Move over, Microsoft⦠[The Jolt with Stephen McBride] NVDA = #1 Nvidia (NVDA) just passed Microsoft (MSFT) to become the worldâs most valuable company. NVDA was worth $160 billion [when I first recommended it back in 2018](. Now, it sits atop everyone else at a staggering $3.34 TRILLION: Congrats to RiskHedge readers who capitalized on NVDA at any point along its historic rise. Weâve taken profits on NVDA twice in Disruption Investor, and I believe it will continue to thrive in the years ahead. It essentially has a monopoly on the computer chips needed to keep powering the artificial intelligence (AI) boom. And fundamentally, the company is as strong as ever. But my partner Chris Wood and I are now focused on the next wave of AI winners essential to the great infrastructure buildout. We highlight our top plays in our latest issue, [which you can access by upgrading here](. - US stocks are having their best start to an election year ever. Theyâve rallied 15%, already surpassing the average full-year gain in an election year (11.7%). As you can see below, election years (year 4 of the presidential cycle) tend to be pretty good years for stocks: Some folks think making stock market forecasts based on election cycles is voodoo. But the historical tendency for stocks to perform well in years 3 and 4 of the election cycle is strong. [Itâs one of the main reasons I recommended aggressively buying stocks in January 2023](, when Wall Street gurus were almost unanimously bearish. Stocks gained 24% last year, surprising them all. In the January issue of Disruption Investor, I said weâd see S&P 5,000 for the first time (already happened) and that stocks would finish the year up 20% on the backdrop of a strong economy and earnings. So far, so good. But Iâm surprised at the lack of a significant drop from stocks so far this year.  Aside from declining 4% in April, stocks have risen every month in 2024. Markets arenât usually this easy or consistent. And remember, in an average year, the S&P 500 suffers a decline of 14%. My guess is weâll get a correction in that ballpark sometime before Novemberâs election. If we do, use it as an opportunity to accumulate shares in high-quality, disruptive businesses. - Google paid its first-ever dividend on Monday⦠Of 20 cents a share, for an annual yield of 0.45%. I see this as Google (GOOG) admitting itâs no longer an innovative tech company Generally speaking, I donât believe tech companies should pay dividends. Why? Because that money is better spent developing new technologies that add to the revenues and earnings of the business. But Googleâs telling us itâs run out of ideas. It doesnât know what to do with its money, so itâs returning it to shareholders. [ShareÂ]( This doesnât mean its stock is doomed anytime soon. Companies that donât invest enough in the future can coast on their past achievements for a time. And Wall Street only cares about what happens next quarter. But this move shows Google is retreating from the (innovation) frontier, like a once-great empire in decline. There are much better opportunities to be found buying up-and-coming disruptors profiting from megatrends. [Thatâs what weâre doing inside Disruption Investor.]( - Todayâs dose of optimism... I took my daughter to her first gymnastics lesson on Fatherâs Day. I couldnât think of a better way to spend a few hours. Two things here... One, Iâm a big fan of the stoic idea of ânegative visualization.â Basically, imagining what could go wrong so you appreciate the good things in life. Itâs often hard to appreciate kids when youâre in the thick of it. But this technique always helps me appreciate these special moments. Ride a winner. Sell a loser. Great advice. But how do you separate the winners from the losers? The answer: Get someone on "the inside" to work for you. [Click to continue reading.]( Two, there are lots of ways to waste away your days. Spending time with your family is not one of them. Nobody ever regretted spending too much time with their kids. Being an engaged dad is a secret superpower. Itâs no coincidence many of historyâs most successful people had gangs of kids. As Jay Gould, whom Cornelius Vanderbilt called âthe smartest man in America,â once said: âWife and children are what men fight wars and build castles for.â See you Friday. Stephen McBride
Chief Analyst, RiskHedge Suggested Reading... [Guidance
on Nvidia]( Â
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