This is the prudent thing to do if youâre up big on Nvidia... [The Jolt with Stephen McBride] Druck sells NVDA… Chris Reilly here, standing in for Stephen McBride. Billionaire Stan Druckenmiller might be the greatest investor alive today. âDruckâ strung together 30 straight profitable years from 1980 to 2010. During that time, he earned returns of 30% per year. If you took $10,000 and compounded it at 30% per year for 30 years⦠youâd amass a $26.2 million fortune. Yesterday, Druck told CNBC his firm cut its stake in Nvidia (NVDA)... calling it âone hell of a run.â After soaring 239% in 2023, the âAI chip kingpinâ is up roughly 90% this year: Nvidia is now the worldâs third largest company. It sits right behind Apple (AAPL) and Microsoft (MSFT): Source: companiesmarketcap Longtime readers know [Stephen McBride recommended Nvidia back in 2018](, saying, âIf I could only buy one stock for the next five years⦠this would be it.â Itâs been a monsterâand itâs hands down the clear-cut leader of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom. But itâs time to take profits if youâre up big... - Earlier this year, Stephen recommended his [Disruption Investor]( members sell half their position in NVDA. It was the second time he recommended taking profits on NVDA. Not because Nvidia wonât continue to drive AI for years to comeâbut because itâs the prudent thing to do. Stephen: Part of good investing is taking easy profits when they come. By selling half your position, youâll significantly reduce your risk and still be able to participate in Nvidiaâs long-term upside. If youâre sitting on big NVDA gains, consider doing the same if you havenât already. [Share]( And keep an eye on that âworldâs largest companyâ list I shared above. Stephen says Nvidia becoming the worldâs most valuable company could be a âtop signal.â Thereâs no fundamental reason this would mark the end of the AI boom. But it would be a clear sign that sentiment has gotten stretched to the max and investors are expecting too much. For now, expect 2024 to continue to be AIâs breakout year. In Disruption Investor, Stephen recommends companies raking in cash from the AI infrastructure boom. [Upgrade here.]( - If you listen to this old Wall Street adage, youâre likely leaving money on the table... âSell in May and go away.â The theory behind it is simple. Stocks tend to rise during the fall and winter months⦠and they tend to struggle in the spring and summer. While it has historically been true, nearly 100 years of data suggests âsell in May and go awayâ isnât necessarily the right move. This chart shows the average S&P 500 return each month dating back to 1928. As you can see, while May is the third worst-performing month, stocks have typically followed up with a great three-month stretch (JuneâAugust): In other words, investors who obey âsell in May and go awayâ are missing out more often than not. Hereâs more from the new issue of [Cornerstone Club](âour simple ârules-basedâ advisory designed to take the emotion out of investing: Itâs true that May through October is the worst six-month stretch of the year, on average. But markets still move higher in those months 65% of the time. In election years, that jumps to 78%. Itâs not exactly comfortable to expect stocks to do fine as we approach whatâs likely to be a historically chaotic election⦠but the data is the data. Now, itâs important to remember that weâre simply looking at the average monthly returns in the S&P 500 since 1928. The key word here is âaverage.â Stocks can, and often do, defy averages. In 2002, for example, the S&P 500 fell 24% during the MayâSeptember stretch. But in 2020, you wouldâve kicked yourself if you had sold in May. Stocks rebounded 24% from the COVID crash from MayâSeptember 2020. So, use this data as a guidepost... not as gospel. And no matter what, always heed Stephenâs #1 rule: Invest like you might be wrong. That means taking âfree ridesâ on positions up 100%+, cutting your losers early, and making sure you donât have too much capital tied up in one stock. Thatâs a winning formula for sustained investing success, no matter what month weâre in. - Oof... have you checked in on Starbucks (SBUX) lately? The stock just plunged 14% after a big earnings miss. Global revenue dropped 2% and net income fell 15%. Traffic at US stores was also down 7%. Not good. Zooming out, the stockâs down over the past five years. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 is up 80% over the same time frame. Some quick thoughts from Stephen: Starbucks is a milkshake company masquerading as a coffee chain. It did a great job at convincing Americans to drink dessert for breakfast and pay $10 for it. But itâs gone nowhere for years. And itâs slowly being disrupted by independent coffee shops across the world. Starbucks isnât going anywhere. Itâs still a great business. Americans will always be hooked on coffee (milkshakes)... but Starbucks is not the type of company Stephen and his team target in Disruption Investor. They only recommend great businesses at the heart of fast-growing, world-changing trends (think AI and biologics). Where these two circles overlap is the sweet spot: [Upgrade here to access the Disruption Investor portfolio.]( Chris Reilly
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