Gary Cohn 2.5 15 ideas

Vice Chair, IBM / Former NEC Director
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4 winning  /  8 losing  ·  12 positions (30d)
Net: -2.5%
By sector
Stock
11 ideas +1.7%
ETF
4 ideas -11.0%
Top tickers (by frequency)
RSP 2 ideas
0% W -8.2%
XOM 2 ideas
100% W +12.4%
WMT 2 ideas
0% W -3.5%
JNJ 2 ideas
0% W -2.4%
VZ 2 ideas
100% W +0.3%
Best and worst calls
Cohn observes a rotation where investors are re-evaluating growth numbers for tech and moving into "traditional companies" like Walmart, J&J, Exxon, and Verizon, which are trading near 52-week highs. In an environment of higher interest rates and input costs, capital flees speculative growth for companies with pricing power and tangible cash flows. The "Equal Weight" S&P is outperforming the "Market Cap" weighted index. LONG. Defensive rotation into high-quality legacy assets. If rates drop significantly, capital may flood back into high-beta tech.
WMT JNJ XOM VZ CNBC Feb 27, 17:56
Vice Chair, IBM / Former...
The Equal Weighted S&P 500 (RSP) was up 6% while the market-cap weighted index was flat during a recent session. The market breadth is improving. The rally is widening beyond the "Mag 7." To capture the recovery of the "other 493" stocks, the equal-weight ETF is the direct instrument. LONG. A recession would hit the smaller/equal-weight components harder than the cash-rich mega-caps.
RSP CNBC Feb 27, 17:56
Vice Chair, IBM / Former...
Cohn points out that while the cap-weighted S&P 500 (dominated by Big Tech) was flat on the day, the "Equal Weighted Index" was up significantly (approx 6% recently). The market breadth is actually improving. The "pain" is localized in the over-owned mega-caps, while the average stock is performing well due to economic tailwinds. Buying the equal-weight index captures this broad strength without the drag of the correcting tech giants. LONG RSP to capture the rotation into the broader 493 stocks of the S&P. If the tech correction turns into a broader market panic, correlations will converge to 1, dragging the equal-weight index down with it.
RSP CNBC Feb 27, 14:34
Vice Chair, IBM / Former...
Cohn notes that the "biggest companies" (Nvidia, Google, Microsoft) are seeing their growth numbers "reevaluated" by investors, leading to flat performance despite good news (e.g., Nvidia's earnings). The market has priced in perfection. Even "great reports" aren't saving these stocks right now because the capital is rotating out to fund positions in traditional sectors. They are sources of funds, not destinations, in the current cycle. NEUTRAL/AVOID. While not explicitly calling for a crash, the momentum has stalled as the market rotates. AI capex could accelerate faster than expected, proving the "reevaluation" wrong and sending these stocks to new highs.
NVDA GOOG MSFT CNBC Feb 27, 14:34
Vice Chair, IBM / Former...
Cohn highlights "really strong economic tailwinds," specifically larger tax refunds (due to unchanged withholding tables) and a massive "Capex boom" in reindustrialization. Larger refunds mean more disposable income for the average American (bullish Consumer). The Capex boom, though slow due to zoning, guarantees a long pipeline of work for construction and industrial firms. LONG sectors tied to disposable income and physical infrastructure build-out. Persistent inflation could eat up the tax refund windfall before it translates to discretionary spending.
XLY ITB CNBC Feb 27, 14:34
Vice Chair, IBM / Former...
Cohn observes a distinct rotation where investors are "reevaluating the growth" of tech companies and moving capital into "traditional companies in America" like Walmart, J&J, Exxon, and Verizon, which are trading near 52-week highs. As high interest rates and input costs persist, investors are seeking safety and realized value over speculative growth. The market isn't exiting equities; it is simply moving to defensive, cash-flow-positive legacy firms. LONG traditional value names as the beneficiaries of this capital rotation. A sudden dovish pivot by the Fed could reignite the risk-on trade in high-growth tech, causing these defensive names to underperform.
WMT JNJ XOM VZ CNBC Feb 27, 14:34
Vice Chair, IBM / Former...
Gary Cohn (Vice Chair, IBM / Former NEC Director) | 15 trade ideas tracked | RSP, XOM, WMT, JNJ, VZ | YouTube | Buzzberg