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Latest Stock Buy or Sell? Make More Informed Decisions!

Today, The Weekly Buzzing Stocks by Billy Kawasaki and The Panic-Proof Portfolio (Stockchase Research) commented about whether ZLU.U.TO, CDZ.TO, HLPR.TO, PLTR, META, MSFT are stocks to buy or sell.

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TOP PICK

Last year, the company generated 281.72 B USD, the most of which — 120.81 B USD — came from its top-performing segment, Productivity and Business Processes, compared to 77.73 B USD the previous year. The greatest contribution came from United States, which accounted for 144.55 B USD last year, with 124.70 B USD the year before. Social media mentions are up 308% in the past 24h.

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TOP PICK

Last year, the company generated 200.97 B USD, the most of which — 198.76 B USD — came from its top-performing segment, Family of Apps, compared to 162.35 B USD the previous year. The greatest contribution came from United States, which accounted for 74.78 B USD last year, with 59.73 B USD the year before. Social media mentions are up 581% in the past 24h.

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TOP PICK

Last year, the company generated 4.48 B USD, the most of which — 2.40 B USD — came from its top-performing segment, Government, compared to 1.57 B USD the previous year. The greatest contribution came from United States, which accounted for 3.32 B USD last year, with 1.90 B USD the year before. Social media mentions are up 325% in the past 24h.

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Curated by Michael O'Reilly since 2020.
1550+ opinions with 4.81 rating (one of the best performing expert).

TOP PICK
Stockchase Research Editor: Michael O'Reilly

We again reiterate HLPR, an ETF holding Canadian preferred shares with laddered rate expiries, as a TOP PICK.  As a Corporate Class ETF, it does not pay dividends, making it very tax efficient for non-registered accounts for Canadian investors.  We recommend trailing up the stop (from $31.50) to $34.00, looking to achieve $42.00 — upside potential of 18%.  Yield 0%

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Curated by Michael O'Reilly since 2020.
1550+ opinions with 4.81 rating (one of the best performing expert).

TOP PICK
Stockchase Research Editor: Michael O'Reilly

We again reiterate CDZ, an ETF of over 90 holdings of Canadian dividend paying stocks that have consistently raised their dividends over the past five years, as a TOP PICK.  A steady performer with a good yield. We recommend maintaining the stop at $40, looking to achieve $52 -- upside potential of 18%.  Yield 3.2%

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Curated by Michael O'Reilly since 2020.
1550+ opinions with 4.81 rating (one of the best performing expert).

TOP PICK
Stockchase Research Editor: Michael O'Reilly

We again reiterate ZLU.U, lower-MER ETF that holds the 100 lowest volatile stocks in the US equity universe, as a TOP PICK.   It is a good defensive holding with diversification across several unique sectors allowing upside potential and stalwart holdings such as Corning, Johnson & Johnson and IBM.  We continue to recommend a stop at $41, looking to achieve $54 -- upside potential of 18%.  Yield 2.3% 

COMMENT
Markets so far this year.

Holy cow, what a ride! We've had a country taken over, we're still in the midst of a major war, now there's stuff going on in Iran, the Fed is in discombobulation, tariffs are on, tariffs are off.

He can't recall having gone through anything like the last 3 months in terms of geopolitical volatility.

COMMENT
Biggest threat to the economy.

Unquestionably, it's this Middle East conflict. We still can't even begin to think about the unintended consequences (second- and third-derivative effects) of what's gone on over the last 30+ days.

Ships that were moving crude, nat gas, and fertilizer and left 37 days ago are now in ports. But there's nothing coming behind them. What's that going to mean for global crops and production of all kinds of things? Gasoline prices in small and emerging economies? They're really hurting.

We can estimate how much this will take off global GDP, but we really don't know at this point.

This ceasefire is very fragile. He wouldn't want to handicap an outcome.

COMMENT
Investing now.

As an investor, it's easy to get caught up in the noise. But when you think about it, what has happened?

Everything else being equal, oil prices are going to be higher moving forward. Insurance won't cost the same as it did in February and before. Will there be tolls? We don't know. They're talking $2M per ship that goes through. That'll just increase the price.

Put all this stuff together, oil prices are now higher. That has an impact that will carry through, but we don't know to what extent.

Take the semiconductor industry. They need helium. What is that going to mean?

It's really hard to know the exact impact but, basically, global costs have gone up. So growth implications have to be ratcheted down. The market hasn't factored all that in yet.

COMMENT
Follow the HALO.

Hard Assets, Low Obsolescence. 

In this kind of environment, cashflow is king. Best cashflow comes from hard assets -- you can look at them and determine their value in terms of what they're producing in terms of revenue/cashflow/dividends.

Low obsolescence means that they have somewhat of a moat (as per Warren Buffett) around themselves. Nobody can replace it in the near term. It's not going away. 

Those are the kind of assets you want to hold at certain times, get paid with that dividend. If growth comes, that's great. But it's going to be there 5 and 10 years from now. You're not worried about 5 days, 5 weeks, or 5 months.

These things survive all kinds of uncertain times. And we're in one now.

DON'T BUY

Tough call. Likes it more today than back in November. Rolled over since the peak last year. Mag 7 names are suffering from a technical name -- they're "tired" ;) 

Not as sexy as a chip manufacturer. Doesn't have a specific AI product. Not cheap. Growth hasn't been stellar, so the multiple is contracting. That's indicative of a tired market. Question of how to monetize Copilot will hang over it for at least a year.

Everybody owned it. If everybody owned it, who's left to buy it when things start to go soft?

DON'T BUY

He's out. No clarity regarding its ability to growth the US market. Management change. No question it's a cheap stock. All weight-loss drugs have had prices come down; that's the uncertainty, and how do you value that?

COMMENT
Precious metals.

Precious metals should be in every portfolio as an insurance policy. It's a diversifier. He uses bullion as that play. Then you have the leverage on bullion, which are the shares (for all practical purposes).

In between, you have something like SII that runs an ETF. Or you could have a streaming company that collect royalties off of the operating companies.

There's a hierarchy -- bullion, miners of bullion, royalty companies, then a Sprott who's an asset manager. He's owned them all.

His position today is that he's trimmed back his gold position dramatically by reducing names. For example, AEM was a 10% holding but today it's at 6%. Same thing with all the names in the portfolio.

Gold hasn't performed over the last 35 days, but it did its job over the last 2 years. He'd be a buyer today. His clients should be at 10% for the insurance component; today they're not quite there at 8%. The equity component is about 7%. So 8 + 7 = 15% in golds today. His gold plays are AEM and FNV.

BUY

Precious metals should be in every portfolio as an insurance policy. It's a diversifier. His position today is that he's trimmed back his gold position dramatically by reducing names. For example, AEM was a 10% holding but today it's at 6%. 

Gold hasn't performed over the last 35 days, but it did its job over the last 2 years. He'd be a buyer today. His clients should be at 10% for the insurance component; today they're not quite there at 8%. The equity component is about 7%. So 8 + 7 = 15% in golds today. His gold plays are AEM and FNV.

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