Cabot Heritage Corporation logo
176 North Street
Salem, MA 01970
978/745-5532
E-mail: julie@cabotheritage.com
Web site: www.cabotchina.com
Contact: Julie DeFelice

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About Cabot Heritage Corporation

In 1970, Carlton G. Lutts began the Cabot Heritage Corporation and launched his very first investment newsletter - the Cabot Market Letter. The passionate venture was a great success and Carlton soon had an eager and loyal following of core subscribers. Carlton was joined in 1986 by his son, Timothy, and together they worked side-by-side picking stocks and launching new investment newsletters until Carlton retired in 2004. Today, Timothy is president of the Cabot Heritage Corporation. Together with his team of dedicated employees, Cabot publishes five separate and distinct investment newsletters, including Cabot Market Letter, Cabot Top Ten Report, Cabot China Investor Repor, Cabot Benjamin Graham Value Letter, and Cabot Stock of the Month Report. Independent from the start, each newsletter is written without bias or influence from the featured companies. Located in historic Salem, Massachusetts, Cabot is a family business - a place where its team of employees takes great pride in providing every customer with timely, personal service. In its 3+ decades of advising investors, Cabot has been honored numerous times by both Timer Digest and the Hulbert Financial Digest as one of the top 10 investment newsletters in the industry.

Cabot Heritage Corporation's Articles

Dynex Capital, Inc. (DX) is a mortgage Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT), investing in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) in the US. The REIT’s portfolio consists of high-quality borrowers with only 2% of its MBS holdings yielding above 6%, highlights Nancy Zambell, editor-in-chief of Cabot Money Club.
Denmark-based Novo Nordisk A/S (NVO) is the drug company behind Wegovy (or semaglutide, its GLP-1 hormone-mimicking drug). Shares flew high when Wegovy was the drug to beat, but they have retreated somewhat due to competition from Eli Lilly and Co.’s (LLY) Zepbound. Don’t fear — there’s plenty of room for both drugs, maintains Nancy Zambell, editor-in-chief of Cabot Money Club.
Many investors favor a “strategic” or “tactical” portfolio allocation. Let me explain what I mean, writes Nancy Zambell, editor-in-chief of Cabot Money Club.
There’s a stock practice that most analysts and investors like to avoid called a reverse stock split (also known as a stock consolidation or share rollback). Most avoid reverse stock splits, as it doesn’t affect the fundamentals of the company so much as it improves investor perception or helps meet exchange requirements. But can they work for investors? Here’s my take, writes Nancy Zambell, editor-in-chief of Cabot Money Club.