Fear and Doubt Are Running the Stock Market – Here’s How to Profit

It’s the start of a brand-new week… and much more importantly, the start of an entirely new stock market.

That’s right: Everything’s changed.

The overriding bullish sentiment that powered markets higher for nine years died last week.

It was at death’s door the week of Oct. 15, but the bull had a pulse at least.

Not anymore. It’s flatlined. R.I.P.

The action last week… ouch; it was ugly. Particularly the Nasdaq, which is well on track for its worst October since 2008.

In fact, that may have been the decisive “death blow.”

Why was that so bad?

Well, for years, the tech darlings, chiefly the FAANG stocks – Facebook Inc.(NASDAQ: FB), Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN), Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL), Netflix Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX), Google’s parent company, Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL), and Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) – would routinely lead markets higher.

Not anymore.

Don’t let Monday’s rally fool you. There’s just not enough there to change the inevitable fact that there’s a new boss in town…

The Mega-Cap Tech Leaders Are Gasping for Air

The Street is talking. Good times or bad, that’ll never change, but there’s a new topic of conversation on the table.

See, the Street isn’t buzzing about record earnings, or record profit margins, or inflows into passive investment funds anymore.

It’s about peak earnings, stretched profit margins, and outflows from indexed mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

Fear and skepticism are the flavor of the day.

As far as I’m concerned, there’s no magic potion investors can take to mask the bad taste they have in their mouths now.

When companies come out with good earnings, they go up then collapse back. When they miss on the top line, the bottom line, or pare back future guidance, the get pummeled mercilessly.

The hell of it is, nothing’s changed, fundamentally speaking. Misses aren’t bad; beats have been convincing.

It’s just that the market isn’t looking healthy. Technically, it looks like there’s a huge weight breaking its back.

That’s sentiment and psychology. And that’s what’s changed.

We’ll respond to it with a classic from my playbook, though…

Even a Downtrend Is Still Your Friend

And it always will be, whether the bulls are running or the bears are rampaging.

Go with the flow.

There’s no sense in fighting it because, if you do, you’re just as likely as not to get sucked under, like millions of investors did over the past two weeks.

In my paid trading services, for instance, several positions I was researching opened down too much. To get into those positions would be to chase them, and that would be foolish.

It’s not unexpected, it’s just indicative of how quickly a lot of stocks got levelled.

It’s just the way it is. It’s not the end of the world.

From here, for the time being, I like being on the short side of things. That’s what I’m going to recommend for my paid-up readers as we look at specific sputtering companies to target.

Otherwise, it’s a smart idea to – you guessed it – go with the trend, and play the broad declines with “bear” vehicles, like the ProShares Short S&P 500 ETF(NYSEArca: SH), the ProShares Short Dow 30 ETF (NYSEArca: DOG), and the ProShares Short QQQ ETF (NYSEArca: PSQ).

The trend is down until proven otherwise. It’s not unrealistic to expect these bear runs to continue until the midterm elections are history.

Beyond that, it’s anyone’s guess, but I would not try to anticipate a change in the weather.

But it will change eventually.

When lightning strikes and a few intrepid bargain-hunting traders inject enough leadership momentum to rekindle hope and, who knows, maybe back toward highs, we’ll be ready.

Because we want to be friends with that trend, too.

Buffett just went all-in on THIS new asset. Will you?
Buffett could see this new asset run 2,524% in 2018. And he's not the only one... Mark Cuban says "it's the most exciting thing I've ever seen." Mark Zuckerberg threw down $19 billion to get a piece... Bill Gates wagered $26 billion trying to control it...
What is it?
It's not gold, crypto or any mainstream investment. But these mega-billionaires have bet the farm it's about to be the most valuable asset on Earth. Wall Street and the financial media have no clue what's about to happen...And if you act fast, you could earn as much as 2,524% before the year is up.
Click here to find out what it is.

Source: Money Morning 

3 Beaten-Down Tech Stocks You Can Buy Now

Source: Shutterstock

The latest October collapse of tech stocks has unveiled many bargains. Some are obvious. Others are less so. For investors with cash to spend, tech stocks that have been beaten down offer good value. You can buy at these levels and feel confident that in five years your money will have built something.

But the obvious buys are not always the obvious names. That’s because, as with recessions, corrections do show the bankruptcy of some business models. Not everything will come back.

So, tread carefully.

Here are three stocks, ranked from the most obvious to the least obvious, that I think will rally from here.

amazon stock

Source: Shutterstock

Amazon (AMZN)

Since Sept. 27, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) shares have fallen 18%. Founder Jeff Bezos’ personal fortune has dropped by about $27 billion. But Amazon will come back. During 2018 it solidified its position as the only choice for e-commerce infrastructure. When the Administration moved to increase postal rates, Amazon yawned, because it has already invested in delivery infrastructure to become independent of the U.S. Postal Service.

If the anti-trust police come after Amazon it will have millions of allies, because 53% of its salesare generated by third parties. While Walmart (NYSE:WMT) is taking inventory risks, Amazon is laying those off, acting more like a franchisor than a franchisee. It gets increased margins without battling over prices. It also has thousands of businesses, large and small, who will go to bat for it if the anti-trust police ever come calling.

At its Oct. 29 opening price of $1,645 per share, Amazon is selling for 3.5 times its anticipated 2018 revenue of $230 billion. That’s still high for a retailer, but low for a tech company. Only 60% of sales in its third-quarter report came from products. The rest was in services, and $6.7 billion of that was from Amazon Web Services, where 31% of revenue hit the net income line.

With revenue growing 34% per year, AWS growing at 42% per year and international revenue now 31% of the total, Amazon stock is a can’t-miss proposition.

Investors Won't Believe the Micron Stock Hype Without Evidence

Source: Shutterstock

Micron (MU)

Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) is cheap, but for a good reason. Its price-earnings multiple of 3 is misleading — memory chips are commodities, and those earnings could disappear in a flash. For fiscal 2018 they were huge, $14.1 billion, or $11.51 per share, on revenue of $30.4 billion. But in its conference call announcing those earnings, chief financial officer Dave Zinsner cut his earnings forecast for the current quarter.

That announcement spawned the recent wreck of tech stocks. Since Sept. 20 Micron shares are down 18.7%, opening for trade Oct. 29 at about $36.50 per share. The market cap of $40.2 billion is just one-third higher than last year’s sales of $30.4 billion.

In past technology cycles, memory prices have collapsed. Micron has been left in terrible shape. It had started making PCs before the last recession and declared bankruptcy on that unit. After the dot-com bust, between May 2001 and early 2003, Micron stock lost 80% of its value.

But it may truly be different this time. CEO Sanjay Mehrotra rode out several tech recessions as co-founder of SanDisk. Micron is buying out Intel (NASDAQ:INTCin flash memory, forcing Intel into the arms of Chinese partners the Administration may not want it to have.

Then there’s the supercycle. Memory and intelligence are being added to millions of previously inanimate objects. Consumer products are coming under voice control, city streets are being automated, cars are becoming intelligent and industrial service cycles are becoming automated. It’s a trend that’s just getting started, with the number of networked devices expected to top 50 billion in just two years.

Who needs crypto-miners, or even cloud data centers, when you have a sure thing like that?

IBM Stock Drops in Pre-Market Trading on News of $33B Red Hat Acquisition

Source: Shutterstock

International Business Machines (IBM)

At its October 29 opening price of $120.60, International Business Machines (NYSE:IBM) has a market cap of just $114 billion, on expected 2018 revenue of $79 billion. It’s super cheap, especially with a dividend of $1.57 per share, still supported by earnings, yielding 5%. But that’s not the reason to speculate on its comeback. The reason to buy is its $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat (NYSE:RHT), the leader in cloud software, and what it portends for the company’s future.

What it means is that IBM is finally serious about open source and the cloud, with which it has had an on-again, off-again relationship for decades. IBM did buy cloud provider Softlayer for $2 billion in 2012, but it was still lagging, focused on creating “solutions” rather than offering tools, as Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) does.

But the cloud is a tools business, built on open source software that customers can adapt and even contribute to. Red Hat is the unquestioned leader in this business, and since it will represent 30% of IBM’s value when the deal closes in 2019, IBM will have to listen to it.

This analysis is highly speculative, but I’m not the only reporter making it. Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst should be the first person IBM turns to as a successor to IBM CEO Ginni Rometty, who is 61. That’s about the age previous IBM CEOs like John Akers and Sam Palmisano were at retirement.

If she does make that announcement, IBM stock is going to soar.

Buffett just went all-in on THIS new asset. Will you?
Buffett could see this new asset run 2,524% in 2018. And he's not the only one... Mark Cuban says "it's the most exciting thing I've ever seen." Mark Zuckerberg threw down $19 billion to get a piece... Bill Gates wagered $26 billion trying to control it...
What is it?
It's not gold, crypto or any mainstream investment. But these mega-billionaires have bet the farm it's about to be the most valuable asset on Earth. Wall Street and the financial media have no clue what's about to happen...And if you act fast, you could earn as much as 2,524% before the year is up.
Click here to find out what it is.

Source: Investor Place