Stock Market Analysis Video
Introducing Lou Gagliardi, Energy Stock Expert
Necessity Breeds Attempt
In Case You Missed It
--
Editor's Note: Matt here. We're unveiling a new format to the
weekend edition this week. You'll notice the Stock Market Analysis
video now runs at the top of the issue instead of near the
bottom--we changed this so you get our market update first thing.
Happy reading!
In this week's Stock Market Video,
Cabot Market Letter
and
Cabot Top Ten Trader
Editor Mike Cintolo says cold water has been thrown on a market
rally since last week, but this is only a short-term correction.
The long-term trend is still up though. Featured stocks:
Rackspace (
RAX
), Salesforce.com (
CRM
), Apple (
AAPL
), Seagate Technology (
STX
), Ariba (
ARBA
), Sourcefire (FIRE), Verisign (VRSN)
and
Amazon.com (AMZN)
. Click below to watch!
--
And now the rest of the issue:
Lou Gagliardi is the newest member of the Cabot Investing
Newsletters team. The editor of
Cabot Global Energy Investor
, Lou has 20 years of experience in the oil and gas industries with
organizations as varied as Texaco and several independent research
firms on Wall Street. His picks as Cabot's energy-stock expert
range from large multinational oil companies to small start-ups in
alternative energy and everything in between.
Lou's bottom-up investment approach is wedded to an overarching
energy view grounded in a risk-management-first attitude. When
picking energy stocks, he prefers to look at the macroeconomic
perspective first and then individual stocks.
You'll be hearing from Lou again soon---his first issue of
Cabot Wealth Advisory
will appear on Monday, May 28--so I thought today I'd take the
opportunity to introduce you to him with an interview. And so let's
begin:
Matt Delman:
How did you become interested in energy stocks?
Lou Gagliardi:
I first became interested in energy stocks when I was working at
Texaco's corporate headquarters--near White Plains, N.Y.--in the
early 1990s. When I worked there, I performed economic
analysis on their capital projects from upstream (exploration) to
downstream (refining).
MD:
What makes energy stocks more attractive than industries such as
pharmaceuticals or retail?
LG:
Energy is a basic commodity -- the fuel that lights the world
around us. It drives the global economic (GDP) engine and without
efficient, cheap energy to drive our economies ... economic growth
and its consequent wealth effect would be severely
limited.
MD:
Do you think energy companies will be able to keep up with growing
worldwide demand?
LG:
Definitely not. The gap between global demand for energy and global
supplies of hydrocarbons has been widening over the last 30 years.
All the easily accessible hydrocarbons have been exploited already,
and it doesn't matter whether it's oil or natural gas. Everything
is getting more difficult to extract, as we're now forced to
extract oil and gas in more remote and difficult terrain than in
the past. This drives up the costs of extraction, which in turn
drives up the cost to the end consumer.
MD:
What's your favorite energy stock that institutional investors
haven't heard of yet?
LG:
I have favorites, but to be honest, institutional investors already
know about them. There are very few companies that "Energy
Institutional" investors do not know about. The limitation for them
is if the companies are small cap or emerging start-ups,
institutional investors are often precluded from investing in them
due to inadequate trading share float. Of course, that's not a
problem for individual investors like us.
MD:
Is there any area of the energy industry that you think doesn't get
the attention it deserves?
LG:
Yes, foreign national energy companies that are publicly traded.
These stocks can offer big opportunities for investors.
MD:
What do you do when you're not researching new energy stocks?
LG:
I roam the web for ideas--I like to track macroeconomic trends. To
unwind, I walk several miles a day and swim. It clears my mind and
helps me to re-think my premises and investment ideas.
MD:
Thank you for talking with me, Lou!
If you'd like to read about Lou's investment ideas and his
favorite energy stocks, I encourage you to
click here
to learn more about Cabot Global Energy Investor ... the
publication that can help you profit from growing energy
demand.

--
Here's this week's Contrary Opinion Button. Remember, you can
always view all of the buttons by
clicking here
.
Necessity Breeds Attempt
A mash-up of "Necessity is the mother of invention" and
"Familiarity breeds contempt," it means exactly what it says.
Whether it can make you a better investor is debatable.
--
In case you didn't get a chance to read all the issues of Cabot
Wealth Advisory this week and want to catch up on any investing and
stock tips you might have missed, there are links below to each
issue.
Cabot Wealth Advisory 5/7/12 -- Five Ways to Lose
Big Money Quickly, and How You Can Avoid Them
On Monday, Cabot Publisher Timothy Lutts wrote about five ways
that you can lose a lot of money in the stock market very quickly,
while also offering up some methods of avoiding those very
pitfalls. He illustrated this using five different examples, and
then analyzed the fate of
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (GMCR)
for a more recent example.
Cabot Wealth Advisory 5/10/12 -- In Investing,
Sometimes It's What You Don't Do That Counts
On Thursday,
Cabot Market Letter
and
Cabot Top Ten Trader
Editor Mike Cintolo discussed what he calls the "silent killers" of
stock portfolio performance. These "silent killers" are the things
you don't do, which sometimes have a greater influence on your
gains and losses in the market than the things you do. Featured
stock:
Ariba (
ARBA
)
.
Happy Investing,
Matt Delman
Editor,
Cabot Wealth Advisory