Hello and welcome to Everyday Alpha, the daily newsletter showcasing a different stock opportunity every day the market is open. We give you laser-focused content to save you time and energy so you can make educated investment decisions quickly.
Our analysts just went through every sector, chart, and earnings trend to find the 10 stocks most likely to dominate the rest of this year - and they compiled them all in the Top 10 Best Stocks to Own in the Second Half of 2026.
Why now? Fresh sell-side coverage from a top-tier bank is one of the cleanest forward catalysts you can find. And when it lands on a name most generalist investors haven't even opened the 10-K for, the setup gets interesting fast.
JPMorgan initiated coverage on ESCO Technologies (NYSE: ESE) on June 15 with an Overweight rating. Consensus price target sits in the $237-$325 range depending on the source. With ESE trading near $333, the re-rating story isn't really about the price target. It's about what a top-five bank initiation does to institutional attention on a name almost nobody covers.
The JPM thesis points to a unique product offering across three segments: aerospace and defense, utility grid solutions, and test systems for EVs and avionics.
None of those end markets are slowing down.
ESE is a name most generalist funds don't own. Coverage is thin, the float trades quietly, and the company has been compounding revenue and margins below the surface. A fresh Overweight from JPMorgan is the kind of trigger that pulls institutional money off the sidelines.
The market hasn't fully priced this in yet.
Trade Setup
Time frame: Swing to medium-term (3-9 months) Edge type: Sell-side re-rating catalyst
When a top-five bank initiates Overweight on a mid-cap industrial, it usually pulls other shops into coverage within 30-60 days. That cluster effect is what moves the stock. Earnings is a secondary support, not the primary thesis.
That’s the edge behind early-signal investing: identifying real growth indicators while they’re still easy to miss.
Our latest free research highlights a handful of companies showing those same early patterns today — quiet movers with real long-term potential. No hype. No guessing. Just data and timing.
Miss the early phase, and the opportunity changes completely.
Potential follow-on sell-side initiations through late July, plus fiscal Q3 earnings, expected early August
Chart
1-Month Synopsis: ESE has been a quiet performer over the past 30 days, trading in a relatively tight band ahead of the JPMorgan initiation on June 15. The stock has been breaking out, which is the setup you want.
Bull Case
Core thesis: ESCO is a three-legged industrial. Aerospace and defense covers mission-critical components for commercial and military platforms. Utility solutions includes grid hardening, transformer monitoring, and partial discharge detection. Test covers EV testing, EMC chambers, and avionics.
Each leg has a structural tailwind.
Catalysts: Aerospace and defense is benefiting from sustained DoD spend and a commercial aerospace backlog that stretches years out.
Utility solutions sits right at the center of the grid modernization story. Every dollar going into transmission upgrades, data center power buildout, and renewables interconnection flows through equipment that ESCO sells.
Test is the smaller leg, but the highest-margin one. EV automakers and avionics labs need their gear, and there's no easy substitute.
Valuation upside: The re-rating story here is about institutional discovery. When a name moves from industrial conglomerate to diversified critical infrastructure compounder in the eyes of the buy side, the multiple stretches. We've seen it happen with peers in this space.
Add a balance sheet with room to do tuck-in M&A, a management team that has been disciplined on capital allocation, and a customer base that signs multi-year contracts.
The setup tightens.
Bear Case
Mid-cap industrials get hit when the macro turns. If recession risk picks up and capex budgets tighten, the utility and test segments could see order delays. That's the cyclical risk you sign up for here.
The market may not reward the initiation in one move. You may see a 5-10% pop and then a grind higher as other banks come in. That's normal, but it tests patience.
The float is thin and the name trades quietly. On a bad market day, ESE can drop more than the index because there aren't enough buyers stepping in. Size your position accordingly.
The multiple expansion thesis also depends on the broader industrial sector staying in favor. If money rotates back into mega-cap tech, mid-cap industrials get left behind regardless of fundamentals. The Iran deal backdrop and a potentially hawkish Fed add some near-term cross-currents worth respecting.
Quick Checklist
✅ Thesis still valid after today's close
✅ Volume confirms move above key levels
✅ JPMorgan initiation (June 15) confirmed and no follow-up downgrade
✅ No major sector ETF outflows
That’s all for today’s Everyday Alpha. We’ll have a new pick for you every morning before the market opens, so stay tuned!
Best Regards, —Noah Zelvis Everyday Alpha
Legal Stuff: Stocks featured in this newsletter are for entertainment purposes only. You should not base any investment decisions on information contained in my newsletter. Stocks featured in this newsletter may be owned by owners/operators of this website, which could impact our ability to remain unbiased. Please consult a financial advisor before making any trading decisions. I may earn a small commission from links placed inside these emails.
It shows you when the biggest stock jumps could occur – to the DAY – with 83% backtested accuracy.
If you feel you've received this email in error, please click here to unsubscribe from the TradeSmith Daily, as well as marketing communication from TradeSmith.
As a member of the TradeSmith Daily, you will receive critical market analysis every day from the TradeSmith team. Be sure to whitelist services@exct.tradesmith.com and info@exct.tradesmith.com to ensure you don't miss any updates.
Apple, Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla
For example, want to see the EXACT DAY Tesla could soar this year?
100% of the time, Tesla has a history of soaring on one particular date – bull or bear market – at a rate fast enough to triple your money over a year if you found trades of this caliber again and again.
TradeSmith is not registered as an investment adviser and operates under the publishers’ exemption of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The investments and strategies discussed in TradeSmith’s content do not constitute personalized investment advice. Any trading or investment decisions you take are in reliance on your own analysis and judgment and not in reliance on TradeSmith. There are risks inherent in investing and past investment performance is not indicative of future results.
To unsubscribe or change your email preferences, please click here.
TradeSmith | 1125 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
But when I saw the caliber of people involved in this project, I made an exception. I had to. I wanted my strategy alongside traders operating at that level.
Ten of us, each handing you one tactic for a market that won't sit still.
My piece is in there too. So is a little of everything, from hedging to structure to options.
This was written for right now, not for some evergreen shelf. Grab it while the read still holds.
[ Get your copy while it's still relevant → ]
Hear what the tape is whispering…..
This is a promotion
Risk Disclaimer
All information is for educational purposes only. Nothing should be considered as a buy or sell recommendation. The risk of loss in trading stocks, commodity futures , forex and options is substantial. Before trading, you should carefully consider your financial position to determine if trading is appropriate. When trading stock, forex, futures or options, it is possible to lose more than the full value of your account. All funds committed should be risk capital. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. This email may is a paid advertisement. It could be for a product or service that is not offered, recommended or endorsed by Pro Trader Strategies and neither the company nor its affiliates bear responsibility or control over the content of the advertisement and the product or service offered. Proceed at your own risk. By signing up for our offers you agree to our privacy policy and terms and conditions and be sent ours and other third party offers and promotions in which we get paid for. Opt out at any time
Pro Trader Strategies | 11222 S La Cienega Blvd | Los Angeles, CA 90304 US
Editor's Note: Marc Chaikin, the 60-year Wall Street legend who called Nvidia before it soared 45,000%, just came forward with another huge opportunity he’s spotted in the AI space. While the media is caught up in "SpaceX IPO fever" right now, the under-the-radar event Marc reveals below could give you access to three brand-new AI IPOs in a rare deal known as a "starburst." You may never get a chance to take part in one of these again in your life... and while it's speculative – this is your chance to get in very early while everyone's attention is elsewhere...
Dear Reader,
A tech firm that’s been called "the unseen winner of the AI race" could soon break itself up into three separate companies.
The next Netflix... The next Tesla... And the next Amazon are all poised to spin off just from this one stock.
That would create a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for investors who buy shares in the company before it happens.
Buy shares of this stock today, and you could get the same amount of free shares automatically deposited in your account for each spinoff.
Meaning, 10 shares could turn into 30 shares overnight.
This brilliant type of spinoff is especially rare in the tech industry.
And if the starburst announcement goes public (and it hasn't yet), it's going to be all the media talks about for a while afterward.
This potential "starburst" is my No. 1 recommendation for how average folks can set themselves up to benefit from what I'm calling AI's "jump to lightspeed" moment.
P.S. In 2021, GE announced a starburst when the stock traded at just $67 per share.
They rolled out the deal in stages, and when it was done, shareholders owned three companies instead of just one. The share prices on those once they were individually valued? $75... $300... $614... That means that one starburst unlocked $184 billion for investors. I predict this AI starburst will be orders of magnitude larger. See why when you click here...
Today’s editorial pick for you
190 Million New Users Couldn’t Save Adobe’s Stock
Posted On Jun 12, 2026 by Grayson Cavern
Adobe Inc (NASDAQ: ADBE) delivered the kind of quarter 2 earnings results most companies would gladly take. Revenue climbed 11% year-over-year to a record $5.87 billion. Adjusted earnings per share rose 13% to $5.06. The company raised its full-year outlook. Management authorized another $25 billion share repurchase program. And perhaps most surprisingly, Adobe added roughly 190 million new monthly active users across its products over the past year. Then the stock fell more than 6% after earnings, wiping billions off Adobe’s market value in a single session. Indicating that the market continues to treat the company as if its best days are behind it.
Table of Contents
If 190 million new users, higher guidance, and a fresh $25 billion buyback authorization aren’t enough to impress Wall Street, what exactly is the market worried about?
Musk needed batteries - he built the Gigafactory. Needed solar - acquired SolarCity. Needed data - bought Twitter. The pattern is consistent: when a supplier becomes mission-critical, he acquires it.
Now, with $75 billion raised in the largest IPO in history, one small power infrastructure company is the critical piece his $2 trillion empire can't run without. Dylan Jovine has the name and ticker.
The headline figures were genuinely difficult to criticize: revenue of $6.62 billion, $2.17 billion in operating cash flow, a 44.5% non-GAAP operating margin, Digital Media ARR grew to $18.09 billion, expanded its user base by roughly 190 million people, and authorized another $25 billion in share repurchases. Companies do not announce repurchase programs of that scale when they believe the business is deteriorating but when they believe the market is pricing in a scenario worse than what they see internally.
You’d agree with me that the user growth should have been the headline moment. 190 million new monthly active users in a single year, driven by Firefly, Express, Acrobat, and a broadening generative AI ecosystem pulling creators into Adobe’s orbit who wouldn’t have engaged with the platform previously. For most software businesses, that kind of funnel expansion would dominate the post-earnings conversation and trigger a re-rating of the long-term monetization opportunity.
Instead, investors barely reacted to it, because Wall Street wasn’t focused on how many users Adobe added. It was focused on who those users are and whether they will ever generate revenue at the level the multiple requires.
Is The Moat Eroding?
For decades, Adobe operated behind one of the most durable competitive moats in enterprise software, built not from network effects or switching costs alone but from something harder to replicate: deep workflow embedding. Creative professionals spent years mastering Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere Pro, and After Effects, entire careers were built around fluency in Adobe’s ecosystem, and companies hired specifically for that expertise. That kind of entrenchment doesn’t disappear overnight, and anyone arguing Adobe’s moat has already collapsed is overstating the current competitive reality.
But the concern the market is pricing is more subtle and more interesting than a straightforward competitive threat. As we speak, the worry is not that Canva or Figma displaces Adobe’s professional base tomorrow, it is that AI is gradually changing the economics of creative work in ways that reduce the premium attached to deep tool mastery over time.
Consider this; if generative AI makes certain creative tasks faster, cheaper, and more accessible to non-professionals, the next generation of creators may place less value on building expertise inside Adobe’s ecosystem than the generation that built the moat in the first place. That is a slow-moving structural risk, difficult to quantify and impossible to disprove in a single quarter, which is exactly why it hangs over the stock regardless of what the near-term results look like.
How Uncertainty Re-Rated The Stock
Adobe closed around $218.80 following the selloff, sitting below its 20-day moving average near $235, below its 50-day near $246, and well below its 200-day near $259. That technical positioning tells me the market is not rewarding current execution and neither is it punishing the stock for failing. It didn’t.
Instead, it is discounting future uncertainty, and until Adobe provides clearer evidence of how those 190 million new users convert into revenue at scale, the price action will continue reflecting that unresolved question rather than the income statement.
In 2021, investors valued Adobe at nearly 19 times sales. Today, the stock trades closer to 4 times sales despite generating substantially more revenue, more cash flow, and serving a dramatically larger user base in this quarter.
I Don’t See A Broken Company
I understand why the market is skeptical.
AI is changing the creative software industry. Competition is increasing. And investors want proof that Adobe can convert all those new users into meaningful long-term revenue. Those concerns are legitimate. But I also think the market may be underestimating how deeply embedded Adobe remains inside professional creative workflows.
Maybe Wall Street is right and those 190 million users never become as valuable as management hopes.
But when I see a business still growing, still generating cash, still attracting users, and still buying back stock aggressively while trading far below its historical highs, I don’t see a broken company.
I see a company trying to prove that its next chapter will be bigger than its last.