Tune into November’s most insightful market analysis as Bill Gunderson dissects the latest CPI reports and post-election effects on American stocks. This episode provides a deep dive into the implications of recent media and technological shifts, offering a fresh perspective on the emerging leaders in industry sectors like autonomous vehicles and energy. With a blend of dynamic market insights and robust investment strategies, this show serves both everyday investors and financial professionals seeking to better navigate volatile market trends and opportunities.
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 Wednesday CPI Day. It is November the 13th edition of the Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management, a fee-based only money management firm nationwide and also a teacher of a master class in the market every day. For our do-it-yourself folks out there also. We have opened the day slightly to the downside here. Drifting a little bit lower. The Dow is down 49 points right now. That puts it at 43,862. The S&P 500 is down 12,5972. NASDAQ is down 76. I don’t know why we’ve taken a turn for the worse. We did open up just slightly to the upside, but now obviously giving that up and then some. The Russell 2000, however, holding on to a 21-point gain. That’s 90 basis points. Bitcoin, last I looked, was over 90,000. Let’s see, did it hold on to that 90,000 mark? It was up like 4,600. You know, Barry, I need to buy some so it can start dropping again.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, 90,721.
SPEAKER 03 :
Holy cow. Okay, and over there at the 10-year, you’re down about seven basis points after that soft CPI report. So welcome to today’s Best Stocks Now show with professional money manager Bill Gunderson, president of Gunderson Capital Management and teacher of the master class in investing every day, putting my 25 years of experience to work to maybe help make you a better investor. We’ve been offering a four-week trial of our live trading throughout the day. It’s been a hit, I can tell you that. You can go to GundersenCapital.com to sign up for that. Hopefully you’ll learn something. And you don’t have to be, look, maybe you work during the day. You can come home at the night and read the emails that I sent out during the day. There’s a record of them. You’ll receive all of those emails with my comments, and I try to do a little teaching along the way every day and learn how these markets work, make it a heck of a lot simpler. We have some big winners in the market today, despite a downdraft in the market. We’re happy for that, and we’ll get to that in a moment. Now, the market has cooled off. Look, what were we up the next day after the election, 1,500 points on the Dow, and The big major banks were blowing up to the upside. The industrials that do business in America, the steel stocks, the aluminum stocks, the copper stocks. You name it, they all had a big day. And, I mean, it’s only obvious that you’re going to cool off. And a lot of those big winners on that day after are fading into the sunset, again, where they belong. I think I had 1,200 B-plus or better ranked stocks yesterday. Yesterday, that was a record.
SPEAKER 04 :
That’s a lot, yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes, out of my database of 5,000, I went through almost a whole bottle of eye drops yesterday to keep my eyes nice and lubricated looking at those charts. Today I’m down to 837, so we’ve lost about 300 or 400 pretenders to the throne here that really were not B-plus or better. They were doing it because of the momentum that came into the market yesterday. the irrational exuberance that came into the market. Now we’re starting to settle back into the true winners under this new regime.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, I mean, it’s the biggest move, I think, since the mid-1930s in terms of after an election. So, you know, Trump has that feather in his cap as well to go along with the popular vote and some other things. And so… It’s interesting to see how it plays out. Sentiment, momentum definitely went in that direction, and you would expect it to cool off. You had a big jump after the election, and now we’re getting names of different cabinet members, and the market’s going to continue to react to some of those, too.
SPEAKER 03 :
And what I like is the sustainable new leaders. Like, okay, Alcoa is not a sustainable new leader in the market. Neither is Nucor, et cetera. You’ve still got a very soft economy in China. The real leaders are now starting to emerge. The weed is starting to be separated from the chaff, the temporary chaff. And I’ve been busy on the buying side. That’s why I started this whole thing. a free trial at this time because the whole landscape is changing. You basically have a fresh new blank canvas. And so far, so good. We had a big interest rate jump yesterday, 12 basis points. Now we’re down 7 today. The CPI came in in line, but I would just say that year over year, 3.3% is still one of the hottest rates in the world. You look to Europe, they’re down well under 2%. So while inflation may have leveled off and has cooled from double-digit range, it has not gone by any stretch of the imagination. I just sent out a little thing on X this morning. We were at a local restaurant, downtown restaurant, $64 for a prime rib-eye steak, which I took a pass on. And, Barry, that’s a la carte, okay, $64. I chose the cheap one.
SPEAKER 04 :
No potatoes or Brussels sprouts with that, right?
SPEAKER 03 :
No, a side of mashed potatoes is $12. So I took the cheaper ahi tuna steak, which was delicious and all, but inflation is not gone. I mean, I’m going to be going to Walmart here tonight. I’m going to eat at Kava tonight and give you a boots-on-the-ground report of the line at Kava, which has been nonexistent here. But Kava had a huge report here today. That’s the Mediterranean fast food restaurant that someone called the next public.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, that per-check average is not cheap.
SPEAKER 03 :
No, it’s $16 for a Mediterranean bowl, okay? That’s the average college kid. That’s a little bit on the steep side, but people have the money right now, I guess. The other subject I wanted to bring up here is I heard an interview yesterday with Scott Besant, who lives in Charleston, South Carolina. and he runs a big hedge fund he right now is the leading candidate to be the treasury secretary uh… imagine that i mean having him right here in our own backyard i’ve been wanting to meet with him i’m trying to find some connections i think i have a few connections that But now that he’s hot stuff, he could be named the Treasury Secretary here today to replace Janet Yellen. So we’ll see. And, of course, you know, Trump’s cabinet continues to shape up. He added Elon Musk and Ramaswamy yesterday to help look for waste in the government. Do you think they’ll find any?
SPEAKER 04 :
Well, I think they’ll find a lot. That’s the one thing they will find, right.
SPEAKER 03 :
You know, there’s nothing like being on the private side of industry, which I’ve been in all my life, okay. My father was a business owner, and, you know, we had to look at expenses constantly. Labor, the cost of materials. We used a lot of wood products in our industry. The cost of 2x4s and the plywood that we used and billboards and steel. You had to control the cost. It was very important, but government, because you’re not personally responsible like you are in a small business, therefore it’s someone else’s money you’re spending, and there’s all kinds of graft and waste. There’s no question about it. It will be interesting to see how these two sharp businessmen can cut some waste and fat. Hopefully there wasn’t a lot of fat on that $64 ribeye steak at that price. Anyways, that’s where that comes in. Okay, so CPI stays firm in October, but core CPI holds a 3.3% pace.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yeah, which is certainly above the target, right? Certainly above the target. It was interesting because, you know, everything really came in, you know, in line in terms of all of the estimates across the board for the CPI. So no surprise. But, yeah, I mean, it’s shelter remains, you know, one of the stickier pieces. It rose 0.4% for the last month and is actually, you know, makes up more than half of the, you know, increase in inflation. And so, you know, it’s hard to see where you’re going to get, you know, kind of housing, right, cost to go down. So it may be kind of in the sticky number for a period of time.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, that’s right. And, you know, another thing that came out of the election, there has been a seismic shift in the media. Oh, my gosh, what a seismic shift. We’re going to talk about that when we come back. But you’ve got one stock way up today. It’s one of our 13 holdings. in the premier growth portfolio and you’ve got another media outlet popular media outlet that’s going to cut hundreds they’re going to have hundreds of job cuts amid poor ratings and they’re slashing the salaries of their people and no it’s not joe rogan we’ll be right back And welcome back here to the second quarter of the Best Docs Now show. Well, let me put this in perspective for you. Just the size and the magnitude of the seismic shift that has occurred in the media landscape. You ever heard of Warner Brothers Discovery? It’s now a $23 billion company. Okay. It’s a mid-cap. I’m sure you’ve heard of their brands. You’ve watched the Discovery Channel, HBO, the Food Network, Home TV. I used to watch that, HTV, to figure out how to fix my light bulb, you know, little thing there. I could never figure that stuff out. That’s why I’m in this business. How about the Magnolia, TNT, TBS, Travel Channel, Animal Planet, Science Channel, Warner Brothers Motion Picture Group. Well, how about Turner Classic Movies? Don’t forget that. Don’t forget the Cartoon Network. Those are the properties of Warner Brothers Discovery. $23 billion company, right? By contrast, a company named Spotify is now $90 billion. Almost four times the size of Warner Brothers Discovery. What happened? Well, one of their holdings, and of course all of them, most of them, are suffering. CNN is set to plan hundreds of job cuts amidst poor ratings. You know, I remember when CNN was the gold standard of news, okay, news, and not so political. I mean, they all were. They used to all report mostly news, not anymore. Chris Wallace is going to quit. They’re going to lay off hundreds of people, and they’re slashing the salaries of Anderson Cooper, Aaron Burnett, Caitlin Collins, and others. Cooper makes $20 million. Aaron Burnett rakes in about $6 million. Collins makes $3 million. So Anderson Cooper is one of their stars. They are going to have their salaries slashed as their ratings are sinking. The last election, on election night, they had 10 million viewers. You know how many they had this election? 5 million viewers. So they’re in big trouble. And on the other hand, you’ve got a stock that is blowing up to the upside today, Spotify, which is Joe Rogan. It’s the people’s. I think it’s the people’s media versus the old mainstream media. You are just seeing a seismic shift here. And, of course, you go to Comcast, and that’s another stock that’s doing horrible. NBC, they’ve got MSNBC and many other properties. Those are horrible stocks to own. While on the other hand, you’ve got Spotify breaking out to new highs today. And we’ll get to those earnings in a moment. Now, the tariff war is beginning. And maybe it begins in the avocado aisle of Walmart. I don’t know. That’s where it started back when the NAFTA came in. Avocados went under a dollar, and the avocado ranchers in Fallbrook, California, went out of business just about. Mexico will retaliate if Trump imposes 25% tariffs. Well, you would expect that, okay? If you apply a 25% tariff to me, I have to react with tariffs, and I’m your main importer along with Canada. says mexico so we’ve been talking about this there’s two sides to this uh to this tariff war that is now brewing and as i say it may uh the first shot of the tariff war may be fired in the avocado aisle at your local walmart at your local supermarket so anyways i think i personally think that Trump plans to use tariffs as leverage to kind of control a little bit, keep them from getting away. I think it’s more of a tool towards… It’s a deterrent, and it’s a tool for negotiations. But at the same time, we currently have a 3.3% inflation rate, and you could see some inflation coming. Here down the road. Super microcomputer delays their 10Q filing again. You know what? That’s just not good, Barry. We may have another WorldCom on our hands. We may have another Enron on our hands here. We may see people going to jail. There’s a lot of bad signs here. with this smci amazon preps for busy black friday to cyber monday holiday period i would think amazon could get caught up in a tariff war of some sorts we shall see so something we’re only a couple weeks away from thanksgiving so i mean that price of that turkey you better grab one for next year put it in the freezer because it may be double who know no we don’t import turkey so Well, okay. All right. Amazon. Okay, now, listen. Remember when the first shot of chat GPT of the artificial intelligence was fired? I think we’re seeing the first shot of the robo-taxi revolution being fired. Two big stories today. One coming from Amazon. Let’s not forget Amazon has a robo-taxi. What don’t they have? I mean, they would be very interested in robo-taxis. Why would Amazon be very interested in robo-taxis or, you know, what is it, autonomous driving, Barry? What do you think the biggest reason?
SPEAKER 04 :
Dropping off packages. I mean, they don’t have to have the driver. The trick is how do they get it from here? From the vehicle to your door, then. Well, we haven’t figured that out.
SPEAKER 03 :
I don’t know, you know, if they’re going to have a little thing that comes out, an arm. We don’t know. But they are now testing robo-taxis in San Francisco and the Las Vegas Strip. There’s a picture of the robo-taxis. Pretty cool. I mean, I’d get into one of those. It’s like something you’d see at Disneyland or Dollywood or something like that. Zoox is Amazon’s autonomous vehicle unit. It has begun testing its robo-taxis in San Francisco. Soma neighborhood. I’ve been there and expanded its geo fence to include the Las Vegas Strip and surrounding areas. Rides initially will be available only to Zoox employees and not to the public. San Francisco is the third city for the company’s robo taxi operations, including foster city in the Bay area and now Las Vegas. Okay. That’s if that’s not enough. Wait a minute. Bang. Here comes another one. More on robo taxi, California dreaming Waymo. Google opens its robo taxi service to everybody in Los Angeles. Now, for me, I put this whole thing in big, bold letters because that seems to me like it’s the first shot fired. I mean, we’ve seen tests right now. But Waymo announced on Tuesday that it launched its autonomous ride service in the Los Angeles area to everyone. Waymo One customers can take fully autonomous rides 24 hours a day around 80 square miles of Los Angeles through Santa Monica, Hollywood Boulevard, USC. and everything in between. Imagine that, an autonomous ride to Tommy Burgers, Dodger Stadium, Philippe’s, French dip sandwiches, all the great places of L.A. I think the first shot has been fired. I think we’ve got something going on here that’s investable. We’ll be right back. Now, back to the second half of the show.
SPEAKER 06 :
And welcome back here to the second half of today’s Best Stocks Now show.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, the Dow has now gone positive. It’s up by 69. The Nasdaq is still down by 36. The Russell 2000, however, is up 60 basis points. It has done the best, the small cap stocks. Since the Trump election, and I’ve said it before, I think because it’s been left behind, the large caps of swamps, small caps. Over the years, the friendlier regulatory environment is helpful to small caps. And the P.E. ratio of the Russell 2000 is a lot less than the 22.1 times forward P.E. that you’re paying for S&P 500 large cap stocks. So all of those kind of add up to what we’re seeing here in the Russell 2000 ratio. Okay, you know, again, to put that in perspective, here you’ve got Warner Brothers, which owns all of these TV stations. You’d call it a mainstream media at $23 billion in market cap now. And you’ve got Spotify. Closing in on $90 billion. I mean, you call that a seismic shift, an absolute seismic shift.
SPEAKER 04 :
And don’t even look at Netflix. Yeah, don’t even look at Netflix.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, that was my second example, okay? Because we own Netflix, which is hitting a new high today. Netflix is now a $353 billion company. And I’ll put that up against Disney, which is one half that size. And Disney owns what? ESPN, ABC, a lot of other channels. Theme parks, all of the merchandise, the Disney channel streaming. And Netflix is now double the size. So there’s been a massive seismic shift. That’s why I say you have to own best stocks now. And Wall Street, for whatever reason, loves to hang on to soggy stocks. I’ve never had anybody… Transfer an account to me from one of the big Wall Street firms or regional firms that had Netflix in it. But almost everyone has Disney or Warner Brothers. Nobody has ever transferred a portfolio to us with Spotify in it. Why are they so far behind the times? It’s almost like they act like government. They’re just so sleepy. Or they’re just saying, hey, we’re just going to take the easy way out. We’re going to pick big, recognizable names. and fill everybody’s portfolio basket with those big recognizable names and then move on to the next person. That seems to me to be more the answer of why they do things the way they do. Well, you know what? I’ve always been a bit of a disruptor. I guess a maverick would be another word, and I’m going to continue to be a disruptor and a maverick. I also believe in arming people with knowledge about how the markets work instead of, oh, you need to come to me to put together a plan and to pick the portfolio for you. You can’t do it yourself. Well, I disagree. Now, another trend, okay? So far we’ve talked about the media trend, seismic shift. We’ve talked about the tariff trend, seismic shift. We just talked about the robo-taxi trend. I believe that’s a seismic shift that’s coming. And it’s going to help a lot of industries, big time. I saw DoorDash hit a new high yesterday. I would think Uber would be helped by it a lot, although it’s not showing up in the stock yet. I would think Amazon, obviously, would be a massive beneficiary. Instacart, I mean, you can go on and on and on of who would benefit from all of this. Now, the other big theme that we’ve been talking about is the nuclear issue. theme the biden administration unveils a plan well they’ve only got two months left right but they unveil a plan to triple nuclear energy capacity by 2050 now i can’t believe that the trump administration wouldn’t be very pro nuclear because something’s got a power uh something’s got a power of the charging of these robo taxis something’s got a power these ai farms, et cetera, server farms. And I have seen even though the nuclear stocks, they’re volatile right now. They don’t have any earnings. They don’t have any customers yet. You had the setback by FERC stepping in and denying the Constellation Energy deal that they made with Apple. Or no, with Microsoft. But I would think that the Trump administration would say, hey, triple by 2050. How about we quadruple it by 2040? I would see them speeding up that whole thing. Because your biggest issue, your biggest drag is regulations. Now, yes, I want a lot of regulations before they put a nuclear power plant on the Wando River up here by me, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
And it’s an investment in infrastructure, right, which tends to be a pretty popular move, right, in terms of legislation. So you can certainly see a bigger investment made there just with power in general, right, in terms of how quickly can you bring it on and in what capacity.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, and, you know, I mean, here’s what they’re looking – they’re not looking to just build these large nuclear power plants that we’re used to. Under the plan, the U.S. would deploy an additional 200 gigawatts of new nuclear energy capacity through the construction of new small – And large reactors. And we’ve talked about the Oklos and the new scale powers of the world, which are in that small space. And even the other companies that are developing a new kind of a fuel that’s even more efficient than the current fuel. We’ve talked about Cameco. which owns Westinghouse and also is one of the biggest producers of uranium out there. So there’s all kinds of different ways to play this burgeoning, I’ll call it, without a lot of earnings. This is a little bit out there on the horizon. But I just think it’s a no brainer that they’re going to increase and there’s going to be a lot of wins and losers in that in that move. OK, now, in the meantime, the oil industry is urging Trump to dump the Biden energy and climate policies. OK, well, that doesn’t surprise me. I did see, though, that. I think it was Mobil, Exxon, they’re wanting Trump to stay in the Paris climate accord. And others are wanting us to stay out or get out. We’re back in it at the current time. So anyways, that’s going to be a big controversial subject. But I don’t think, I think oil prices are going to stay down. I think that the drill baby drill is going to happen. And I think that the biggest winners will be those that supply the wellheads, the fracking equipment, the pipeline equipment, the hydraulic, the water that’s needed to accomplish this. And let’s not forget Texas Pacific Land, TPL, which might be one of the great stocks of all time on the royalties that come from the land that they’re producing oil on. And I think LNG, okay, they currently, there’s a moratorium on LNG. We cannot export it. I would say that moratorium is going to come off, which is going to be a boon for LNG plants, natural gas producers, the people that convert the natural gas into liquid natural gas, the compression units, the shipping of that. There’s going to be some winners and losers there also. So that’s another subject and another sector that we see opportunity in. Now it’s narrowing it down to the best in that sector. There’s also been a big move here recently in the software industry since Trump took office. Adobe is starting to get more and more into that AI game. Adobe has really underperformed the market here for quite some time, but I did send out an alert yesterday, and that is a beautiful looking chart right now on Adobe, which was a disruptor themselves, Barry. think about how much Adobe, all the print shops, all the designers, all the photography. I mean, it’s just incredible how much publishing, how much Adobe has disrupted. Moved it all to the computer screen. Even right on down to paintings. Yeah. PDF files.
SPEAKER 04 :
Adobe looks pretty good. Now with AI, you have pictures and other things, right? Yeah.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, you know, I have seen a feature. You can take a photo, obviously, and enter it into any of the paint programs, whether it’s Corel Paint or Adobe, and you can do an AI painting. That it does automatically, right? You can choose your style. I want it to look like a Vincent van Gogh. No, I want it to look like a Rembrandt. I want it to look like whatever. Modern. Where your ears are on your leg and your knees are on your face and all that kind of stuff. AI Paintings. Adobe. It’s on the move. We’ll be right back.
SPEAKER 07 :
On a winter day You gotta go where you wanna go Do what you wanna do
SPEAKER 03 :
And welcome back here to the final segment of today’s Best Stocks Now Show. Boy, we’ve had a lot to talk about here today. Busy day. But I’ve got three stocks I want to talk about before the end of the show. These are three stocks that we currently own that are having big days. Spotify, number one. Okay, Spot, like we say, is now four times the size, three times the size of Warner Brothers Discovery. That stock is right now up $37 per share, or 8.9%. Stocks follow earnings. Spotify lost $3.01 last year per share. This year, they’re going to make $6.35. Next year, they’re going to make, according to the analysts, $9.53. To go from a $3 loss in 2023 last year to $6 earnings this year per share and $9.53 next year, the stock is following those earnings and those earnings expectations. And they did report last night. They reported a very good quarter. They had revenue of $4 billion for the quarter. They had earnings of $1.50 or so for the quarter. And they put out a forward outlook for next year. And obviously the market loves it. You look at the Best Stocks Now app. I’m just going to see where it’s ranked right now. I mean, that’s how I find all my stocks, right?
SPEAKER 04 :
And they have 260 million premium subscribers, which is… I’m getting there.
SPEAKER 03 :
I’m not there yet. But Spotify was ranked number 55 yesterday overall with 118% upside potential. so it meets the momentum criteria it meets the valuation criteria And you just look at it logically. I mean, people are fleeing. They’re fleeing the mainstream media that we used to call it. You know, in the day, I remember three networks. There was ABC, NBC, and CBS. And then they started to add a few along the way. And now it’s the most crowded field you can ever imagine. There’s more channels on my TV now. Then you have time to even flip through all of those channels, and people are choosing the winners and the losers. And Spotify, obviously, is a major winner here with their move today. The second stock I wanted.
SPEAKER 04 :
Fourth largest position at the firm.
SPEAKER 03 :
Yes, that’s our fourth largest position.
SPEAKER 04 :
Jumping up there today. It’s moved up a few spots.
SPEAKER 03 :
And we don’t own Disney. No. And we don’t own Time Warner. And we don’t own AT&T. Okay, number two, Flutter Entertainment. I’ve been talking a lot about this whole gambling craze. Whether it’s good or bad, I’ll leave that up to you. But, you know, I mean, between the betting now that is on almost every move during a football game or a baseball game or a hockey game, Or horse racing. I mean, you name it. It’s a gambling explosion. Stocks follow earnings. Flutter is based in Ireland. You know, the Irish sweepstakes go way back to… I remember when I was a little kid hearing my dad talk about the Irish sweepstakes, right? They were kind of the inventors of a lot of this stuff. Horse racing, for sure. A lot of the turf racing we see today today. They made 18 cents last year, Flutter. They’re expected to make $5.88 this year and $8.85 next year. What do you see in common there with Spotify? You see the same exact pattern. You see a company that’s been building and building and building, and now the earnings are starting to really come in. Flutter’s up 4.8% today. That’s now a $46 billion company. $46 billion company. Up 4.7% today. Now, we own Flutter in the… In the ultra-growth portfolio, I also own a little DraftKings, which is the competitor. Let’s see how it’s doing today. I didn’t want to have two stocks in the same portfolio from the same industry, gambling, sports betting stocks. I own DraftKings. It’s up 1.4%. Okay, then the third one I want to talk about. And I, you know, I’m not a big fan of restaurant stocks. I’m not a big fan of fast food stocks. But I have had some big winners there over the years. I mean, obviously, Chipotle is one of the great stocks of all time. And there have been some others. I’d have to go back and think about it. But there have, well, I mean, Outback was a huge winner in the early 2000s, late 1990s, early 2000s. Texas Roadhouse continues to be a big winner in the market. There were some others along the way that had their moment. Right now, I would say Kava is having its moment. Even though I have an issue, I own it personally. I didn’t feel comfortable buying it in our clients. portfolios because it’s just it’s fast food it’s high end and i’m not seeing the lines i’m gonna go tonight talk about boots on the ground now barry i let you do the fertilizer stocks and i get to do the restaurant stocks yes i get to do the restaurant stocks I’ve been to Cava a few times here in our local neighborhood. I’m never very impressed with it. That’s why. But the growth, I mean, their earnings were up 150%. I mean, those are the kind of numbers, you know, that adds a little tzatziki to it. To this story. I still don’t really believe in the story all that much. P.E. ratio 315 right now. But it is up 11.3% after a blowout.
SPEAKER 04 :
They’re going to have to show you a good time tonight there at CAVA. I’ll be waiting to hear what the update is.
SPEAKER 03 :
Well, if you’re meeting me there, bring your own money because it’s Dutch treat. You know, you can buy your own pita sandwich. No, but I am going to take a picture of the line at 630, which I consider to be prime time. And it’s in a very busy shopping center. I’m going to say there’s going to be two or three people in the restaurant. That’s what I’m going to say. So get ready to short this thing at some point in time. But not right now. I mean, it’s in that groove with that triple-digit growth. And the soaring today, okay Well, this has been a lot of fun, but it’s even more fun to get down into the weeds here into the trenches Put on the scuba gear and look underneath the surface of the market. We still have an extraordinary number of stocks to look at Because of this big wave we’ve had and all the stocks that have entered into momentum territory and But it’s starting to cool off a bit, which I’ll be happy. And the real winters are starting to emerge. And if I find anything, if I see anything, I’ll say something. Get four free weeks. Spend the day with Bill or the evening, whatever the case may be. Go to GundersenCapital.com. Sign up. If you’d like to say, I don’t have the time to do this. I need someone to do it for me. You can make an appointment at 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.