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Top Ten Trader
Discover the Market’s Strongest Stocks

Cabot Top Ten Trader Issue: May 9, 2022

Today was another day of bloodletting, with the major indexes and many former leaders continuing to melt down. Short-term, there’s little doubt things are getting emotional—thus, it’s certainly possible we’re close to a low point, but of course you could have said that a few days ago as well. As always, you shouldn’t fight the tape—with most things cratering, you should be holding much more cash than stocks, though we’re still not opposed to a nibble here or there. When this maelstrom is over, there are going to be some great buying opportunities, but right now, you should remain defensive. Our Market Monitor is down to a level 2.

This week’s list is heavy on commodity names, which did get hit today but in general remain in uptrends. Our Top Pick is a refining name that has recently shown accelerating strength.

Cabot Top Ten Trader Issue: May 9, 2022

Don’t Fight the Tape (but Keep Your Eyes Open)

Gauge2

Today was another day of bloodletting, with the major indexes gapping lower at the open, with many former leaders continuing to melt down and with even some resilient areas of the market (like energy stocks) taking good-sized hits. Short-term, there’s little doubt things are getting emotional—whether it’s forced or panic selling, we’re seeing stocks implode a few percent at a clip, while many internal metrics (new highs vs new lows, etc.) are at levels rarely seen. Thus, it’s certainly possible we’re close to a low point, but of course you could have said that a few days ago as well. As always, you shouldn’t fight the tape—with most things in meltdown mode, you should be holding much more cash than stocks, though keeping your eyes open for a turn makes sense; we’re still not opposed to a nibble here or there in strong stocks and sectors as they pull in to support. When this maelstrom is over, there are going to be some great buying opportunities, but right now, you should remain defensive. Our Market Monitor is down to a level 2.

This week’s list is heavy on commodity names, which did get hit today but in general remain in uptrends. Our Top Pick is Delek (DK), part of the refining group that’s recently turned strong, and the latest weakness looks normal.

Stock NamePriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
Boot Barn (BOOT)8784-8874-76
Chart Industries (GTLS)162158-163140-143
Chesapeake Energy (CHK)8482.5-85.573-75
CH Robinson (CHRW)108105-10897-99
Consol Energy (CEIX)4844-46.538.5-40.5
Delek (DK) ★ TOP PICK ★2423-2520.5-21.5
Livent (LTHM)2423.5-2520-21
Louisiana Pacific (LPX)7471-7465-67
New Fortress Energy (NFE)4139-4134-35
The Chemours Co. (CC)3937-3933-34

Stock 1

Boot Barn (BOOT)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
8784-8874-76

Why the Strength

Boot Barn has always had a very solid niche story, selling country-style hats, boots, clothes and blue-collar workwear (all of which are seeing growing demand over time and usually see few price discounts), and with the pandemic (mostly) in the rear-view mirror and with energy-related firms doing well, business has enjoyed an excellent rebound in recent quarters. But this looks like more than just a big-picture turnaround play—Boot Barn’s management has put a lot of time and money into expanding and modernizing its offerings (some dresses, ball caps, hiking boots, knit shirts, etc.) and focused on exclusive brands, with the result being that the firm has expanded its appeal beyond the traditional western customer; indeed, apparel and western boots for women were among the firm’s strongest categories in the latest quarter. Throw in a solid cookie-cutter aspect here (store growth of around 10% annually; stores opened since March 2020 have paid back the initial investment in just one year!) and the overall results have been eye-opening: In the quarter ended December, sales rose 71% from two years ago (pre-pandemic quarter), with same-store sales up 61% from that period and earnings more than doubling. Most expect growth to slow, with fiscal 2023 (which started April 1 of this year) earnings slipping 10% after last year’s moonshot, but we think there’s a chance that will prove very conservative. The facts will be revealed tomorrow night (May 10), when fiscal Q4 results will be released.

Technical Analysis

BOOT had an unbelievable run not just from its pandemic lows but all through last year, with the 10-week line offering support; shares finally blew off on the upside in November, which along with the sour market, led to a 45% retreat by February. However, the stock rallied nicely for a month after that, and it’s been resilient since, setting up a reasonable consolidation heading into earnings. If you want to roll the dice, you could nibble ahead of tomorrow night’s report, though we prefer to just watch it and see what earnings brings.

Market Cap$2.79BEPS $ Annual (Mar)
Forward P/E16FY 20201.55
Current P/E18FY 20211.93
Annual Revenue$1.36BFY 2022e6.14
Profit Margin12.4%FY 2023e5.53

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr48661%2.23125%
One qtr ago31369%1.22510%
Two qtrs ago306107%1.26N/A
Three qtrs ago25937%0.75317%


Weekly Chart
BOOT_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
BOOT_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 2

Chart Industries (GTLS)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
162158-163140-143

Why the Strength

Chart is a leading maker of equipment used in the clean energy and industrial gas markets, and its products are used in every phase of the liquid gas supply chain. Supply issues in the oil market due to the Russia/Ukraine war gave Chart’s liquified natural gas (LNG) operations and energy solutions a major boost in Q1, as LNG demand has dramatically increased in recent months. Revenue of $354 million set a new first-quarter record and was 23% higher than a year ago, while per-share earnings of 65 cents beat expectations by 10 cents. Q1 also included Chart’s sixth straight quarter of record backlog (amounting to $1.5 billion) and its highest ever quarter of total orders—up and eye-popping 53%. It wasn’t just LNG products that were in high demand, however, as the firm’s cryo tank solutions, specialty products and heat transfer systems saw their backlog rise 49%, 55% and 77%, respectively. Indeed, Chart isn’t hanging its hat on LNG alone; the company completed a slew of acquisitions in 2020 and 2021 that will provide more exposure to the burgeoning clean energy business. These include Sustainable Energy Solutions, which boasts a post-combustion technology that reduces carbon emissions from coal-powered power plants by up to 99%, and at a lower cost than other carbon capture systems. Chart also has a stake in sustainable chemical technology outfit Transform Materials, which converts natural gas into acetylene and hydrogen via a net carbon-negative process. The big picture looks very bullish—not only does the top brass see free cash flow of $5.50 this year, but at last week’s Investor Day, it revealed that it sees revenues growing 17%-plus annually and earnings 25%-plus annually for the next three years even as debt is paid off.

Technical Analysis

GTLS spent the first seven months of last year locked in a holding pattern between 120 and 165, and while it did briefly break higher, the stock eventually hit a ceiling at 200 in September—and soon got caught up in the market’s undertow, falling about 45% by January. However, GTLS actually tightened up at that point and recovered most of the lost ground by the end of March, with the stock gyrating in the past few weeks. We’d like to see it settle down a bit, but if you want in, nibbling on this dip could work.

Market Cap$6.17BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E33FY 20202.41
Current P/E68FY 20212.72
Annual Revenue$1.38BFY 2022e5.17
Profit Margin9.6%FY 2023e8.02

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr35423%0.65-12%
One qtr ago37921%0.73-20%
Two qtrs ago32820%0.49-22%
Three qtrs ago32211%0.7669%


Weekly Chart
GTLS_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
GTLS_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 3

Chesapeake Energy (CHK)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
8482.5-85.573-75

Why the Strength

After a spate of quarterly reports, it’s clear that the fundamental energy story is very much intact, and while there are more than a few attractive oil plays, the best opportunities may be in natural gas—that area had a longer, deeper dry spell, leading to far more cost and capacity cuts, and the sea change in Europe and acceptability of natural gas as carbon-friendly (at least compared to coal) could mean a new era of higher prices has just begun. Chesapeake is a gas-heavy player in the Marcellus (about 45% of production this year), Haynesville (~40%) and Eagle Ford (15%-ish), and it’s following the new playbook of mostly constrained CapEx, though it is upping output in certain places (Haynesville up 10% this year). Even so, the net result is gigantic cash flows: Even with a bunch of hedges (71% of gas and 58% of oil is hedged for the remainder of the year), the firm saw free cash flow come in around $4.50 per share in Q1, which (between its base 50 cent quarterly dividend and a variable payout) led to a quarterly $2.34 per share dividend. And there should be plenty more where that came from—even in mid February, when gas prices were in the $4.70 range, Chesapeake anticipated paying out around $8.40 per share in dividends this year, and that figure could lift to $10 or more based on current strip prices. There’s also a good-sized buyback program ($1 billion through year-end 2023) that management said has “a good chance of being exhausted early,” while the top brass also said reducing debt (which is already well under 1x cash flow) isn’t a huge priority at this point. It’s a good story that, importantly, should remain buoyant even if energy prices correct further.

Technical Analysis

Despite having a cash flow profile as solid as any in its group, CHK has been a bit herky-jerky since breaking out in February: There was an excellent run on big volume on the initial breakout, followed by a sharp dip (89 to 73), and the next ramp to new highs also saw a good-sized pothole (97 to 80). But the 50-day line offered support last week and shares are still above their recent lows even after today’s market-induced plunge. We’re OK taking a swing at CHK here, but keep it small and use a loose leash.

Market Cap$11.0BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E8FY 202019.34
Current P/E10FY 202133.47
Annual Revenue$5.60BFY 2022e11.89
Profit Margin46.6%FY 2023e13.18

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr935-18%3.09-89%
One qtr ago3086147%2.39-79%
Two qtrs ago890-7%2.38-53%
Three qtrs ago69337%1.64-93%


Weekly Chart
CHK_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
CHK_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 4

CH Robinson (CHRW)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
108105-10897-99

Why the Strength

Supply chain snafus and still-strong consumer demand means logistics efforts are more important to the flow of trade than they normally are. CH Robinson is one of the world’s largest global logistics platforms, that is, it’s a broker between shippers and truckers and their customers, serving more than 100,000 clients who should generate some $25.7 billion in revenue this year. CH Robinson has managed the double-edged sword of supply chain troubles well. Typically, customers book shipping capacity under contracts (usually a year long) through the company. Robinson has a clause that allows it to reprice rates partially in response to the market, so the company has been able to hike prices on the fuel costs of its contracted carriers (half its business is in North American trucking) while maintaining favorable pricing power with transportation customers because of its heft. In Q1, reported April 27, the company bested consensus earnings by 50 cents, at $2.05 a share on a revenue surge of 42%, to $6.8 billion, also handily over Wall Street’s expectations. Robinson has built a software system that allows it to recognize changes in rates and pass along the adjustments to customers, as well as book more profitable options, more quickly. Its Navisphere Carrier platform provides customers with real-time rates and the ability to book capacity themselves, without speaking to a Robinson agent; fully automated business more than doubled last year to $831 million of bookings. Investors are also thinking bullishly after Ancora, an activist fund that specializes in transportation companies, wrangled two seats on the board in February. That implies moves toward creating greater shareholder value should be ahead. In the meantime, business is good and the stock isn’t very pricey (15x earnings, 2.1% dividend).

Technical Analysis

CHRW peaked near the start of 2021 and hasn’t done anything since, suffering through a bunch of 20%-ish corrections during that time. But (a) the stock has perked up since early February and actually held its gains despite a meltdown in the market and transport stocks, and (b) shares did react well to the Q1 report, though of course CHRW is still having trouble at its prior highs near 112. It’s fine to keep an eye on, and if you want in, you could start a position of CHRW here or on dips.

Market Cap$13.8BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E15FY 20203.72
Current P/E15FY 20216.31
Annual Revenue$25.1BFY 2022e7.33
Profit Margin3.5%FY 2023e6.21

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr6.8242%2.0560%
One qtr ago6.543%1.7461%
Two qtrs ago6.2648%1.8585%
Three qtrs ago5.5353%1.4436%


Weekly Chart
CHRW_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
CHRW_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 5

Consol Energy (CEIX)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
4844-46.538.5-40.5

Why the Strength

While the developed world is trying to become less dependent on fossil fuels like coal, the war in Ukraine has put that mineral back in the spotlight due to elevated natural gas costs. Consol is a Pennsylvania-based producer and exporter of high-BTU bituminous thermal and metallurgical coal, and as one of the leading energy companies in the U.S., it’s in an excellent position to benefit from the renewed coal boom. Coal sales in Q1 increased 5% from a year ago, to $359 million, and while per-share earnings missed expectations, investors see huge earnings ahead. Coal shipments out of the firm’s Pennsylvania Mining Complex amounted to 6.5 million tons, down 6% from a year ago but up 16% from the prior quarter. Throughput volumes at the company’s marine terminal in Q1 were down 12% from last year, but also up 16% sequentially, resulting in record revenue for the segment. But what really captured Wall Street’s attention was the company’s reported free cash flow of $118 million (about $3.30 per share!), which increased 61% from a year ago and soared a whopping 372% from Q4 (a reason for the strength). Management expects the supply tightness that has characterized the coal market since early 2021 to continue due to the ongoing Ukraine/Russia war, and its contracted position for 2023 has subsequently improved to over 16 million tons—a substantial improvement from a year ago. The company also updated the progress of its Itmann, West Virginia mine, which remains on track to produce around half a million tons of coal in the second half of 2022. Going forward, the numbers look gigantic through at least next year, with earnings of $9 and $18 per share this year and next.

Technical Analysis

CEIX had a huge post-vaccine rally that took the stock to 35 in October, when a deep correction unfolded; shares were nearly cut in half through January and it was thought that the stock was done for. But the European war gave CEIX a new lease on life, with cash flow and earnings estimates going through the roof, pushing shares sharply higher (albeit with tons of short-term volatility). The 25-day line has contained the advance, dips of another couple of points would be tempting.

Market Cap$1.86BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E6FY 2020-0.37
Current P/EN/AFY 20210.96
Annual Revenue$1.28BFY 2022e8.97
Profit Margin24.4%FY 2023e17.85

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr3595%-0.13N/A
One qtr ago48148%3.30573%
Two qtrs ago149-39%-3.30N/A
Three qtrs ago28777%0.12N/A


Weekly Chart
CEIX_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
CEIX_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 6

Delek (DK) ★ Top Pick

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
2423-2520.5-21.5

Why the Strength

Improving demand and margins for downstream companies that refine crude oil into usable products like fuels, asphalt and lubricants has prompted a major ratings firm to predict “impressive” revenue and cash flow growth for the group this year. Delek is a diversified downstream energy company with assets in petroleum transportation and storage, asphalt, renewable fuels and even convenience stores. But refining is Delek’s specialty, as the firm is able to process 302,000 barrels per day of crude from its four U.S. refineries; refining tends to be less impacted by falling oil prices and more impacted by the spread between input costs (crude oil) and output prices (for their end product). Dramatic improvement in the refining landscape has prompted a number of Wall Street institutions to boost their outlook for margins in 2022, while Delek has expressed optimism in what it calls a “robust macro environment.” The company just released Q1 results that blew estimates out of the water (a reason for the strength), including revenue of nearly $4.5 billion that was up 86% from a year ago and EPS of 58 cents that beat expectations by 69 cents. The strong industry backdrop gave Delek the confidence to repurchase around 5% of its stock in March (!), with plans to further enhance the balance sheet and return cash to shareholders throughout the year. Further, management said it has no major planned CapEx this year, which is music to investors’ ears. The company also updated its planned acquisition of midstream company 3Bear Energy, which Delek said would allow it to achieve midstream EBITDA of around $380 million per year while increasing its reach within the resource-rich Permian Basin. Analysts see the good times continuing and predict 60% sales growth in Q2. We like it.

Technical Analysis

DK hit a major peak in mid-2018 at 60 and spent the next couple of years tumbling before reaching a nadir at 10 in October 2020. A powerful rally followed over the next four months, but this was terminated at 27 last February. DK needed most of 2021 to consolidate and build a deep base for the next phase of its bull run that finally blossomed in March and which resulted in shares hitting their highest level since 2020 last week. The dip of the past couple of days has been sharp but normal, so if you want in, you could nibble here or (preferably) on further retrenchment.

Market Cap$2.06BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E13FY 2020-7.43
Current P/EN/AFY 2021-3.05
Annual Revenue$12.7BFY 2022e2.09
Profit Margin1.0%FY 2023e1.34

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr4.4686%0.58N/A
One qtr ago3.1165%-0.61N/A
Two qtrs ago2.9643%0.13N/A
Three qtrs ago2.1943%-0.88N/A


Weekly Chart
DK_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
DK_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 7

Livent (LTHM)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
2423.5-2520-21

Why the Strength

Electric vehicle (EV) sales have likely begun a years-long boom, with industry sales expected to rise to more than 40% of annual new car sales by the end of the decade, up from 4% last year. Even if that proves too optimistic, there’s no question there’s big growth ahead, and that means lithium, the primary metal used in EV batteries, will be in increasing demand—both from greater sales but also because EVs are using more lithium per battery to provide greater range, to about 22 pounds a car now vs. nine pounds a decade ago. Livent is a pure-play lithium producer, putting the company at the heart of the EV supply chain, so it should be poised to benefit. An American company spun off from FMC in 2018, Livent has its lithium brine production facilities in Quebec and Argentina. Not all lithium is the same, with lithium hydroxide preferred for use in high-end EV batteries and other energy storage applications because of chemical properties that allow for improved battery performance and life with a lower operating temperature. Livent got about half its $420 million 2021 revenue from lithium hydroxide, with another 20% of sales coming from Lithium carbonate and lithium chloride, used for higher grade laptop batteries and EV chargers. The balance of revenue come from related specialty metals, primarily butyllithium, which feeds into many unique applications, like military alloys and industrial polymers. In Q1, reported last week, Livent soundly beat expectations, with EPS of 21 cents, seven cents better than consensus, on sales of $144 million. Basically, lithium prices are rising and Livent is seeing the results flow to its bottom line. For the year, management expects sales to be $755 to $835 million and adjusted EBITDA as high as $350 million, nearly four times prior guidance.

Technical Analysis

LTHM broke out of a nice base last August, but the rally ran into a wall when growth stocks topped in mid November, leading to a sharp 40%-ish decline by late January. But that was effectively the low, with retests in March and late April finding support in the 20 to 21 range, and then last week’s earnings report brought a huge gap up. LTHM remains volatile and took a hit today, but it’s still in decent position; you could take a small swing at it here, or just keep it on your watch list.

Market Cap$4.55BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E30FY 2020-0.04
Current P/E78FY 20210.18
Annual Revenue$473MFY 2022e0.94
Profit Margin12.7%FY 2023e1.21

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr14456%0.21950%
One qtr ago12350%0.08N/A
Two qtrs ago10443%0.03N/A
Three qtrs ago10257%0.04N/A


Weekly Chart
LTHM_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
LTHM_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 8

Louisiana Pacific (LPX)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
7471-7465-67

Why the Strength

Even with mortgage rates on the rise, strong demand from first-time Millennial home buyers, coupled with the work-from-home trend, is expected to keep building product sales high this year. Louisiana-Pacific (LP) specializes in producing high-quality siding and engineered wood products, including oriented strand board (OSB)—a plywood substitute made from compressed wood wafers that’s around half the coast of traditional boards. However, exterior wood siding is where the firm sees its strongest prospects, and LP’s siding solutions revenue grew more than twice the 13% increase in U.S. single-family housing starts last year. To that end, LP is ramping up capacity in this segment, recently opening up a new siding mill in Houlton, Maine, with plans to increase siding capacity at its Sagola, Michigan plant. All in all, siding revenue broke a record in 2021 by surpassing $1 billion in annual sales, and the firm believes it can grow that business by 15% in 2022. Last week, LP announced sales and earnings beats (a reason for the strength), featuring revenue of $1.3 billion that increased 31%, adjusted EBITDA that rose 38% to its second-highest quarterly level and per-share earnings of $5.08 that crushed estimates by 45 cents. The solid results were led by OSB sales of $744 million (up 38%) and a 17% increase in siding solutions sales. Additionally, the company authorized the buyback of $600 million of its shares, bringing the total repurchase authorization to $814 million. While management expects OSB revenue in Q2 to be 7% lower sequentially, it sees siding sales jumping 20% in both Q2 and for the full year based on record demand for its SmartSide products. A modest dividend (1.2%) helps the cause.

Technical Analysis

After peaking around 75 a year ago, LPX entered what ended up being a year-long consolidation, with a tedious pullback last summer and, after retesting its old high, a vicious plunge into early April. But now LPX may want to get moving: The stock has been up four weeks in a row (market has been down all four weeks), including a strong-volume move last week. If you want to nibble here or on dips, you can.

Market Cap$6.36BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E5FY 20204.31
Current P/E5FY 202113.97
Annual Revenue$4.88BFY 2022e14.88
Profit Margin32.8%FY 2023e7.69

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr1.3431%5.0869%
One qtr ago0.9915%2.2411%
Two qtrs ago1.2253%3.87148%
Three qtrs ago1.33142%4.74999%


Weekly Chart
LPX_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
LPX_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 9

New Fortress Energy (NFE)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
4139-4134-35

Why the Strength

New Fortress Energy isn’t a well-known name, but it quacks like a potential new leader given the world’s new realities in the energy sector. The firm isn’t pulling oil or gas out of the ground, but instead looks like one of the leading infrastructure plays, especially when it comes to liquified natural gas: New Fortress has spent a few years building out its assets (and making acquisitions, such as that of Golar LNG partners) that’s resulted in a global network of terminals, power plants and more. There are two big attractions now: The first are FSRUs (which “re-gassify” the slushy LNG that ships carry across oceans before putting it in pipelines), which were in growing demand anyway, and now the Russia/Ukraine war is likely to drastically boost gas demand from non-Russian sources. New Energy has seven FSRUs now, with two other ships that can be converted, making up nearly 20% of the global fleet; many are on contract, but two are available, with contract rates having doubled from a year ago (likely $50 million of annual earnings from each ship deployed at today’s rates). Then there’s what management calls “Fast LNG,” where New Fortress effectively constructs an offshore LNG terminal using new techniques that make it cheaper and (of course) faster to build; it’s filed to bring on new capacity off the coast of Louisiana, with applications for some offshore Texas to follow suit. All told, if/when approved, these will be some of the only major LNG capacity additions in the U.S. for the next few years. Long story short, the company is becoming a fully integrated gas infrastructure outfit, and there are plenty of near-term catalysts that should keep sales and earnings (see tables below) kiting higher. It’s an intriguing new story.

Technical Analysis

NFE had a big post-pandemic rally, but after topping early last year, shares went back in the soup, losing nearly two-thirds of their value into the late-January market low point. However, NFE changed character after the Russian invasion, going bananas in March before it finally hit a wall in early April. The month-long rest found support at the 10-week line, and last week’s earnings report brought in some buyers. A small buy on today’s dip is fine as long as you use a stop under the 50-day line.

Market Cap$9.30BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E21FY 2020-1.71
Current P/E26FY 20210.47
Annual Revenue$1.68BFY 2022e2.17
Profit Margin37.8%FY 2023e4.10

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr505247%1.13N/A
One qtr ago649345%0.72999%
Two qtrs ago305123%-0.05N/A
Three qtrs ago224137%-0.03N/A


Weekly Chart
NFE_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
NFE_D_CTTT_20220509

Stock 10

The Chemours Co. (CC)

PriceBuy RangeLoss Limit
3937-3933-34

Why the Strength

The U.S. chemical industry is firing on all cylinders, thanks to strong domestic and export order growth, increased pricing power and restricted chemical supplies from shutdown-impacted China. Chemours, a DuPont spin-off, is one of the bigger names in the sector and provides a range of chemical solutions including titanium technologies and fluoropolymers (used in 5G applications), along with ingredients found in plastics and coatings, mining and oil refining operations and general industrial manufacturing. The company reported total volume growth of 4% and a 25% improvement in pricing as driving factors behind its head-turning Q1 report. Revenue of nearly $1.8 billion rose 23% from a year ago and beat expectations by 10%, while EBITDA soared 50% and per-share earnings came in at $1.46, doubling from a year ago and topping estimates by 54 cents. By segment, titanium technologies (mainly serving the automotive and aerospace industries and a making up over half of the firm’s sales) saw revenue increase 28% to nearly $1 billion in Q1, despite difficulties obtaining titanium ore, with volume rising 6% and pricing up 24%. Thermal and specialized solutions sales grew 40%, also thanks to strong pricing. Advanced performance materials sales, meanwhile, grew 16%. Based on the stellar results, management guided for continued growth and increased adjusted EBITDA guidance for the full year, targeting a mid-range projection of $1.53 billion, 18% above prior guidance, with free cash flow expected to be greater than $550 million (up 10%). Chemours also completed $146 million in share buybacks in Q1 and approved a new repurchase authorization of $750 million. (There’s a 2.5% yielding dividend, too.) Wall Street sees the good times continuing both this year and next.

Technical Analysis

After reaching a peak around 39 last June, CC fell along with other chemical names for the next three months before bottoming in September at 27. The stock reversed from there and zig-zagged its way back up to 36 by January, but collapsed again with the market when the calendar flipped, eventually nosediving to 23. The recovery from there has been fantastic, first with a rally back to 36, then after a quick shakeout, the big earnings-induced breakout last week. We like the look of it, but if you want in, aim for dips in this environment.

Market Cap$6.41BEPS $ Annual (Dec)
Forward P/E8FY 20201.98
Current P/E8FY 20214.00
Annual Revenue$6.68BFY 2022e5.08
Profit Margin12.4%FY 2023e5.82

Qtrly RevQtrly Rev GrowthQtrly EPSQtrly EPS Growth
($M)(vs. yr-ago-qtr)($)(vs.yr-ago-qtr)
Latest qtr1.7623%1.46106%
One qtr ago1.5818%0.8133%
Two qtrs ago1.6836%1.27170%
Three qtrs ago1.6651%1.20567%


Weekly Chart
CC_W_CTTT_20220509

Daily Chart
CC_D_CTTT_20220509

Previously Recommended Stocks

Below you’ll find Cabot Top Ten Trader recommended stocks. Those rated HOLD are stocks that traded within our suggested buy range within two weeks of appearing in the Top Ten and still look good; hold if you own them. Stocks rated WAIT have yet to dip into our suggested buy range … but can be bought if they do so within the next week.

Those stocks rated SELL should be sold if you own them; they will no longer be listed here. Finally, Stocks in the DROPPED category are those that failed to trade within our buy range within two weeks of our recommendation; that’s not a bad thing, we just never got the price we wanted. Please use this list to keep up with our latest thinking, and don’t hesitate to call or email us with any questions you may have. New recommendations each week are in bold.

DateStockSymbolTop PickOriginal Buy RangePrice as of 5/9/2022
HOLD
3/14/22Antero ResourcesAR23-24.533
5/2/22Arch ResourcesARCH157-163160
5/2/22AutonationAN116-119121
4/18/22Box IncBOX30-3129
5/2/22Bristol-MyersBMY73.5-75.576
4/25/22Cal-Maine FoodsCALM53-5550
4/25/22Comstock ResourcesCRK15.5-16.515
4/25/22Coterra EnergyCTRA27-28.529
5/2/22Delta Air LinesDAL41-4338
5/10/21Devon EnergyDVN25-26.562
5/2/22EQT CorpEQT36-3836
4/18/22Golar LNGGLNG23-2421
1/18/22HalliburtonHAL27-2834
4/18/22HalozymeHALO40.5-4237
3/21/22LantheusLNTH52-5455
1/10/22Marathon OilMRO17.0-17.824
5/2/22MasterCardMA350-360327
2/14/22Occidental PetroleumOXY38-4058
4/18/22Range ResourcesRRC31-3227
4/18/22SSR MiningSSRM23.5-24.520
5/2/22Suncor EnergySU34.5-3635
5/2/22Ulta BeautyULTA394-404381
4/25/22United AirlinesUAL49.5-51.543
4/25/22WestrockWRK48-49.551
WAIT
5/2/22Valero EnergyVLO108-112118
SELL RECOMMENDATIONS
2/28/22Allegheny TechATI23.5-2526
11/8/21Arista NetworksANET129-134102
4/11/22CNX ResourcesCNX20-2118
4/25/22CortevaCTVA55.5-57.553
3/21/22HiltonHLT147-151133
4/25/22LululemonLULU355-365292
4/18/22MarriottMAR177-182162
4/25/22MosaicMOS62-6555
3/21/22NutrienNTR97-10193
4/11/22Pacira PharmPCRX76-7759
3/7/22Palo Alto NetworksPANW525-540458
3/7/22Patterson-UTIPTEN14-1514
3/21/22Pure StoragePSTG33-3526
4/18/22Royalty PharmaRPRX43-44.537
DROPPED
None this week


The next Cabot Top Ten Trader issue will be published on May 16, 2022.

Analyst Bio

Mike Cintolo

A growth stock and market timing expert, Michael Cintolo is Chief Analyst of Cabot Growth Investor and Cabot Top Ten Trader. Since joining Cabot in 1999, Mike has uncovered exceptional growth stocks and helped to create new tools and rules for buying and selling stocks. Perhaps most notable is his development of the proprietary trend-following market timing system, Cabot Tides, which has helped Cabot place among the top handful of market-timing newsletters numerous times.