Every day, we sift through the filings to spot where the real conviction lies — cutting through the noise to highlight the most meaningful insider moves.
Here's what stood out today:
📌 Middleby $MIDD – Director Edward P. Garden fired a mammoth $65.6 million round into the commercial‑kitchen giant – easily one of 2025’s biggest insider buys.
📌 Sunrun $RUN – Director Edward H. Fenster snagged $543,000 just after the solar installer ripped more than 100 % off the lows, betting the squeeze still has juice.
Here’s The Hot Corner, with data from May 13, 2025:
Click the table to enlarge it.
📌 TMC the Metals Company $TMC – First Manhattan hiked its stake to 6.50 % from 5.78 %, as the deep‑sea‑miner finishes carving a...
The dollar is rebounding, but don’t expect it to last
The US Dollar Index $DXY continues to sit near the top of our macro checklist.
It’s been one of the more important tells of the cycle, not just for currencies—but for equities, commodities, and global risk assets.
Traditionally, the dollar moves opposite to US stocks. But as technicians, we know better than to marry intermarket correlations. These relationships ebb and flow, strengthen, weaken, invert, and sometimes go completely quiet. That’s normal.
Late last year, a big shift took place as stocks began to move with the dollar. It's not typical, but it’s not without precedent either.
Large caps have been steadily outperforming in U.S. markets, even as growth stocks led the most recent leg lower.
But in a market like this, flexibility is everything. We need to stay nimble and open-minded—ready to give a variety of investment themes the benefit of the doubt.
Europe is a prime example. After over a decade of going nowhere, it’s finally giving the U.S. a serious challenge.
Back in the U.S., one area that's quietly caught our attention is mid caps—the often overlooked middle child of the size spectrum.
Relative to large caps ($SPY), mid caps ($MDY) are digging in at a critical support level. It’s a key battleground.
If this level holds, we could see renewed strength in the mid-cap space. But if it breaks? It may set the stage for a deeper rotation down the cap scale—into small caps—as markets look to find their footing after the recent correction.
As Europe is proving right now, leadership is up for grabs. The winners of the next leg higher may not look like the winners of the last.
58% of S&P 500 stocks made 20-day new highs yesterday.
Here’s the chart:
Let's break down what the chart shows:
The blue line in the top panel is the S&P 500 index price.
The black line in the bottom panel shows the percentage of S&P 500 stocks at 20-day highs.
The red line in the bottom panel is the trigger for a breadth thrust.
The gray shading highlights when in a breadth thrust regime.
The Takeaway: Market participation is heating up!
Yesterday, my favorite breadth thrust officially fired.
The breadth thrust I am talking about is when 55% or more of the S&P 500 stocks reach a 20-day new high.
Yesterday, we saw 58% of S&P 500 stocks making 20-day new highs,
This means we have entered a breadth thrust regime that lasts one year.
It’s not an all-clear signal or a guarantee that the market will go up, but this breadth thrust regime points to healthy market leadership conditions and...
On had to be perfect going into earnings. Fast growth company and priced accordingly. On isn't cheap. It wasn't a month ago at $35 and wasn't when I bought it yesterday at $50.70. What On has transcends cheap. On has momentum, good management, and a near-perfect business model. It's got the fattest margins in footwear.
After running 40% from the lows, On had to be close to perfect when the company reported this morning.
I always look forward to these get-togethers. It’s an opportunity to catch up with JC and the analyst team in person.
But more importantly, it’s a fun and laid back forum for sharing ideas with some of our smartest colleagues and industry professionals. I always come away with something good. Something I wasn’t watching. Something from someone else’s radar that is now on mine.
I’m going to give a special talk on how I use VWAP...
As the weeks go by, the S&P 500 continues to slip in the global rankings.
It’s becoming harder to ignore the strength emerging overseas. International markets are flashing compelling opportunities—with attractive valuations and a clear resurgence in relative strength giving nimble investors plenty to work with.
Just look at Europe. It’s lit up in green. That’s relative strength in action.
After more than a decade of sideways action, Spain’s $EWP is breaking out to new all-time highs—defying the uncertainty weighing on U.S. equities.
Germany’s $EWG is doing the same—ripping to record highs.
Austria’s $EWO? New all-time highs as well.
Meanwhile, U.S. markets continue to wrestle with overhead resistance, struggling to reclaim its past glory.
With these long-term breakouts now taking shape abroad, it’s worth asking: Is the cycle of U.S. dominance finally running out of steam?
Welcome back to Under the Hood, where we'll cover all the action for the two weeks ended May 9, 2025. This report is published bi-weekly, in rotation with The Minor Leaguers.
What we do here is analyze the most popular stocks during the week and find opportunities to either join in and ride these momentum names higher, or fade the crowd and bet against them.
We use a variety of sources to generate the list of most popular names.
There are so many new data sources available that all we need to do is organize and curate them in a way that shows us exactly what we want: a list of stocks that are seeing an unusual increase in investor interest.
Click here for a behind-the-scenes look at our process.
Today, I’m headed to New Orleans for our tri-annual Portfolio Accelerator event.
There’s always been something about this city that resonates with me—not just the food, the music, or the unmistakable soul of the French Quarter—but its relationship with risk.
New Orleans understands risk. And more importantly, it understands how to manage it.
From levees and dikes to advanced pumping and drainage systems, the city doesn’t ignore the dangers it faces. It builds around them. It plans for them. It respects them. Just like we do as traders.
That’s part of why this city is such an inspiring backdrop for a room full of portfolio-focused minds. Like New Orleans, we try to hedge our exposure. We use long options, smart position sizing, and strategic overlays to reduce our downside risk. And like the levees, those hedges give us peace of mind—until the water starts to rise.
Because here’s the truth: sometimes, Mother Nature throws a punch you just can’t fully dodge. In markets, that’s when volatility explodes and our carefully calibrated short-vol trades face the full wrath of a panicked tape. Sure, we might technically...
I should probably wait. I might be able to buy a dip. But there's a name I've wanted in the portfolio for months. They report tomorrow. Expectations aren't exactly "low" but you don't get many dips in the good names.
Here's why I'm betting on this hot brand ahead of tomorrow's earnings.
We've all been there. Think about the time you first got interested in trading. It was exciting thinking about all the potential money we could make. But then we were quickly overwhelmed with the reality of all the things we didn't know. Former aspiring traders never made it past this moment. The mountain they had to climb just looked too daunting. When Jason Krutzky left the road after spending years touring with a rock band through North America and Europe, he decided he wanted to try his hand at full-time trading.
If there’s one thing Brian Lund learned about himself over the past 30 years in the markets, he must write. Without a doubt, without even thinking about it, he knows that to express himself and to complete his thoughts into productive trading, he needs to sit down and start writing. And this makes sense. We hear this a lot from our smart friends. Barry Ritholtz once wrote: “I write to find out what I’m thinking.”