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Company NameCORE16 Inc.
CEODavid Cho
Business Registration Number762-81-03235
Address83, Uisadang-daero, Yeongdeungpo-gu, Seoul, 07325, Republic of KOREA
Walmart
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셀스마트 재이
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4 months ago
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Weekly BoB3! Top 3 U.S. Stocks to Watch in the First Week of February
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META
Meta Platforms
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셀스마트 재이
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4 months ago
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Weekly BoB3! Top 3 U.S. Stocks to Watch in the First Week of February
Weekly BoB 3🏇👉Top 3 U.S. Stocks to Watch – First Week of FebruaryHello, this is CORE16.CORE16 actively responds to market trends by analyzing multiple data points, including 1) stock momentum, 2) trading volume fluctuations, and 3) financial stability, to curate the SellSmart Best of Breed (BoB) portfolio, which selects the most attractive stocks.SellSmart Best of Breed has demonstrated significantly higher returns compared to the S&P 500 index, the global stock market benchmark.Using 2020 as the baseline (100), the S&P 500 has risen to 172, while the SellSmart BoB portfolio has surged to 655, showcasing its superior performance.In our Weekly BoB 3 content, we highlight the top three U.S. stocks from the BoB portfolio that are the most attractive in terms of potential returns for the week.Walmart✅ Walmart operates as a technology-driven omnichannel retailer, managing retail and wholesale stores, clubs, e-commerce websites, and mobile applications across eight countries.✅ Despite concerns over consumer spending slowdowns, Walmart has demonstrated consistent revenue growth and a stable dividend policy, reinforcing its position as a defensive stock.✅ This marks its second consecutive week in the Weekly BoB3, delivering an approximate 3.9% gain over the past two weeks.JPMorgan Chase✅ As a leading financial holding company, JPMorgan Chase operates in four key segments: Consumer & Community Banking, Corporate & Investment Banking, Commercial Banking, and Asset & Wealth Management.✅ The firm has maintained over 10% revenue growth since 2021, backed by its broad customer base and strong positioning within the financial sector.✅ This is its fourth consecutive week in the Weekly BoB3, posting an approximate 5.7% gain over the past four weeks.Meta Platforms✅ Meta Platforms develops products and services that connect and engage users across mobile devices, personal computers, VR & MR headsets, AR, and wearables.✅ Among big tech companies, Meta has stood out with cost structure improvements and strong expectations around AI and metaverse investments.✅ Impressively, Meta has been featured in Weekly BoB3 for 57 consecutive weeks, achieving a cumulative gain of over 80% during this period.The Best of Breed strategy has delivered outstanding performance due to its rigorous stock selection process, continuous portfolio adjustments based on market conditions, and proactive risk management.However, no investment strategy guarantees future success based on past performance. It is essential to consider individual investment preferences and current market conditions when making decisions.At CORE16, we continuously monitor market volatility alongside data-driven quantitative analysis. Stay tuned for Weekly BoB3 updates as we provide insights into the most attractive stocks each week.
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박재훈투영인
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4 months ago
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Newell expands its divestiture plan and said it plans to sell Waddington for $2.3 billion(May 4, 2018)
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Newell Brands
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4 months ago
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Newell expands its divestiture plan and said it plans to sell Waddington for $2.3 billion(May 4, 2018)
Newell Brands said on Friday it would sell its plastics packaging unit Waddington Group for $2.3 billion, and added more brands to a divestiture plan aimed at streamlining its operations and cutting costs.The sale of Waddington, which makes disposable cutlery and drinkware, is the first major divestiture after activist investors Starboard Value and Carl Icahn placed their nominees on the company’s board last month.Newell’s shares were up 6 percent at $28.29 in early trading. The stock took a beating after the company, which sells everything from Sharpie pens to Crock-Pot cookware, first laid out plans in January to explore options for several of its businesses.As part of its agreement with Icahn, Newell said in March its divestitures would bring in about $10 billion, ratcheting it up from its previous estimate of $6 billion.Newell said on Friday it would add Jostens and Pure Fishing to the list of brands it plans to sell, with the expanded divestiture plan ultimately reducing its net sales and workforce by more than a third.The moves come as the company’s retailer customers such as Walmart and Target pare back inventories to cut costs as fewer shoppers visit brick-and-mortar stores.“All of these assets should command competitive multiples ... the sale of Waddington validates that belief,” Chief Executive Officer Michael Polk said during a conference call.Newell said its divestiture process was “well underway” and expects to complete all transactions by the end of 2019 and become a company with net sales of about $9.5 billion in 2020.“Investors never wanted Newell to own Waddington and likely underestimated the multiple a sale could bring,” Renaissance Macro Securities analyst April Scee said.The company also reported first-quarter sales that fell nearly 8 percent and missed analysts’ estimates, mainly due to divestitures in 2017 and the liquidation of Toys ‘R’ Us.But normalized earnings of 34 cents per share beat the average estimate of 26 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.“With continued organic weakness and conflict with Starboard ongoing, there’s enough noise in the stock ... However, intended divestitures improve focus or help odds of successful restructuring,” Scee said.The company also reaffirmed 2018 net sales and earnings forecast.
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Newell Brands
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4 months ago
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Dow closes down 260 points at session low as megacap tech stocks turn negative(May 18, 2021)
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133690
Mirae Asset TIGER NASDAQ100 ETF
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4 months ago
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Dow closes down 260 points at session low as megacap tech stocks turn negative(May 18, 2021)
Major U.S. stock indexes wiped out earlier gains and closed at their session lows on Tuesday as Big Tech stocks reversed lower, while data showing housing starts dropped sharply last month also weighed on sentiment.The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the session 267.13 points, or 0.8%, to 34,060.66. The S&P 500 fell 0.9% to 4,127.83. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite erased a 0.8% gain and slid 0.6% to 13,303.64 as Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Alphabet all rolled over and fell more than 1% on the dayHousing starts tumbled 9.5% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.569 million units last month, the Commerce Department said on Tuesday. Economists polled by Dow Jones had forecast starts falling to a rate of 1.7 million units in April.Investors also digested better-than-expected earnings from big retailers. Walmart shares jumped more than 2% after reporting strong grocery sales and e-commerce growth for the quarter. Macy’s posted a surprise profit and hiked its full-year outlook, but its shares erased earlier gains and dipped 0.4%.Home Depot reported earnings of $3.86 a share for the previous quarter, much higher than the $3.08 expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv. Net sales surged 32.7%, more than expected. The stock ended the session 1% lower.Growth-heavy stocks have remained under pressure in recent sessions as investors fret over whether a pop in inflation will entrench or blow over as the Federal Reserve expects. Inflation above the Fed’s 2% target for a sustained period could prompt the central bank to tighten monetary policy and dampen stocks that outperform the market when interest rates are low.″Growth may be peaking, but it’s not a bull-market breaker yet,” said Lauren Goodwin, economist and portfolio strategist at New York Life Investments. “Data can’t stay at peak levels forever, and tailwinds from fiscal stimulus are likely to wind down. This can complicate the environment for investors; history suggests that when the economy starts to slow, market returns tend to slow with it.”Investors blamed that angst for the S&P 500′s dismal performance last week, which saw the broad market index fall 4% through midweek amid heightened inflation fears. The broad equity benchmark eventually rebounded and ended the week down 1.4%. All three benchmarks posted their worst week since February 26.The Fed’s minutes from its last meeting, which will be released Wednesday, could offer some clues on policymakers’ thinking on inflation.Elsewhere, the first-quarter earnings season is wrapping up with more than 90% of the S&P 500 companies having reported their results. So far, 86% of S&P 500 companies have reported a positive EPS surprise, which would mark the highest percentage of positive earnings surprises since 2008 when FactSet began tracking this metric.
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133690
Mirae Asset TIGER NASDAQ100 ETF
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박재훈투영인
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4 months ago
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Target just went from great to bad to ugly. But the worst may be over(Aug 20, 2022)
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Target
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4 months ago
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Target just went from great to bad to ugly. But the worst may be over(Aug 20, 2022)
Target just demonstrated how quickly things can change in the world of retail, posting a terrible quarter after nearly two years of soaring profits and record revenue growth. But the big box retailer is promising things will change in the other direction just as fast.Target was widely seen as one of the winners of the pandemic, gaining new customers as shoppers not wanting to go into brick-and-mortar stores were drawn to its growing curbside pickup and home delivery.But after a disappointing fiscal first quarter when profits fell 40%, Target just had an even worse second quarter. Profits plunged 90% compared to a year earlier.Inflation-weary shoppers shifted to buying essentials such as food and gas rather than “nonessential” general merchandise that is central to Target’s sales and profits. It was a stark contrast to larger rival Walmart (WMT), which posted only a narrow drop in profits for the quarter.But many analysts believe Target is still in good position going forward, that it’s not at risk of joining some of the other pandemic winners who are now struggling, like online retailer Wayfair (W). Friday it announced it had to cut 5% of the staff due to expanding too fast during the good times.Target’s profit plunge came from the deep discounts it had to offer on much of its general merchandise, such as clothing, electronics and home goods. The hit to earnings from such deep discounting was unavoidable. But company executives insist it was the right choice.“Consider the alternative: we could have held on to excess inventory and attempted to deal with it slowly, over multiple quarters or even years. While that might have reduced the near-term financial impact, it would have held back our business over time,” said CEO Brian Cornell to investors. “The vast majority of the financial impact of these inventory actions is now behind us.” He predicts a meaningful improvement in operating margin rates in the fall season.Many analysts agree that Target did the right thing taking the hit. Several say the sudden shift in consumer buying habits was not the fault of miscalculation by management.“All last year the supply chain was very, very tight. Stores were out of stock of many items. They were ordering for a level of demand that was very reasonable,” said Bobby Griffin, retail analyst at Raymond James. “Then there was a very fast change in consumer behavior.”Discretionary purchases being made by consumers shifted away from goods to things like travel, Griffin said.Other experts say that Target management wasn’t quite blameless for being caught with too much of the wrong inventory.“My sense is that this [problem at Target] was 70% about consumer behavior and 30% miscalculation related to inventory,” said Eric Schiffer, chief investment officer of Los Angeles-based private equity firm, The Patriarch Organization.There is some hope for all retailers that they could benefit from the large, steady decline in gas prices over the last two months.The national average price of gasoline has dropped $1.11, or 22% to $3.91 since hitting a record of $5.02 on June 14. It has fallen every day since. That should save households $100 a month on average. And wholesale gasoline futures point to even lower gas prices ahead in the coming weeks and months.Target was always going to have more problems with a sudden shift in consumer spending than Walmart. Walmart has more than half of its sales from grocery while Target is closer to 20% said Owen Chen, retail analyst at Cowen. Walmart also had to offer sales on its nonessential general merchandise in the quarter.And Walmart has always competed more on low prices, an advantage at a time that even middle and higher income shoppers are concerned about higher prices. Walmart executives reported it saw more business from those upper income households in the most recent quarter, a statement that cheered its investors.But Chen said the numbers indicate that they did not get those higher income shoppers from Target’s traditional customers.“I think that Target’s [store] traffic numbers show it did a good job holding onto their customers,” he said. The number of customers making purchases at Target was up 2.7% compared to a year ago in the just-completed quarter. And that’s more than a 20% increase since the same period of 2019, ahead of the pandemic.Target shares have underperformed some of its rivals, falling 28% so far this year, compared to only a 5% decline at Walmart. Schiffer said he wouldn’t be surprised to see the slide in Target shares continue, as he believes they are overvalued by as much as 30%. But he doesn’t think that means Target is badly positioned for the future.“I would stay the course,” he said. “The pace of growth during the pandemic was never going to be sustainable. They’ll still grow, just not as fast.”
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Target
Economy & Strategy
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셀스마트 판다
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4 months ago
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Indicators Predicting a U.S. Recession (Mar 14, 2025)
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셀스마트 판다
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4 months ago
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Indicators Predicting a U.S. Recession (Mar 14, 2025)
Discussions of a potential recession are circulating everywhere, fueled by tariffs, government job cuts, budget reductions, and immigration restrictions. Any one of these factors alone could temporarily burden the economy, but together, they create simultaneous pressures across multiple sectors, potentially causing severe economic damage. White House officials have warned that, as Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated, the economy may require a "detox period." At the same time, Donald Trump’s promised deregulation and large-scale tax cuts are being positively received by many businesses, as they could stimulate investment and hiring.Key economic data has yet to fully reflect the effects of Trump’s presidency. The Wall Street Journal is tracking various indicators to determine whether the U.S. can avoid a recession or is heading toward one. Several notable signs focus on businesses, consumers, and workers.Businesses Are No Longer Talking About a 'Soft Landing'The phrase “soft landing” has significantly decreased in corporate discussions. During the last three months of 2024, the term was mentioned 61 times in U.S. corporate earnings calls, but since early this year, it has appeared only 7 times.While executives avoid publicly criticizing Trump’s policies, a March CEO survey showed that business confidence for the next 12 months had fallen to its lowest level since November 2012.Instead, tariffs have become a major topic. Mentions of tariffs in S&P 1500 earnings calls surged from 49 times in Q1 2024 to 683 times in Q1 2025.The Small Business Optimism Index declined in February, though it remains above average. However, the Uncertainty Index has reached its second-highest level in history, indicating that businesses find it increasingly difficult to predict policy changes.Consumers Across All Income Levels Are Reducing SpendingDue to economic concerns, consumers are cutting back on spending in all categories.According to a University of Michigan survey, the Consumer Sentiment Index has fallen to its lowest level since November 2022, showing a consistent decline across all age groups, education levels, incomes, political affiliations, and geographic regions.Consumers are making fewer impulse purchases at gas stations, while Walmart shoppers increasingly opt for smaller package sizes toward the end of the month.Sales of discount alcoholic beverages are rising, while luxury goods purchases are declining.Airfare sales are slowing, particularly in same-day bookings, as businesses scale back travel budgets and domestic leisure travelers delay trips due to higher costs.Small businesses in immigrant communities report a decline in consumer spending, partly due to fear of mass deportations under Trump’s administration. Hispanic consumer foot traffic has also fallen, impacting major retailers.Workers Are Feeling Increasingly UncertainThe labor market remains strong, with the February unemployment rate at 4.1%, but job cuts and corporate cost-cutting are raising concerns among workers.A New York Fed survey found that concern over rising unemployment jumped from 34% in January to 39.4% in February.A Glassdoor survey reported that employee optimism about their employers has dropped to its lowest level since 2016.In February, U.S. companies announced 172,017 layoffs, the highest level since July 2020. While government job cuts played a role, private-sector layoffs more than doubled.Unemployment Insurance Claims May Be the Best Early IndicatorWhile overall jobless claims remain low, they have surged in Washington, D.C., Virginia, and Maryland, rising 49% year-over-year.Federal employee jobless claims are also increasing as government budget cuts impact contractors reliant on public sector spending.Companies linked to U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and other federal programs face increasing financial strain due to funding reductions.[Compliance Note]All posts by Sellsmart are for informational purposes only. Final investment decisions should be made with careful judgment and at the investor’s own risk.The content of this post may be inaccurate, and any profits or losses resulting from trades are solely the responsibility of the investor.Core16 may hold positions in the stocks mentioned in this post and may buy or sell them at any time.
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