activemixedyoutube

Investors should keep buying, here’s why

Recommendation: Investors should keep buying, with a mixed strategy. Remain generally constructive on equities but add a hedge or tilt into energy and defense positions if escalation risk rises — e.g., XLE, XOM, and LMT — and be mindful of travel- and fuel-sensitive names such as JETS.

Confidence
38 / 100
Assets
4
Authors
1
Outcome
open

Linked assets

This play highlights an energy/defense tilt as a hedge: XLE (energy sector ETF), XOM (large integrated oil & gas), LMT (defense prime), and JETS (airline-focused ETF). Use energy and defense exposure to offset potential risk-premium moves in crude and flows into defense during heightened conflict risk; treat airline exposure as a watch-list for travel- and fuel-sensitivity.

XLEState Street Energy Select Sectbeneficiaryopen

In seeking to track the performance of the index, the fund employs a replication strategy.

Confidence: 40 / 100

Sector basket tends to benefit from crude risk-premium moves.

XOMExxon Mobil Corporationbeneficiaryopen

Exxon Mobil Corporation engages in the exploration and production of crude oil and natural gas in the United States, Canada, and internationally.

Confidence: 36 / 100

Large integrated with leverage to higher oil prices.

LMTLockheed Martin Corporationbeneficiaryopen

The company operates through four segments: Aeronautics; Missiles and Fire Control (MFC); Rotary and Mission Systems (RMS); and Space.

Confidence: 35 / 100

Defense prime often sees flows during heightened conflict risk.

JETSU.S. Global Jets ETFriskopen

The fund uses a "passive management" (or indexing) approach to track the performance, before fees and expenses, of the index.

Confidence: 34 / 100

Airlines typically pressured by higher fuel costs and risk-off travel sentiment.

Source proof

Source proof: Strong source proof | 4 directional assets | 1 supporting author | headline-like title review

Underlying source material is fragmented and often promotional. Several items are low-actionability headlines or garbled transcripts; some point to bullish commentary on mega-cap tech but lack clean figures or dates. The clearest tradable implication is around Microsoft in a single headline, but most sources do not provide firm entry levels, confirmed filings, or robust risk controls. Treat these signals as directional rather than primary catalysts.

11 Undervalued Stocks To Buy Today
Joseph Carlson After Hours · Jun 10, 2026, 2:49 PM EDT

The source is a lightly edited transcript about buying “undervalued” stocks within a core/satellite portfolio. It explicitly calls out several large-cap tickers with mostly “buy” ratings (ASML, SPGI, MA, TXRH, plus mentions of MSFT/AMZN as buy candidates depending on entry), and one explicit non-buy due to valuation (COST). Actionability is moderate because it lacks specific catalysts, price levels, or timing rules beyond “lower end of 52-week range/valuation range.”

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Google Is Fooling Everyone
Joseph Carlson After Hours · Jun 2, 2026, 4:21 PM EDT

The source contains only the title/body phrase “Google Is Fooling Everyone” with no supporting details, catalysts, timeframe, or specific claims. It is not actionable as-is.

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My Investing Plan For The Next 5 Years
Joseph Carlson After Hours · May 26, 2026, 4:02 PM EDT

The source lays out a 5-year portfolio concept focused on “sellers into AI scarcity” (semicap equipment, foundry capacity, HBM memory) versus “buyers of AI.” It argues scarcity-phase suppliers have the best near/mid-term setup, with ASML positioned as a more “durable seller” due to long-lived tool installs. Mentions owning ASML and cites TSMC, Nvidia ecosystem demand, and HBM suppliers (Micron, SK Hynix).

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This Is The Craziest IPO Ever
Joseph Carlson After Hours · May 21, 2026, 5:02 PM EDT

The source provides only a title/body (“This Is The Craziest IPO Ever”) with no details on the company, ticker, exchange, valuation, sector, timing, or deal terms. There is insufficient information to form a specific, tradable thesis or identify affected tickers.

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Super Investors Are Buying AI Stocks
Joseph Carlson After Hours · May 18, 2026, 3:50 PM EDT

Super Investors Are Buying AI Stocks Join Qualtrim, the stock analysis platform I built and use, and join over 13,000 other paying members: https://www.qualtrim.com/ 00:00 Episode Overview 00:50 Chris Hohn Sells Microsoft and Buys Google 08:54 Bill Ackman Buys Microsoft and Sells Google 13:40 Dev Kantesaria Is Down -20% This Year 17:00 Berkshire Sells a LOT of Holdings 19:03 Terry Smith's Recent Performance Is Horrible 21:40 Pat Dorsey Is Buying Uber 23:30 Alta Rock Portfolio Bets Big On Amazon 24:15 Brad Gersner Bets Big on AI 25:00 Chuck Akre's Fund Will Struggle 26:40 Fail Of The Week: Waymo -Disclaimer Some of the links below are affiliate links, I can earn money from them at no cost to you. This content is not a solicitation, is not endorsed by M1, and was not reviewed by M1; the opinions expressed are solely those of the authors and do not reflect M1's views. Information presented is accurate as of the video posting date; for the most up-to-date information, please refer to m1.com. Before making any investment decisions, consult your personal investment, legal, and tax advisors, as this content is for informational purposes only and not intended as investment recommendations.

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These 7 Companies Will Dominate The Future
Joseph Carlson After Hours · May 13, 2026, 5:16 PM EDT

The source is a garbled stock-pick/long-term-compounding pitch arguing that a handful of dominant platform companies are worth buying today. Clear actionable names are Alphabet/Google, Amazon, and Uber. The cited positives are YouTube/YouTube TV gaining TV watch-time share, Google Cloud growth/backlog, AWS scale and cloud/AI momentum, and Uber’s 18% trailing revenue growth plus accelerating buybacks. The source is moderately actionable as a directional long-term idea list, but it lacks valuation, exact prices, timing, and complete details for all seven companies.

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The Best Investor In The World Just Sold Microsoft
Joseph Carlson After Hours · May 11, 2026, 4:08 PM EDT

The item only states that an unnamed “best investor in the world” sold Microsoft, with no source, filing date, position size, valuation rationale, or confirmation. This is a very low-actionability sentiment headline. The only clearly implicated tradable ticker is Microsoft (MSFT), potentially negatively affected if the sale is confirmed and perceived as meaningful.

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Analysts Were Completely Wrong About This Stock
Joseph Carlson After Hours · May 6, 2026, 5:57 PM EDT

Garbled transcript of a bullish investment commentary arguing that analysts underestimated Alphabet/Google. The speaker cites recurring earnings evidence, YouTube’s strength on TV, Google Cloud backlog/RPO growth, and broader hyperscaler revenue acceleration as validation that AI/cloud capex is producing revenue. Amazon/AWS and Microsoft are also mentioned positively, though Microsoft’s higher forward P/E is framed as less attractive than cheaper peers. Actionability is moderate-low because the source lacks clean figures, dates, entry levels, and risk controls.

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Supporting authors

Analysis supported by one author. Sources include a mix of promotional videos, earnings-reaction snippets, and short-form commentary; automated analysis flagged missing or incomplete content in several items.

Unlock full thesis monitoring

Keep buying into constructive market conditions, but implement a mixed strategy: add a hedge or tilt toward energy (XLE, XOM) and defense (LMT) if escalation risk persists. Monitor airlines (JETS) for sensitivity to higher fuel costs and risk-off travel sentiment.