XLK: A Great Way To Profit From Rising Earnings And Stock Buybacks


Image Source: PixabayAll three stock indexes – the Dow, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq – achieved substantial gains in the first half of 2024, surprising many analysts. I like the look of the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) in this market environment, notes Mark Skousen, editor of Forecasts & Strategies.Stagflation seems to be good for our portfolio, as we now have a dozen stocks and funds with double-digit-percentage returns. Almost every recommendation is profitable this year.So far, we have avoided the tradition on Wall Street to “sell in May and go away.” Last year, President Joe Biden and the Democrats imposed a 1% tax on all stock repurchases. But stock buybacks are good for investors because they avoid double taxation of dividends and increase the value of a shrinking stock issue.

Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK)
As a result, most companies are offering stock buybacks. Goldman Sachs expects S&P companies to allocate $1.1 trillion in share repurchases in 2025. Recently, Apple Inc. (AAPL) unveiled a record stock buyback plan and increased its dividend to 25 cents per share. Apple stock has soared on the news.We recommend Apple indirectly through XLK, which is now ahead by double digits in 2024. Over 22% of XLK is invested in Apple stock alone. All five of its top holdings rose steadily recently.Even as Wall Street is hitting all-time highs, the big news is the new bull market in gold, silver, copper, uranium, and Bitcoin. Commodities have done great, with gold and copper hitting new highs. Bitcoin, silver, and uranium are also recovering and moving higher.The recession and the bear market have been postponed, despite the Fed’s tight-money policy. Last month, Wall Street expected robust growth in the first-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) number. The Atlanta Fed forecast 2.9% growth. Even Kevin Hassett, former chairman of Trump’s economic team, told Larry Kudlow on Fox Business that he expected real growth of 3.5%.The real number turned out to be an anemic 1.6%, with higher-than-expected price inflation. But my readers weren’t fooled. As I stated last month, and in my Wall Street Journal column, gross output (GO) — a measure of total spending at all stages of production — was slowing sharply, and business-to-business (B2B) spending was negative for the fourth quarter.My recommended action would be to consider buying XLK.

About the Author
Mark Skousen is known as “America’s Economist,” having recently been named one of the top 20 living economists in the world. Dr. Skousen has taught economics and finance at Columbia Business School and was recently appointed the first Doti-Spogli Endowed Chair of Free Enterprise at Chapman University in California. He is the editor of the award-winning investment newsletter, Forecasts & Strategies, the author of The Maxims of Wall Street, and has the unique distinction of having worked three careers—working for the government (the CIA), non-profits (president of FEE), and for-profit corporations (consultant to IBM, and producer of FreedomFest).More By This Author:WMT, TGT, COST: What Retail Sector News And Moves Say About Consumer Spending
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