newsom’s exclusion of Tesla is insane.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, and on the other side of it, in Rivian, man, they were up at 10% at one point today, but they’re actually down 0.6% at the moment. But I saw where… In addition to that, Rivian received conditional approval for a loan up to $6.6 billion from the U.S. Department of Energy. From Georgia, too. Yeah, to support a construction of EVs in Georgia. So not only are we taking away – you can’t get it, but we also are going to build up your competitors a bit, too, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
Yeah, well, you know, at least Rivian looks like a survivor now. I mean, now that they’ve joined up with Volkswagen. Of course, Volkswagen doesn’t exactly, is not on sound footing themselves.
SPEAKER 04 :
And they’ve got significant ties with Amazon, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
And Amazon.
SPEAKER 04 :
Kind of a couple of things propping them up, I guess. And now we’ve got $6.6 billion from the Department of Energy.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, the weight loss stocks are in the news today in a big way. Amogen, okay, Amogen posts their mid-stage data for weight loss therapy. It’s experimental weight loss therapy, Meritide, generated up to 20% of weight loss on average in roughly over one year. in a phase 2 trial for people living with obesity or overweight, but without type 2 diabetes. Well, you would say that sounds like pretty good news, and that sounds like it could be a competitor to Lilly and Novo Nordisk. But then look at the reaction of the stock. Amgen is in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Amgen is getting clocked today. It shouldn’t be in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, in my opinion. You’ve said that one before, yeah. Yes, and I don’t think Pfizer belongs in there either, but Amgen definitely not. Amgen is down 12.1% today. uh which uh obviously they looked at the results and they said well this they must be saying lily uh they have a lot better results uh than this and obviously amgen’s uh is met with a 12 percent drop and of course as a member of the dow that takes the dow down Two hundred and forty-four points. It’s mostly Amgen here today that is doing that. The other news, well, there’s big news when we come back that I want to go over. Lilly’s having a big day. And at first I thought it was on the Amgen news. But no, no, there’s other big news on Lilly. You know, I’ve just had to be patient with Lilly. I really believe in it. The stock has sold off. It was approaching $1,000 just a few months ago. What drove Lilly lower? You know, I don’t really know. RFK was one factor. Fear of him coming after the weight loss of the stock. It started back at the end of June. And the compounders. And the compounders.
SPEAKER 04 :
And it started back at the end of June where you had, was it Viking Pharmaceutical? Remember they said they had… The pill. Yeah, they had some good data from the pill. And then it turned out, what, like less than a month later, it was only like five or six people that they tested the pill on. Remember? Yeah. That was a huge… That was kind of the first kind of shot across the bow. And then… And like you said, the compounders, that story, and then, of course, RFK. And then you have the guy that will head up the CDC, too, McQuarrie, who…
SPEAKER 03 :
Seems to be kind of pro-compounders, but also pro-weight loss stocks. But when we come back, there’s big news on Lilly, and it is bouncing hard to the upside on two times normal volume. 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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Because there’s something in the air We’ve got to get together sooner or later.
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Stocks Now show. Big news, I suppose, for Lilly and Novo. Lilly is having a huge day today right now. Lilly is up, best day it’s had in a while, up 4.1%, $31 per share. Why? Because the Biden administration proposes expanded obesity drug coverage under Medicare and Medicaid. It would significantly expand coverage of anti-obesity medications for Americans under Medicare and Medicaid. Currently, these government health insurance programs cover the use of anti-obesity drugs for certain conditions like diabetes. But the proposed regulation would expand access to these advanced medications for obesity, which I believe is a little over half of America. bringing coverage to an estimated 3.4 million Americans. Boy, it seems to me like it would be more than that with Medicare. So anyways, that’s good news for these drug makers. They still have to work out the compounding issue, which I’m sure is taking away a lot of potential sales from Lilly. It’s going to get that supply up, I guess, right? Yes.
SPEAKER 04 :
Then they can’t have the shortages.
SPEAKER 03 :
I mean, eventually prices are going to come down for these drugs. They’ll have to negotiate with Medicare, Medicaid, but… That’s a win for Lilly. Okay, nuclear news today. GE Vernova wins a contract to supply essential grid equipment. Now, it may not be nuclear. They also do just, you know, your regular old hydroelectric and whatever else. Essential grid equipment for Australia. And GEV has been one of the biggest players here so far in this burgeoning and, you know, a sector that’s making a huge comeback. GE Vernova, major player, $93 billion company. They get a big contract from Australia. Now let’s go to the other end of the spectrum, GE, Vrnova, Vistra, Constellation Energy, those are probably the three big players, large cap companies that are smack dab in the middle of all of this resurgence in nuclear. Then you go down to the other end of the spectrum. We’ve mentioned several smaller ones, one which has backing from OpenAI, Sam Altman’s company. It has ties to the BP former CEO. We’ve talked about another one. We’ve talked about several here recently. Well, here’s a new one. Kind of new. I’ve known about it for a while. Nano Nuclear Energy. N-N-E. Okay, now Nano did a secondary offering yesterday, and the stock went down 18.6%. But that dilutes the current shareholders, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
Depends on what they’re going to do with the money.
SPEAKER 03 :
Exactly. So what are they going to do with the money? The company said that the financing provides a cash runway to expedite cutting-edge portable, portable, nuclear micro reactor technologies. Auxiliary businesses seek complementary acquisitions and drive growth towards initial revenue generation. Well, it takes money to produce products. And, you know, you can go to the well and float bonds. They probably would have had to pay a lot of money for that. But in a very, you know, interesting sector right now, I would imagine there’s money out there chasing. And they were able to do a $60 million private placement. In the company, NNE, and I see today it’s rebounding a little bit. It’s up 2.9%. I guess, yes, I own it, okay? I own 400 shares in this thing. It’s in my… Incubator, my incubator portfolio, my guinea pig portfolio. I have not bought it for clients.
SPEAKER 04 :
Your desk drawer, if you will.
SPEAKER 03 :
They have no sales. They’re out of New York. But I guess their little niche is portable nuclear reactors. Now, will they ever be selling portable nuclear reactors on Amazon? I doubt it. You can get a solar reactor or a solar generator, solar battery. I have three in my office that I run my office on. But a nanonuclear energy, look what I got out in the garage. It’s glowing red, and I don’t know.
SPEAKER 04 :
We’ll see. I mean, I could see. Do we have security concerns where folks could open these things up, blow them up?
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, I’m sure you have to qualify to own one of these things. Now we’ve got another one, okay, ASPI, which I’ve talked about before. Now these things are super, it’s as volatile as enriched uranium, these stocks. ASP is down 21% today, but it could be back up 21% tomorrow. They’ve completed construction of a Silicon 28 enrichment facility in Pretoria, South Africa. and started the commissioning phase of the facility in preparation for supplying commercial quantities of silicon-28. This is going to be an alternate fuel for nuclear reactors. And I believe ASPI, that’s the one that has the backing of Bill Gates, I want to say. So that’s another one. Silicon-28 is an isotope that is believed to enable quantum computing and likely will improve the performance of next-generation semiconductors for artificial intelligence. And it’s going to be possibly used as nuclear fuel. So Silicon-28. A buzzword, and the name of the stock is ASP Isotopes, down 21.6% today, but it’s been very lively recently. This thing was $2 at the beginning of September. Stocks in the news. Well, let’s begin with Zoom, a company that I just don’t see growth there anymore. It seems to me like they need to come up with a new product. Everybody has now kind of gotten in on that. Microsoft has their teams. Google has their teams. Zoom Video. And their growth has just leveled off. They were in the right place at the right time. The stock went to $588. The year of COVID, and now it’s $81 per share. It’s down 8.1% today after announcing their earnings. Their sales were up just 4%. There’s the problem. I mean, they’re single-digit growth now, single-digit. And their earnings were up 7%. So Zoom is not one that I would be interested in. And there’s a lot of other collaboration software stocks. Asana is another one. Atlassian down in Australia is another one. And, of course, Microsoft, which owns Teams. Now, here’s the question, the next question. Can Kohl’s survive, or is it another Bed Bath & Beyond? They’re getting a new CEO today. Oh, boy, that’s a tough one there to take over Kohl’s. Kingsbury, Tom Kingsbury, will step down as top boss of Kohl’s Corporation, effective January 15th. He’ll be replaced by Ashley Buchanan. She was the chief executive of Michael’s. company since 2020 and prior to that held the variety of positions at walmart and sam’s club but kohl’s is down 20 percent today ouch this is now a 1.6 billion dollar that’s a very very small small cap uh and it’s almost now in micro cap territory and you know i mean this It just hurts it in every single way. The institutions, I’m sure, it’s still 86% owned by the institutions, but you’re going to have mid-cap funds, mid-cap ETFs, small-cap ETFs starting to dump the stock because it doesn’t fit. It’s now headed towards micro-cap territory. Is this going to become another Bed Bath & Beyond? Will there be any bricks-and-mortar stores left in our local shopping malls?
SPEAKER 04 :
With Kohl’s, the interesting thing is their other businesses are actually doing better than their core business. I mean, they’ve got… You know, they made a deal with Sephora, you know, I don’t know, kind of in 2020, I believe. And that’s, you know, providing some benefit. I think they’ve got some Babies R Us exposure. But other than that, their main business, it’s not going anywhere.
SPEAKER 03 :
No, they’re running out of time. It may be going. They’re bailing. They’re bailing this sinking ship right now, trying to get it stabilized, floating, and then start to get it to come back again. Is it possible? We’ll see. We’ll be right back. And welcome back to the final segment of today’s Best Stocks Now show. Well, we’ve had hundreds of people sign up to spend the day with a professional money manager. I not only send out my commentary, I send out pre-market commentary. I send out things that I’ve noticed before the market’s opened, stories that are sticking out, standing out to me. And then, of course, any buys or sells throughout the course of the day in any of my five portfolios that I manage. and then a summary and uh you know any other tidbits that i notice while i’m down underneath the surface of the market on a daily basis and i try to add little lessons why and pictures and graphs and this is why you know i like this and it it i i look at it as a master class on uh on the markets i mean you’re you’re stepping you’re you’re passing by kindergarten but i try to make it very simple so folks can understand uh and uh we’re having a lot of fun i’m having a lot of fun i think uh hopefully the folks that signed up for i haven’t heard any complaints yet It’s four weeks. Four weeks.
SPEAKER 04 :
It’s neat because everyone has a different understanding and different exposure to the market. And so I think you do a great job of coming from it. Being sophisticated when it needs to be and then also hitting the nuts and bolts, setting the foundation when that needs to happen too.
SPEAKER 03 :
Exactly. And you start with a clean slate. I say don’t go in and buy my portfolios. I’ll tell you when to add them because I have new people coming to me all the time, new accounts, and I start putting them to work. I don’t throw them in on day one into all the stocks that I currently own. I’m a very methodical kind of guy.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, that’d be like buying a mutual fund if you did it all in one day.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, that’s right. Or an ETF. You’re bam. You’re totally in. You’re all in. not your toe in the water you’re in the water 100 okay now a few other stocks in the news analog is kind of a it is an important stock in the semiconductor sector it’s a very kind of low tech semiconductor however uh you know a lot of the little pieces and parts the amplifiers the uh the detectors, the diodes, the couplers, the mixers, the demodulators, all this kind of thing. It is now down. It was up, but it’s not one that I would have any interest in. They beat top line and bottom line estimates. It was impacting NVIDIA. NVIDIA has now kind of given up its gains, however. NVIDIA is now up. Just 40 cents. NVIDIA is a sideways stock. What can I say? It’s just a sideways stock. Its earnings didn’t help it. Its earnings estimates for the coming years didn’t really move that much one way or another. They still have phenomenal growth, but it’s a sideways stock right now. And that happens.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, and it’s also made some investments in longer-duration plays as well. I mean, they’ve had plenty of cash to put to work, and they just released, I think, an AI model yesterday in terms of music makers can use it to make music or what have you. So they’ve got a lot of… AI irons in the fire, particularly on the health side. But some of those things, obviously the chips are paying the bills right now. Some of those other things may hold or not hold down the road.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, and as it becomes the largest company in the market and then goes into the Dow, I’m sure people got to stop and say, wow. Does it deserve this? Should it be priced at $3.5 trillion? Well, I mean, the earnings suggest that it should. Is that growth? How much further into the future? You can’t rule out that they don’t come up with other products. I mean, they were a graphic card maker, and then they became this AI chip maker. What else are they working on back in the lab? We just don’t know, but the best of the best have got to be working there, and you’ve got a pretty sharp CEO. But the stock is a sideways stock right now. Best Buy. There’s another one. I don’t know how they survive. How do they go up against Amazon? What’s the traffic like in a Best Buy store? We have one here. I haven’t been in it since I’ve lived here. I just don’t go into a Best Buy store. Their sales were down 3%. They have no growth whatsoever. uh their earnings they do they are profitable maybe they make it on the service side i don’t know they got 1125 consumer electronic stores that’s been a a graveyard over the years of companies and they bounced back for a bit with uh with you know they finally got the uh the online sales part uh you know ramped up but then you know obviously amazon’s
SPEAKER 04 :
been in that business for a long time and you know frankly walmart has improved uh you know their uh their online uh experience over the last couple years too so they get that uh you know they’re a company like best buy is taking it from all sides whether it’s a move to the internet away from brick and mortar and obviously there’s just much bigger plays out there nowadays
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes, and then Dick’s Sporting Goods, another survivor. Still most towns, cities that are large enough have a Dick’s Sporting Goods, 724 across America. It’s a survivor. I mean, they are profitable. They did grow their sales by 8%. maybe that’s one of the things that you still need to go in. With three boys. Swing those clubs.
SPEAKER 04 :
I can say with three boys, it’s the one store specialty store that I’ve probably walked into the most because they also have fishing stuff in the back, right? So you get everything from fishing to soccer to golf.
SPEAKER 03 :
But I’m just not a big fan of retail bricks and mortar stores. And then the last one here is Abercrombie & Fitch. which amazes me how they survive because they’re basically a big mall company, the old shopping mall. But they survive. It’s down 5.4%. Consumer discretionary is not one of my favorite sectors. It’s very low margin. You’ve got Amazon eating everybody’s lunch. And that’s why I’m also not a fan of a lot of the real estate investment trusts because they have exposure to this very, very dicey area of the market. Okay, well, we’re out of time. If you’d like to join our master class, you can join any day, any time. I mean, it’s an ongoing. There is no start date. There is no end date. It’s a four-week class, and it doesn’t cost you anything. Go to GundersenCapital.com. You may learn that, wow, this is time-consuming. Why don’t I just have Gunderson and his team manage our money and do our planning for us? Give us a call. Set up an appointment. 855-611-BEST. 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 SIPC and FINRA.