This text is predicated on TheStreet’s Inventory & Markets Podcast. Hosted by Chris Versace, the veteran Wall Road investor and lead portfolio supervisor for TheStreet Professional, the weekly podcasts can be found early to members of TheStreetPro investing membership.
What the heck occurred to 2025?
We appeared to have been popping open the champagne and watching the ball drop in Occasions Sq. on the finish of 2024, however now we’re within the closing quarter of 2025.
And whereas others could also be planning for the vacation season, a few of the high names at TheStreet Professional had been making their requires the remainder of the 12 months in the course of the Oct. 8 version of the Shares and Markets podcast.
From TheStreet Professional Staff (l to r): Ed Ponsi, Jason Meshnick, James ‘Rev Shark’ DePorre, Chris Versace and Louis Llanes
Jason Meshnick, TheStreet Professional’s managing editor, hosted this version of the podcast. He was joined by Chris Versace, lead supervisor of TheStreet Professional’s portfolio and common podcast host, as effectively longtime contributors Louis Llanes, Ed Ponzi and James “Rev Shark” DePorre.
“This week we are combining the weekly Stocks and Markets Podcast with the quarterly meeting,” Meshnick mentioned. “We’ve assembled the team here today to give us their top pick for the rest of the year.”

A dealer works on the ground of the New York Inventory Alternate on the opening bell on April 21, 2025 (Photograph: Angela Weiss/AFP by way of Getty Photographs)
ANGELA WEISS/Getty Photographs
AI Spending: Huge Speak Vs. Actual Outcomes
“I think we’re in a phase right now where we really need to separate what is real and what is not real,” Llanes mentioned. “There are a lot of firms out there that are talking big talks about AI spend.
“What we want to do is we want to find those companies that actually are showing that they’re getting results from the R&D.”
Llanes mentioned he has been searching for firms which are spending at the least 10% of their income on analysis and growth.
“They’re growing revenue quarter over quarter on the year,” he mentioned. “So, they’re showing acceleration of growth. That positive cash flow. And the return on capital is solid above average.”
Llanes mentioned he was shopping for a basket of 107 firms that adhere to those necessities.
“How do you know that they’re being successful by monetizing that R&D spend?” Versace requested. “How are you measuring who’s going to be successful monetizing this R&D that they’re putting in?”
“One study does actually show that there is a lag,” Llanes mentioned. “And it’s usually about a year or two. So, what you want to see is companies that have more sustainable edges. You have to get into qualitative work. There’s no two ways about it.”
Versace mentioned the significance of AI infrastructure.
“I still think we’re relatively early innings, but that’s something that is constantly on my mind,” he mentioned.
“As we get more (artificial intelligence personal computers), as we get more, robust applications on smartphones and, of course, enterprise adoption, you’re going to see that enterprise consumer adoption continue to grow,” Versace added, referring to the process of integrating new technologies, practices and strategies into a company’s core operations.
TheStreet Pro’s Rev Shark Favors Biotech
DePorre said he favored biotechnology stocks.
“Biotechnology has been a dog for a couple of years,” he mentioned. “It’s lagged. It hasn’t kept pace with the overall market. It’s just been a terrible sector for a very long time. However, it’s finally starting to come to life now.
“And I think that many of the stocks in the sector are not as overvalued or as excessive as some of the technology names.”
The dialog turned to feedback by the hedge fund supervisor Paul Tudor Jones, who likened the market to the atmosphere that existed in 1999, simply earlier than the bubble peak that occurred in early 2000.
DePorre famous that in 1999, folks had been involved about Y2K, a pc bug that was predicted to trigger a world technological collapse when the 12 months modified to 2000. This catastrophe didn’t occur.
“There was this huge amount of liquidity that was being created to deal with the disaster that that was supposed to be,” he mentioned. “And we’re getting an identical form of factor now with the [Federal Reserve easing interest rates]. The liquidity Jones talked about, that is going to drive this, and in plenty of ways in which parallel to the Y2K factor could be very attention-grabbing.”
“I’ve had that feeling for a while,” Ponsi said. “I think it’s liquidity. You have high liquidity, and you have lowering interest rates at the same time. It’s a very explosive recipe. Stocks just seem to go higher. There’s no reason why that shouldn’t continue for the entire fourth quarter and into next year.”
“Talk to me six months from now,” he added. “Maybe things will change. But if we believe what Mr. Jones is saying, and I’ve always felt that’s where we are right now, you’ve got to go with large-cap tech.”
Associated: Autonomous autos transferring into the quick lane
