Disney just beat the crap out of estimates and (surprising part here) guided higher for the year.
Despite collapsing consumer sentiment, a drop off in US park visits, leaning even deeper into cruises (which might be the only way to vaporize your money faster than going to a theme park) and national disinterest in all things Marvel and Star Wars Disney guided pretty much every higher for just about every segment and hiked the annual estimate by over 30c a share.
Just to flex a little more Disney also raised expected cash flow by more than $2 billion.
Oh yeah, Disney also added the news of a new park in Abu Dhabi. Which raises a whole bunch of questions
Let's Grade It!
Financials: A
This is why you have a conglomerate. Parks fall off? Entertainment picks up the slack. Cruises are disappointing? Streaming picks up some slack. This is probably the best quarter for Disney since the return of Iger, given the cross-currents.
Consumer: B+
Park profitability went up despite less traffic. I'd like to think that was because the company was controlling traffic levels by raising prices, a...
Every day, we sift through regulatory filings to spot where real conviction lies — cutting through the noise to highlight the most timely and meaningful insider moves.
Here's what stood out today:
📌Organon & Co $OGN — CEO Kevin Ali and CFO Matthew Walsh filed separate Form 4s, collectively scooping up nearly $399,918 in stock.
This is easily the standout trade of the day. When the top two executives double down at the same time, that’s a serious vote of confidence — and a signal we don’t ignore.
📌Ardelyx Inc $ARDX — Foresite Capital Fund is back with a massive $1.6 million buy.
When a fund known for backing early-stage innovation leans in this hard, it tells us they like what they see under the hood.
Here’s The Hot Corner, with data from May 6, 2025:
Large-cap stocks continue to dominate the U.S. equity markets, and this trend looks poised to persist in the near future.
Growth $IWF has just broken to new relative highs relative to Value $IWD, signaling a shift in the underlying trend.
Despite the considerable headwinds faced by the U.S. markets and growth stocks in particular throughout this year, it seems that growth is far from surrendering.
In fact, it appears that growth stocks are positioning themselves for a potential rebound, showing resilience and the capacity to deliver returns despite their recent weakness.
In trading, we’re taught early on that risk management is everything. “Use stop losses!” they say. And I agree. But what I’ve come to learn—especially when trading options in volatile markets—is that stops aren’t always about a precise line in the sand. Sometimes, they’re more like zones. Areas. Regions on the chart where you start paying close attention, rather than pulling the trigger at the first sign of trouble.
This came into sharp focus recently as volatility spiked. When the market threw its “tariff tantrum” and everything went haywire, we saw stocks and indices swinging wildly in both directions. On any given day, the same stock could be up 5% in the morning and down 5% by the afternoon. It was chaos. And chaos doesn’t play nicely with rigid stop-loss levels.
I had several long positions on during that time—mostly defined-risk spreads with expirations a few months out. The kind of trades that allow for a bit more breathing room. Yet many of these positions would repeatedly dip below my stop levels… only to recover just hours later. Over and over. A less experienced version of me might have panicked and bailed the moment my mental stop was breached. But I’ve...
The Taiwan New Dollar just posted its sharpest two-day rally against the US dollar—ever.
This wasn’t just any rally. It was a vertical move—TWD/USD spiked over 10% in two sessions, tagging a near three-year high in the process.
It caught the entire FX complex leaning the wrong way. It was statistically off the charts.
This wasn’t a six-sigma move. Or even ten. We're talking fifteen sigma. That’s what quants call an “impossible” outcome. A market move so extreme that it breaks the model.
A 10% move might not turn heads in a tape where spec. growth stocks like HIMS or PLTR can move that and more intraday—but for a currency pair? It’s seismic. Especially when the pair has been dozing in a multi-year falling wedge.
That pattern? It just resolved higher. The breakout came right at the apex of the wedge—when no one was paying attention.
With this kind of volatility comes a forced unwind. Exporters, insurers, speculators—everyone caught leaning the wrong way gets squeezed out the door. Fast.
Berkshire Hathaway $BRK.B just delivered a double miss, falling short on revenue and earnings.
But the real bombshell came later: Warren Buffett is stepping down as CEO at the end of 2025.
The result? Berkshire just logged its worst earnings reaction since 2011.
This isn’t just another miss. This is the market reacting to the end of an era.
The Oracle of Omaha has been Berkshire's steady hand for decades, and while succession plans have been public for years, the official word hits differently.
The stock sold off hard and fast.
This isn’t about numbers anymore. It’s about confidence.
When a fortress stock like Berkshire gets punished like this, it signals something deeper: investors are nervous...
Buffett stepping back into the shadows feels like a metaphor for this entire tape.
If Berkshire’s not safe, what is?
So what else did we learn from yesterday's earnings reactions? Let’s dive into the details.
Here are the latest earnings reports from the S&P 500 👇
Here are the most significant insider buys we’re tracking right now — starting with a major bet in Biotech and ending with a familiar name in Big Tech.
📌 Mimedx Group $MDXG – CEO Joseph H. Capper stepped in to buy 200,000 shares, equivalent to $1.27 million.
When the person steering the ship is buying with that kind of size, it usually means they believe in what’s ahead — or they know something we don’t.
📌 Hillman Solutions $HLMN – CFO Robert Kraft dropped nearly $1 million into his own stock.
If the finance chief is bullish, we take notice. It’s often one of the most telling insider signals out there.
Here’s The Hot Corner, with data from May 5, 2025:
Click the table to enlarge it.
📌 Algoma Steel $ASTL – Maple Rock Capital just upped its stake from 5.85% to 7.2%,...
Gold has been in an uptrend for the past 358 trading days, marking the 8th-longest trend since the 1970s.
Here’s the chart:
Let's break down what the chart shows:
The black line in the upper panel indicates the price of gold. The blue line represents the 50-day moving average, while the red line shows the 200-day moving average of gold.
The black bars in the bottom panel indicate days when the 50-day average is greater than the 200-day average.
The Takeaway: To clarify, I identify a strong uptrend when the 50-day moving average is above the 200-day moving average. Currently, gold is experiencing one of the longest uptrends in the past 60 years, ranking as the eighth longest overall so far. At this point, there are no signs of this trend slowing down, as it continues to move upward and to the right on the chart. Therefore, it's difficult to be pessimistic about gold at this time.
However, Right now the 50-day moving average is 12.4% above the 200-day moving average. The last time the trend...
If there’s one word to describe the Trump administration over the past month, it’s “backfire.”
Just this past week, we’ve seen Australia ($EWA) and Canada ($EWC) rally following their respective elections—both countries opting for left-of-center governments in a clear rebuke of Trump-style politics. Their conservative leaders, caught mimicking Trump’s aggressive rhetoric amid a looming global trade war, were swiftly voted out.
Meanwhile, in a move that further underscores the unintended consequences, China ($FXI) has been quietly outperforming the United States ($SPY), even as tensions rise.
Talk about a backfire.
Since 2024, $FXI has been steadily trending higher relative to $SPY, and there’s no sign of that trend reversing anytime soon.
Strip away the politics, and the rotation out of U.S. equities starts to make perfect sense.
Valuations may not matter—until they suddenly do. U.S. stocks are commanding a premium that investors seem increasingly unwilling to pay in this environment. On the other hand, China offers both attractive valuations and strong momentum—a high-conviction setup...
The relentless bid for international equities continues to stand out—and it’s getting harder to ignore.
Outside the U.S., we’re seeing a textbook V-bottom in progress. Stocks around the world are recovering fast and fierce, with many regions snapping back toward new highs.
Just look at the iShares MSCI EAFE ETF $EFA. It erased all its March and April losses in no time.
After briefly undercutting last year’s lows, EFA shook out the weak hands, trapped the bears, and ripped right back above the upper bounds of the range.
These shakeouts that lead to breakouts are some of the most bullish setups out there.
The greatest investor the world has ever seen announced his retirement this weekend.
Warren Buffett delivered the news at the Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholders meeting on Saturday that he’ll be stepping down on January 1, 2026.
Naturally, this was the big story of the day. But all I keep hearing is that the stock is down 5% on the news.
You gotta be kidding me.
JC and I have been joking for years that when this moment comes, you buy the dip. And now that it’s here, we’re doing it.
So, let’s tell the real story of Buffett and Berkshire shares these days.
What all the headlines aren’t telling you is that Buffett literally just went out on top in the most GOAT fashion. Let me explain…
Berkshire closed at fresh all-time highs Friday.
Only a handful of stocks in the S&P 500 could say the same.
The market just suffered a swift and steep drawdown. It's the worst of the entire cycle. A lot of stocks have been absolutely crushed. But not this one.
We're amidst an epic bull market for precious metals. And while gold and silver get all the headlines, we think Palladium could end up being the sneaky outperformer in this cycle.
We've had some great trades come out of this small-cap-focused column since we launched it back in 2020 and started rotating it with our flagship bottom-up scan, Under the Hood.
For the first year or so, we focused only on Russell 2000 stocks with a market cap between $1 and $2B.
That was fun, but we wanted to branch out a bit and allow some new stocks to find their way onto our list.
We expanded our universe to include some mid-caps.
Nowadays, to make the cut for our Minor Leaguers list, a company must have a market cap between $1 and $4B.
And it doesn't have to be a Russell component — it can be any US-listed equity. With participation expanding around the globe, we want all those ADRs in our universe.
The same price and liquidity filters are applied. Then, as always, we sort by proximity to new...