Tomorrow morning’s stock alert

Our research team is preparing to release our next stock idea tomorrow morning, just before 12:00 PM Eastern.

As a reminder, we send this pick first to investors who subscribe to receive The Early Bird Stock of the Day via text message. Then, it goes out the following morning to our email newsletter subscribers.

If you’d like to see the idea before it reaches the broader audience, now is the time to join. Many subscribers told us they appreciated getting early access, and our most recent pick drew a strong response.

The Early Bird Stock of the Day is a free service from The Early Bird and MarketBeat. To add yourself to the SMS distribution list and make sure you’re included in tomorrow’s release, simply click the link below:

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Best regards,
The Early Bird Team






Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media

Alphabet’s Pullback May Be Opening a New Entry Point

Author: Ryan Hasson. Article Posted: 3/11/2026. 

Google logo in data center over falling chart.

Key Points

  • GOOGL shares have pulled back more than 12% from recent highs but appear to be stabilizing near the key $300 support level.
  • Strong institutional demand continues to support the stock, with roughly $164 billion in inflows over the past 12 months.
  • Analysts remain bullish, with a Moderate Buy consensus rating and a price target implying nearly 20% upside from current levels.
  • Special Report: [Sponsorship-Ad-6-Format3]

Technology giant Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL)has held a major higher-timeframe support level, potentially creating a fresh entry opportunity for long-term investors.

The Magnificent Seven standout — still up roughly 77% over the past year — has pulled back more than 12% from its recent record highs. Much of that decline came with the broader technology selloff and was further pressured by rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

These guys act like this is big news… I called it (Ad)

The largest, private, dollar-linked financial entity in the crypto world, Tether, has openly stated it plans to allocate up to 15% of its reserves to physical gold—at current reserve levels, that’s roughly $30 billion worth of gold bullion, the kind of monetary decision normally made by central banks, not private companies. When a private company operating at the core of the dollar system is trading its dollar assets for gold, the oldest crisis hedge in history, that’s a clue showing you where the stress is building and what the release valve will be, and my top four gold stocks are up a combined 992% in just two years.See the four top gold stocks positioned for this demand

Fundamentally, little has changed for Alphabet. The company remains dominant in global search, digital advertising and artificial intelligence. While the long-term fundamental story remains intact, the recent pullback has shifted focus to the technical picture, where the stock may be setting up for its next move higher.

GOOGL Finds Support Near Key $300 Level

Technically, Alphabet’s pullback appears to be stabilizing near a key support zone.

After retreating from its February all-time high, the stock found support around the $300 level. That area was significant earlier this year, acting as support in mid-December and again in mid-March.

On Monday, March 9, shares briefly dipped below $300 intraday but quickly recovered with the broader market, ultimately closing above $306. That action reinforced the idea that buyers are defending the $300 line in the sand.

If Alphabet can push back above its 20-day simple moving average and then reclaim the 50-day moving average, it would confirm a higher-low structure. That would keep the broader uptrend intact and suggest the recent pullback was a reset within a longer-term bullish trend.

The correction has also improved the company’s valuation profile.

When shares traded near their all-time highs, Alphabet’s forward price-to-earnings ratio had crept well above its historical average. After the double-digit pullback, the stock now trades closer to a forward P/E of roughly 22.

For a dominant technology company that continues to deliver growth across search, cloud and AI, that valuation looks notably more reasonable.

Institutional Demand Continues to Climb

Institutional ownership is another key indicator: when large funds steadily accumulate a stock, it often signals durable market conviction.

Alphabet currently has institutional ownership of about 40%, and that figure has risen over the past year. Over the last 12 months, $164 billion flowed into the stock versus roughly $82 billion in outflows, highlighting strong institutional conviction even as the shares rallied significantly during the same period.

Short-term flows show a similar picture. In the fourth quarter of 2025, Alphabet recorded $78 billion in inflows compared with $33 billion in outflows, suggesting large investors continued to build positions despite market volatility.

Analysts Continue to See Meaningful Upside

Institutional sentiment is often reinforced by analyst coverage. Alphabet is currently covered by 51 analysts, making it one of the market’s most widely followed stocks.

Of those analysts, 46 rate the stock a Buy, producing an overall Moderate Buy consensus rating.

Notably, the average analyst price target is about $367.18, implying nearly 20% upside from current levels. If shares reached that target, the move would represent a new all-time high.

Most recently, on March 6, Robert W. Baird raised its price target on Alphabet from $375 to $380, a forecast that implied more than 26% potential upside at the time.

That upgrade was largely driven by Alphabet’s strong fourth-quarter 2025 results and continued momentum in its cloud computing and artificial intelligence businesses — both key drivers of long-term growth.

A Reset Within a Long-Term Uptrend

Short-term volatility has weighed on many technology stocks, but Alphabet’s broader outlook remains largely unchanged.

The pullback toward the $300 support level has allowed the stock to reset technically and improved its valuation. At the same time, institutional inflows and strong analyst sentiment indicate confidence in the company’s long-term trajectory remains intact.

If the stock holds support and reclaims key moving averages in the coming weeks, this dip may prove to be another buying opportunity within Alphabet’s longer-term uptrend.


Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media

MarketBeat Week in Review – 02/23 – 02/27

Author: MarketBeat Staff. Article Posted: 2/28/2026. 

Sometimes the best offense is a good defense. That’s what investors seem to be feeling. Technology stocks continue to be under pressure, and money is flowing into traditionally defensive assets like gold. There’s also growing evidence this rotation is expanding to include many blue-chip names. For example, The Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO) is up more than 10% in February.

Does this mean the tech trade is dead? Not likely. Innovation may take a breather, but it doesn’t stop. Much like the dot-com era, investors are wrestling with two competing themes: concern over the depth and breadth of the artificial intelligence (AI) buildout, and concern about what the AI transformation means for jobs and the broader economy.

Investors will get more information about the labor market when the February jobs report is released on March 6. Until then, buckle up for more volatility—and with it, more chances to find mispriced stocks. MarketBeat’s analysts hunt for those opportunities every week. Here are some of our most popular articles from this week.

These guys act like this is big news… I called it (Ad)

The largest, private, dollar-linked financial entity in the crypto world, Tether, has openly stated it plans to allocate up to 15% of its reserves to physical gold—at current reserve levels, that’s roughly $30 billion worth of gold bullion, the kind of monetary decision normally made by central banks, not private companies. When a private company operating at the core of the dollar system is trading its dollar assets for gold, the oldest crisis hedge in history, that’s a clue showing you where the stress is building and what the release valve will be, and my top four gold stocks are up a combined 992% in just two years.See the four top gold stocks positioned for this demand

Key Points

  • Investors are rotating away from pressured technology stocks into defensive areas, including gold and some blue-chip stocks.
  • The artificial intelligence buildout remains a major theme, but concerns about its scale and its impact on jobs are driving uncertainty.
  • With the February jobs report due March 6, market volatility may persist, creating opportunities to spot mispriced stocks.
  • Special Report: [Sponsorship-Ad-6-Format3]

Articles by Thomas Hughes

Thomas Hughes covered the most highly anticipated earnings report of the season: NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA). Hughes explained why the report was strong, what it means for the company’s balance sheet, and why institutional investors are likely to lead NVDA stock higher.

In a familiar story this earnings season, Tempus AI (NASDAQ: TEM) delivered a double beat — and the stock tumbled. Hughes explained why the technical outlook supports a bounce, one backed by institutional support.

Chipmakers look set for another strong year in 2026 as demand rises in several fast-growing sectors. Hughes highlighted three industrial chip stocks with “must-have” niches that support their future growth.

Articles by Sam Quirke

PayPal Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: PYPL) has been a brutal stock to hold over the past five years. Still, Sam Quirke wrote that despite concerns about competition and slowing growth, PayPal is trading at a historically low multiple, offering a compelling risk/reward profile.

On the other end of the valuation spectrum is Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA). Quirke explained what’s driving the company’s expanding multipleand why TSLA will continue to be a tug-of-war between true believers and perpetual skeptics.

Stocks adjacent to the housing sector remain under pressure. However, Quirke noted recent bullishness in Zillow Group (NASDAQ: ZS). It’s too early to call this the start of a long-term trend, but Quirke laid out both the fundamental and technical cases for ZS stock.

Articles by Chris Markoch

Opendoor Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: OPEN)surged after a mixed earnings report. Speculative investors may give the company the benefit of every doubt, but Chris Markoch argues the report showed Opendoor is still in the game — and now needs to show investors what “winning” actually looks like in the numbers.

Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) has been sliding for about four months. Markoch pointed to two indicators that popped up, suggesting larger investors may be starting to load up on this beaten-down tech name.

The rally in precious metals paused but has picked up again. Markoch wrote that we’re in the next phase of the gold and silver bull market, which should include mining stocks like the three names he offered to investors.

Articles by Ryan Hasson

The AI infrastructure trade remains a major push-pull for markets: either the buildout accelerates, or it doesn’t. Ryan Hasson wrote that the recent earnings report from Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) gave investors optimism that the company could be a winner with more upside ahead.

But the AI trade is broader than infrastructure; it’s an entire ecosystem. This week, Hasson highlighted five stocks at the center of the AI supply squeeze and why each merits a closer look.

Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL) has dominated headlines with its AI initiatives. Hasson noted the company’s “quiet investment” that may be Alphabet’s most significant growth driver in 2026 and beyond.

Articles by Leo Miller

At a time when many stocks look expensive, buybacks can carry extra weight. This week, Leo Miller highlighted three companies that announced new share buyback programs. As Miller noted, they span different sectors, reinforcing the idea that it’s a stock-picker’s market.

Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) is on deck for earnings next week. Miller previewed analyst expectations and highlighted the one metric investors should watch closely in Broadcom’s report.

Investors may also find out-of-the-box opportunities this year. Miller pointed to Hinge Health (NYSE: HNGE), a mid-cap healthcare company with a business model centered on reducing healthcare costs.

Articles by Nathan Reiff

D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) reported this week with headline numbers that weren’t great. Nathan Reiff emphasized that the story for D-Wave—and many quantum computing stocks—is about the long-term opportunity. With that in mind, Reiff explained why this report may fuel a new rally for QBTS stock.

As part of the sector rotation, beaten-down retail stocks could be worth a look. Reiff highlighted three retail names that analysts believe have strong catalysts that could drive bullish reversals in 2026.

Market volatility has boosted interest in the relative safety of exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Reiff highlighted three ETFs that have delivered strong performance over the last five years and explained why each may continue to perform well.

Articles by Dan Schmidt

Retail investors are often tempted to buy stocks that have fallen 50% or 60% — the so-called “falling knives.” As Dan Schmidt reminded readers, some falling knives aren’t worth catching. That’s the case with the three falling knife stocks he analyzed this week.

The AI panic trade has become a rolling wave that has hit financial stocks. Short-term reactions can create long-term opportunities, and Schmidt identified three financial stocks that are now on sale.

Articles by Jeffrey Neal Johnson

Sam Quirke gave investors one reason to look at PayPal this week. Jeffrey Neal Johnson offered another: the rumor that Stripe is in preliminary talks to buy the beaten-down fintech. Johnson broke down the math behind the potential move and why other buyers might take a closer look at PayPal.

Johnson also wrote about news that SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) launched a real-world AI agent. He explained why this could be the breakthrough investors have been waiting for to set SOUN apart from other AI stocks.

Johnson also examined the recent pullback in Archer Aviation Inc. (NYSE: ACHR). It’s a classic battle between institutions buying and short sellers. Johnson explained what investors should watch for when Archer reports earnings next week.

Articles by Jordan Chussler

The tech bull market may be tiring, but it’s not done yet. Jordan Chussler explained why investors should look for value in quality tech stocks that are on sale, including two Mag 7 names that are down sharply to start the year.

Lawsuits are generally bearish, and the suit filed by Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO) has been particularly damaging for Hims & Hers Health (NYSE: HIMS). But investors often sell first and ask questions later. Chussler argued HIMS’s setup could present an opportunity for risk-tolerant investors.

Market volatility hasn’t cooled interest in upcoming initial public offerings (IPOs). This week, Chussler analyzed three of the most anticipated names that investors should watch as IPO rumors intensify.

Thank you for subscribing to Insider Trades Daily, which covers the most recent insider buying and selling activity from Wall Street CEO’s, CFO’s, COO’s and other insiders.

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Featured Link: Affordable Shares With Surprising Upside Forecasts (Click to Opt-In)

Good day,

Our research team is preparing to release our next stock idea tomorrow morning, just before 12:00 PM Eastern.

As a reminder, we send this pick first to investors who subscribe to receive The Early Bird Stock of the Day via text message. Then, it goes out the following morning to our email newsletter subscribers.

If you’d like to see the idea before it reaches the broader audience, now is the time to join. Many subscribers told us they appreciated getting early access, and our most recent pick drew a strong response.

The Early Bird Stock of the Day is a free service from The Early Bird and MarketBeat. To add yourself to the SMS distribution list and make sure you’re included in tomorrow’s release, simply click the link below:

Get The Early Bird Stock of the Day

Best regards,
The Early Bird Team






Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media

Alphabet’s Pullback May Be Opening a New Entry Point

Author: Ryan Hasson. Article Posted: 3/11/2026. 

Google logo in data center over falling chart.

Key Points

  • GOOGL shares have pulled back more than 12% from recent highs but appear to be stabilizing near the key $300 support level.
  • Strong institutional demand continues to support the stock, with roughly $164 billion in inflows over the past 12 months.
  • Analysts remain bullish, with a Moderate Buy consensus rating and a price target implying nearly 20% upside from current levels.
  • Special Report: [Sponsorship-Ad-6-Format3]

Technology giant Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL)has held a major higher-timeframe support level, potentially creating a fresh entry opportunity for long-term investors.

The Magnificent Seven standout — still up roughly 77% over the past year — has pulled back more than 12% from its recent record highs. Much of that decline came with the broader technology selloff and was further pressured by rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

These guys act like this is big news… I called it (Ad)

The largest, private, dollar-linked financial entity in the crypto world, Tether, has openly stated it plans to allocate up to 15% of its reserves to physical gold—at current reserve levels, that’s roughly $30 billion worth of gold bullion, the kind of monetary decision normally made by central banks, not private companies. When a private company operating at the core of the dollar system is trading its dollar assets for gold, the oldest crisis hedge in history, that’s a clue showing you where the stress is building and what the release valve will be, and my top four gold stocks are up a combined 992% in just two years.See the four top gold stocks positioned for this demand

Fundamentally, little has changed for Alphabet. The company remains dominant in global search, digital advertising and artificial intelligence. While the long-term fundamental story remains intact, the recent pullback has shifted focus to the technical picture, where the stock may be setting up for its next move higher.

GOOGL Finds Support Near Key $300 Level

Technically, Alphabet’s pullback appears to be stabilizing near a key support zone.

After retreating from its February all-time high, the stock found support around the $300 level. That area was significant earlier this year, acting as support in mid-December and again in mid-March.

On Monday, March 9, shares briefly dipped below $300 intraday but quickly recovered with the broader market, ultimately closing above $306. That action reinforced the idea that buyers are defending the $300 line in the sand.

If Alphabet can push back above its 20-day simple moving average and then reclaim the 50-day moving average, it would confirm a higher-low structure. That would keep the broader uptrend intact and suggest the recent pullback was a reset within a longer-term bullish trend.

The correction has also improved the company’s valuation profile.

When shares traded near their all-time highs, Alphabet’s forward price-to-earnings ratio had crept well above its historical average. After the double-digit pullback, the stock now trades closer to a forward P/E of roughly 22.

For a dominant technology company that continues to deliver growth across search, cloud and AI, that valuation looks notably more reasonable.

Institutional Demand Continues to Climb

Institutional ownership is another key indicator: when large funds steadily accumulate a stock, it often signals durable market conviction.

Alphabet currently has institutional ownership of about 40%, and that figure has risen over the past year. Over the last 12 months, $164 billion flowed into the stock versus roughly $82 billion in outflows, highlighting strong institutional conviction even as the shares rallied significantly during the same period.

Short-term flows show a similar picture. In the fourth quarter of 2025, Alphabet recorded $78 billion in inflows compared with $33 billion in outflows, suggesting large investors continued to build positions despite market volatility.

Analysts Continue to See Meaningful Upside

Institutional sentiment is often reinforced by analyst coverage. Alphabet is currently covered by 51 analysts, making it one of the market’s most widely followed stocks.

Of those analysts, 46 rate the stock a Buy, producing an overall Moderate Buy consensus rating.

Notably, the average analyst price target is about $367.18, implying nearly 20% upside from current levels. If shares reached that target, the move would represent a new all-time high.

Most recently, on March 6, Robert W. Baird raised its price target on Alphabet from $375 to $380, a forecast that implied more than 26% potential upside at the time.

That upgrade was largely driven by Alphabet’s strong fourth-quarter 2025 results and continued momentum in its cloud computing and artificial intelligence businesses — both key drivers of long-term growth.

A Reset Within a Long-Term Uptrend

Short-term volatility has weighed on many technology stocks, but Alphabet’s broader outlook remains largely unchanged.

The pullback toward the $300 support level has allowed the stock to reset technically and improved its valuation. At the same time, institutional inflows and strong analyst sentiment indicate confidence in the company’s long-term trajectory remains intact.

If the stock holds support and reclaims key moving averages in the coming weeks, this dip may prove to be another buying opportunity within Alphabet’s longer-term uptrend.


Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media

MarketBeat Week in Review – 02/23 – 02/27

Author: MarketBeat Staff. Article Posted: 2/28/2026. 

Sometimes the best offense is a good defense. That’s what investors seem to be feeling. Technology stocks continue to be under pressure, and money is flowing into traditionally defensive assets like gold. There’s also growing evidence this rotation is expanding to include many blue-chip names. For example, The Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO) is up more than 10% in February.

Does this mean the tech trade is dead? Not likely. Innovation may take a breather, but it doesn’t stop. Much like the dot-com era, investors are wrestling with two competing themes: concern over the depth and breadth of the artificial intelligence (AI) buildout, and concern about what the AI transformation means for jobs and the broader economy.

Investors will get more information about the labor market when the February jobs report is released on March 6. Until then, buckle up for more volatility—and with it, more chances to find mispriced stocks. MarketBeat’s analysts hunt for those opportunities every week. Here are some of our most popular articles from this week.

These guys act like this is big news… I called it (Ad)

The largest, private, dollar-linked financial entity in the crypto world, Tether, has openly stated it plans to allocate up to 15% of its reserves to physical gold—at current reserve levels, that’s roughly $30 billion worth of gold bullion, the kind of monetary decision normally made by central banks, not private companies. When a private company operating at the core of the dollar system is trading its dollar assets for gold, the oldest crisis hedge in history, that’s a clue showing you where the stress is building and what the release valve will be, and my top four gold stocks are up a combined 992% in just two years.See the four top gold stocks positioned for this demand

Key Points

  • Investors are rotating away from pressured technology stocks into defensive areas, including gold and some blue-chip stocks.
  • The artificial intelligence buildout remains a major theme, but concerns about its scale and its impact on jobs are driving uncertainty.
  • With the February jobs report due March 6, market volatility may persist, creating opportunities to spot mispriced stocks.
  • Special Report: [Sponsorship-Ad-6-Format3]

Articles by Thomas Hughes

Thomas Hughes covered the most highly anticipated earnings report of the season: NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA). Hughes explained why the report was strong, what it means for the company’s balance sheet, and why institutional investors are likely to lead NVDA stock higher.

In a familiar story this earnings season, Tempus AI (NASDAQ: TEM) delivered a double beat — and the stock tumbled. Hughes explained why the technical outlook supports a bounce, one backed by institutional support.

Chipmakers look set for another strong year in 2026 as demand rises in several fast-growing sectors. Hughes highlighted three industrial chip stocks with “must-have” niches that support their future growth.

Articles by Sam Quirke

PayPal Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: PYPL) has been a brutal stock to hold over the past five years. Still, Sam Quirke wrote that despite concerns about competition and slowing growth, PayPal is trading at a historically low multiple, offering a compelling risk/reward profile.

On the other end of the valuation spectrum is Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA). Quirke explained what’s driving the company’s expanding multipleand why TSLA will continue to be a tug-of-war between true believers and perpetual skeptics.

Stocks adjacent to the housing sector remain under pressure. However, Quirke noted recent bullishness in Zillow Group (NASDAQ: ZS). It’s too early to call this the start of a long-term trend, but Quirke laid out both the fundamental and technical cases for ZS stock.

Articles by Chris Markoch

Opendoor Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: OPEN)surged after a mixed earnings report. Speculative investors may give the company the benefit of every doubt, but Chris Markoch argues the report showed Opendoor is still in the game — and now needs to show investors what “winning” actually looks like in the numbers.

Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) has been sliding for about four months. Markoch pointed to two indicators that popped up, suggesting larger investors may be starting to load up on this beaten-down tech name.

The rally in precious metals paused but has picked up again. Markoch wrote that we’re in the next phase of the gold and silver bull market, which should include mining stocks like the three names he offered to investors.

Articles by Ryan Hasson

The AI infrastructure trade remains a major push-pull for markets: either the buildout accelerates, or it doesn’t. Ryan Hasson wrote that the recent earnings report from Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) gave investors optimism that the company could be a winner with more upside ahead.

But the AI trade is broader than infrastructure; it’s an entire ecosystem. This week, Hasson highlighted five stocks at the center of the AI supply squeeze and why each merits a closer look.

Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL) has dominated headlines with its AI initiatives. Hasson noted the company’s “quiet investment” that may be Alphabet’s most significant growth driver in 2026 and beyond.

Articles by Leo Miller

At a time when many stocks look expensive, buybacks can carry extra weight. This week, Leo Miller highlighted three companies that announced new share buyback programs. As Miller noted, they span different sectors, reinforcing the idea that it’s a stock-picker’s market.

Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) is on deck for earnings next week. Miller previewed analyst expectations and highlighted the one metric investors should watch closely in Broadcom’s report.

Investors may also find out-of-the-box opportunities this year. Miller pointed to Hinge Health (NYSE: HNGE), a mid-cap healthcare company with a business model centered on reducing healthcare costs.

Articles by Nathan Reiff

D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) reported this week with headline numbers that weren’t great. Nathan Reiff emphasized that the story for D-Wave—and many quantum computing stocks—is about the long-term opportunity. With that in mind, Reiff explained why this report may fuel a new rally for QBTS stock.

As part of the sector rotation, beaten-down retail stocks could be worth a look. Reiff highlighted three retail names that analysts believe have strong catalysts that could drive bullish reversals in 2026.

Market volatility has boosted interest in the relative safety of exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Reiff highlighted three ETFs that have delivered strong performance over the last five years and explained why each may continue to perform well.

Articles by Dan Schmidt

Retail investors are often tempted to buy stocks that have fallen 50% or 60% — the so-called “falling knives.” As Dan Schmidt reminded readers, some falling knives aren’t worth catching. That’s the case with the three falling knife stocks he analyzed this week.

The AI panic trade has become a rolling wave that has hit financial stocks. Short-term reactions can create long-term opportunities, and Schmidt identified three financial stocks that are now on sale.

Articles by Jeffrey Neal Johnson

Sam Quirke gave investors one reason to look at PayPal this week. Jeffrey Neal Johnson offered another: the rumor that Stripe is in preliminary talks to buy the beaten-down fintech. Johnson broke down the math behind the potential move and why other buyers might take a closer look at PayPal.

Johnson also wrote about news that SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) launched a real-world AI agent. He explained why this could be the breakthrough investors have been waiting for to set SOUN apart from other AI stocks.

Johnson also examined the recent pullback in Archer Aviation Inc. (NYSE: ACHR). It’s a classic battle between institutions buying and short sellers. Johnson explained what investors should watch for when Archer reports earnings next week.

Articles by Jordan Chussler

The tech bull market may be tiring, but it’s not done yet. Jordan Chussler explained why investors should look for value in quality tech stocks that are on sale, including two Mag 7 names that are down sharply to start the year.

Lawsuits are generally bearish, and the suit filed by Novo Nordisk (NYSE: NVO) has been particularly damaging for Hims & Hers Health (NYSE: HIMS). But investors often sell first and ask questions later. Chussler argued HIMS’s setup could present an opportunity for risk-tolerant investors.

Market volatility hasn’t cooled interest in upcoming initial public offerings (IPOs). This week, Chussler analyzed three of the most anticipated names that investors should watch as IPO rumors intensify.

Thank you for subscribing to Insider Trades Daily, which covers the most recent insider buying and selling activity from Wall Street CEO’s, CFO’s, COO’s and other insiders.

This email message is a paid sponsorship from The Early Bird, a third-party advertiser of InsiderTrades.com and MarketBeat. 

If you need assistance with your subscription, feel free to contact MarketBeat’s U.S. based support team at contact@marketbeat.com.

If you no longer wish to receive email from InsiderTrades.com, you can unsubscribe.

© 2006-2026 MarketBeat Media, LLC. All rights protected.
345 N Reid Place #620, Sioux Falls, South Dakota 57103-7078. USA..

Featured Link: Affordable Shares With Surprising Upside Forecasts (Click to Opt-In)

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