I've been watching the markets for nearly 20 years... And the data I'm looking at right now is unlike anything I've seen before.
Consider this: Six years ago, $30 billion sat in U.S. leveraged ETFs – the type of instrument that allows investors to make turbo-charged bets on the market.
Today, they just hit a record $177 billion. That's nearly six times more money, making bigger and more aggressive bets.
Investors are sprinting full-speed into the stock market. And it's not just Americans...
Foreign investors now hold a record $21 trillion in U.S. stocks – up 170% since 2020. They have an unusually large share of their money in U.S. stocks – more than even during the peak of the dot-com bubble.
In other words, the entire world is piling into American stocks.
Meanwhile, the S&P 500 just hit a fresh all-time high, adding $11 trillion of value in just seven weeks.
I know what the skeptics will say: "This sounds like a top."
But here's what they're missing...
Every bull market in history – 1929, the dot-com boom, Japan in the late '80s, and more –followed the same exact pattern.
Stocks rise steadily for years... Then, something changes. People who sat on the sidelines panic that they're missing out. They rush in all at once... prices explode... and then, when there's nobody left to buy... it all comes crashing down.
We're not at peak euphoria yet. Not even close. You'll know it arrives when your neighbors and barber are giving you stock picks.
But Melt Ups happen fast. During the dot-com bubble, the Nasdaq nearly doubled in just a few months.
That's why I just published a brand-new presentation laying out everything you need to know to maximize your returns during the Melt Up (including how to know when to get out before the Melt Down).
Brett Eversole
Senior Editor & Analyst, Stansberry Research
P.S. If you're over 55, navigating the next 12 to 18 months in the markets will be the final, most important decision of your financial life – the difference between the retirement you've planned for... and one haunted by "what ifs." You deserve to be on the right side of it.
3 Down-and-Out Consumer Stocks To Buy on Sector Rotation
Posted On Jun 16, 2026 by Grayson Cavern
For the better part of two years, investors barely needed to look beyond a handful of AI stocks to outperform the market. Capital followed performance, performance attracted more capital, and one of the most powerful momentum trades in recent memory took hold.
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Meanwhile, a different opportunity quietly developed elsewhere.
As investors focused on AI, several consumer stocks continued generating billions in revenue, strengthening operations, and rebuilding investor confidence while expectations drifted lower. That’s where I’m looking today.
"I recently visited Mar-a-Lago... And now I'm prepared to put my reputation on the line. One investment I just uncovered could be my biggest winner of all... It involves President Trump, Elon Musk, trillions of dollars, China… And a MAJOR upgrade to the artificial intelligence revolution. If you buy just one stock in 2026, I urge you to make it this one." – Louis Navellier
Few companies command the kind of global brand recognition Nike (NYSE: NKE) does. Professional athletes wear its products. Amateur athletes train in them. Consumers across every major market recognize the swoosh instantly. That kind of brand equity takes decades to build and billions of dollars to replicate.
No wonder why Nike generated $11.3 billion in revenue during its latest fiscal 2026 third quarter, including $11.0 billion from the Nike brand itself, while wholesale revenue reached $6.5 billion. Management spent the last several quarters reducing inventory, rebuilding wholesale relationships, and sharpening product execution after a period that tested investor patience.
The stock chart now shows those efforts beginning to gain traction.
Shares recently traded at $45.20, above the 20-day moving average of $44.54 and the 50-day moving average of $44.25 after spending months building a base in the low-$40 range. Trading volume remains elevated at roughly 14.35 million shares a day while the stock continues working toward its 200-day moving average of $59.23.
Revenue, inventory progress, and improving price action now point in the same direction. The share price still sits far below levels investors once considered normal for Nike, creating a setup not only where operational improvement carries the potential to matter far more than it would during periods of peak optimism, but also a buying opportunity for the bulls.
Starbucks Continues To Benefit From Scale
Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX) built one of the most recognizable consumer brands in the world by turning a daily habit into a global business. More than 40,000 stores now serve customers across dozens of countries, creating a footprint few restaurant companies can match.
Starbucks produced approximately $229.9 million in operating income during its latest quarter 2 2026 earnings while maintaining an operating margin of 40.5%. Those figures reflect a business that continues generating meaningful profits despite facing the same consumer pressures affecting much of the industry.
Shares recently traded at $101.59, above the 20-day moving average of $100.28, the 50-day moving average of $100.84, and the 200-day moving average of $91.72. Roughly 7.05 million shares change hands daily while the stock continues building on a recovery that began earlier this year.
Price action often reveals where capital is moving before headlines catch up. Investors spent months discussing slowing traffic, China concerns, and operational challenges. The stock spent the same period climbing above every major moving average.
Scale, profitability, and strengthening momentum rarely travel together by accident.
Starbucks already possesses the store network, customer loyalty ecosystem, pricing power, and brand recognition required to benefit when investor attention broadens beyond technology.
Target Quietly Rebuilt Momentum
Target (NYSE: TGT) spent the last several years navigating shifting consumer behavior, inventory challenges, inflation pressures, and changing spending patterns. Investors responded by pushing the stock into one of the steepest drawdowns among large retail names.
The business continued producing results.
Target earned $1.71 per share during its quarter 1 2026 earnings and a revenue beat of $25.44 billion. Those figures came from a retailer operating thousands of locations, maintaining nationwide brand recognition, and generating billions of dollars in annual revenue.
The stock currently trades at $133.17, comfortably above the 20-day moving average of $126.60, the 50-day moving average of $125.89, and the 200-day moving average of $106.95. Average daily volume sits near 7.29 million shares while the stock continues building a higher-high, higher-low structure after climbing from the mid-$80 range reached last year.
Investors searching for consumer exposure don’t need to imagine a turnaround scenario or project aggressive growth assumptions. The company already generates earnings, already generates cash flow, and already possesses the infrastructure required to participate in a stronger consumer environment.
Why This Shift Into Consumer Stocks Matters
The strongest opportunities rarely emerge from the most crowded trade on Wall Street.
Granted, AI deserved much of the capital it attracted. Revenue growth, infrastructure spending, and demand for computing power created one of the most compelling investment themes of the decade. Investors recognized that early and benefited accordingly.
At the same time, capital concentration creates opportunities elsewhere.
Nike generated $11.3 billion in quarterly revenue while rebuilding technical momentum above key moving averages.
Starbucks produced substantial operating income, maintained a global footprint exceeding 40,000 stores, and pushed above its 20-day, 50-day, and 200-day moving averages.
Target generated $22.44 billion in revenue while climbing more than 50% from last year’s lows and establishing one of the strongest charts in the retail sector.
What you’re seeing are figures that best describe businesses executing in the real world while capital remains focused elsewhere.
Eventually, stock prices and business performance find each other.
Nike, Starbucks, and Target already possess the scale, financial resources, and improving technical setups required to benefit if capital begins searching beyond the market’s most crowded trade. The companies continue generating revenue. The earnings reports continue arriving. The charts continue improving.
Wall Street won’t ignore those combinations forever.
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