My 10 Stocks for Your Core Portfolio–with the “whys” for each pick

My 10 Stocks for Your Core Portfolio–with the “whys” for each pick

I think a well-constructed portfolio should resemble an onion. (Yes, to continue the analogy, it may make you cry in the short term, but the end result after cooking time is yummy.) At the center of that onion is a core built of stocks with extremely high, risk-adjusted potential rates of return. These stocks won’t deliver the kind of huge gains you can reap from investing in a risky bet–if everything turns out right for that company and its stock. But neither are they likely to crash and burn because something goes wrong at the company. These core portfolio stocks will drop if the market as a whole heads south, but they will drop less and recover faster. These aren’t buy-and-forget, or hold-forever stocks. They can soar to unreasonable valuations at times and an active investor should take profits at some point of overvaluation. (I did a YouTube video recently (you can find it on any of my sites) on when to sell a very overvalued Nvidia, for example.) And they can trade at big discounts to fair value (which is, of course, when the steely-eyed among us will buy) because management has made a mistake or between the industry in which they do business is slumping, or because the market for the company’s goods and services has taken an unexpected direction. At that point, you’ll need to consider selling or adding to your positions depending on your analysis of how long the damage might last and how bad it is. But the point of this core to your stock portfolio is that these are companies that will deliver index-beating results with relatively small risks. Which will enable you, the investor, to plan how to achieve your financial goals with relatively less worry and uncertainty. So, without further ado, here’s my list of 10 stocks for a core portfolio–with the very important “whys” for each pick.

Special Report: Finding the Next Nvidia–my 10 Picks. Part 1, the Parameters for My Search, and Pick #1 Luminar

Special Report: Finding the Next Nvidia–my 10 Picks. Part 1, the Parameters for My Search, and Pick #1 Luminar

Certainly, we can all understand the attraction. Back on May 14, 2013, shares of Nvidia (NVDA) closed at a split-adjusted $3.60 a share. On May 1, they closed at $289.53. That’s a gain of 7943% in 10 years. Can we find the next Nvidia? 20/20 foresight would help, of course. But we can learn something about how to find the next Nvidia by examining the history of the current Nvidia. In Parr 1 of this Special Report I established some of the parameters that will guide my search for the next Nvidia. It’s necessary groundwork, I believe. I’ll start the task of building my list of 10 picks for finding the next Nvidia in Part 2.

Special Report: You Can Make Money Investing in Climate Change: Here’s How With Four Sectors and First 10 of 12 Stock Picks

Special Report: You Can Make Money Investing in Climate Change: Here’s How With Four Sectors and First 10 of 12 Stock Picks

All you have to do to find the high profits that will make the risk of investing in climate change stocks worthwhile is to focus on sectors (1) where the rewards are solid and the risk is quantifiable, (2) where companies are making profit the old-fashioned way by building out networks and then charging high rents to use them, by (3) carefully targeting a few technologies (wind and solar and hydrogen and electric cars) that will be part of any mix of solutions, and (4) by investing in bottlenecks that are likely to drive prices up (and provide good profits for companies that resolve the bottleneck.

Special Report: A Recession is Coming: My 12 Recession Stock Picks

Special Report: A Recession is Coming: My 12 Recession Stock Picks

In order to meet my 5 p.m. “in your inbox” deadline today, I’m going to give you the name of my 12 picks and the logic for dividing them into three groups that correspond, roughly, to when you should thinking about adding these stocks to your portfolio.
But I’m going to save the specific reasons for each one of these 12 stocks to tomorrow. I’ll add them to the standing Recession Special Report and create a separate “reasons” post then. I’d divide my 12 Recession Stock Picks into 3 groups.

Please watch my new YouTube video: Trend of the Week Auto Supply Stocks

Please watch my new YouTube video: Trend of the Week Auto Supply Stocks

I’m starting up my videos on JubakAM.com again–this time using YouTube as a platform. My one-hundredth-and seventh YouTube video “Trend of the Week Auto Supply Stocks” went up today. Two big deals for auto suppliers have Wall Street excited! Last week, Cummins (CMI) bought Meritor (MTOR) and Apollo Group bought Tenneco (TEN). These stocks jumped up in part because they were so undervalued and cheap before, but it also points to a larger trend: with the ongoing transition to EVs, makers of auto parts that can be put to use in that process will be increasingly important. That’s why I’m recommending you look at Dana (DAN), BorgWarner (BWA), and American Axle (AXL). As well as Cummins, the buyer in one of these deals

Please watch my new YouTube video: QuickPick Cummins Update

Please watch my new YouTube video: QuickPick Cummins Update

Welcome back to Quick Picks. I have another update this week, this time on Cummins (CMI), the maker of diesel engines that I first covered in August 2021. Cummins has built itself into a leader in developing new technologies for diesel engines in terms of efficiency and is now using the cash flow from that legacy business to create a market leading position in clean energy engines (fuel cells and electric vehicles.) That willingness to invest legacy earnings in new businesses is why I say they’re more like MSFT than XOM. The stock has fallen in recent months, so I think it’s a great time to buy and hold (and get paid a 2.6% dividend, too).

So far it’s just a typical September slump

So far it’s just a typical September slump

I found myself humming “I scare myself” this morning as the market continued its September selling. The Dan Hicks and the Hot Licks song pretty much sums up the market action this morning. We all know that stocks go down in September so we’re sending stocks downward. And we all know that September 17 is the Big Bad Day in the month so it’s unreasonable to expect a turn in sentiment before that date. But so far, I’d note, the selling seems “orderly” with the usual candidates bucking the trend and showing up in the green. It’s when those still in the green stocks start tumbling that I’ll really start to worry.

What to make of Cummins’ $2 billion penalty for Clean Air Act cheating

Trick or trend: Infrastructure stocks pull back as investors assume that Republican control of Senate means no big infrastructure plan from Biden administration

Our regular (or occasional or perhaps occasionally regular) Friday series (actually running on Saturday this week) Trick or Trend looks at what might (or might not) be emerging investible trends. Exclusively on JAM. This post won't run anywhere else. Ever. On Friday...
Stocks try another rotation again today–I’m not sure this one will stick with employment claims and August jobs report still due this week

Stocks try another rotation again today–I’m not sure this one will stick with employment claims and August jobs report still due this week

At the close today, the Standard & Poor's 500 was up another 1.54%. Putting this question at the top of many investors' and traders' minds: Is there any way to participate in this blow out rally without real adding an unacceptable amount of risk? The 5.83% drop in...