Our International Hall of Famers list is composed of the 100 largest US-listed international stocks, or ADRs.
We've also sprinkled in some of the largest ADRs from countries that did not make the market cap cut.
These stocks range from some well-known mega-cap multinationals such as Toyota Motor and Royal Dutch Shell to some large-cap global disruptors such as Sea Ltd and Shopify.
It's got all the big names and more–but only those that are based outside the US. You can find all the largest US stocks on our original Hall of Famers list.
The beauty of these scans is really in their simplicity.
We take the largest names each week and then apply technical filters in a way that the strongest stocks with the most momentum rise to the top.
Based on the market environment, we can also flip the scan on its head and filter for weakness.
Let's dive in and take a look at some of the most important stocks from around the world.
Below is my weekly video for members of Macke's Retail Roundup.
It's been a helluva week. Even with Friday's bounce, XLY is still by far the worst-performing sector this year.
Crashes are easy. I’ll tell you what to do if stocks fall 20% in one day: Buy something.
Bear markets are a different vibe. If a crash is a blitzkrieg, bear markets are a seige. Every day like the last. Long, negative, intermittent spells of misery. Since December 17th the Consumer Discretionary SPDR is down 18%. No day much stands out as particularly miserable. So far, 2025 has been about two weeks of hope, followed by stocks falling 4 out of 5 days, usually about 1%.
The XLY has now given back all of its gains since last October and is breaking down much worse than that below the surface. First they came for the darlings like Elf and Abercrombie and no one said anything because those were momentum plays.
But the market isn’t just coming for losers on the day they disappoint. Stocks like ANF sell off seemingly every day. It’s been folded in half since January. The stock is “cheap” and...
Contrary to popular belief, we're not just Americans. We're earthlings.
I think that gets forgotten, especially after the United States stock market outperformed practically everything else for so long.
You have a combination of home country bias and you have the recency bias layered on top of that.
So when U.S. Technology is an underperformer, as it has been since last summer, many investors with too much exposure in those areas are blinded by their losing, to see all the winning that's going on around them.
China, for example, just closed the week out at new 4-month highs. The CSI 300 is basically the S&P500 of China, and just closed at the highest levels since early November.
Meanwhile, you're seeing the German DAX this morning working on the highest weekly close in the country's history.
Whether it does or doesn't, the relative strength in Germany has been off the charts, despite any selling pressure you've seen in the U.S.
Keep in mind that outside of the American Indexes (S&P500, Dow & Nasdaq), I would put Germany right at the top of the most important markets list.
Adobe $ADBE just reported a double beat and got destroyed for it. The reaction was nasty!
Shares slid 13.85% during Thursday's market session and closed near the low.
The company reported revenues of $5.71B versus the estimated $5.66B and reported earnings per share of $5.08 versus the estimated $4.97.
Their AI-related business contributed $125M in ARR, and they expect that number to double this year.
The growth is off the charts, but the market has already priced it into the stock.
The management team thinks the stock is cheap. They've repurchased $11.4B in stock over the last 12 months, equivalent to 7% of the market capitalization. They're authorized to repurchase an additional $14.4B.
ADBE is a share cannibal as it's aggressively eating its shares. This is a sweet tailwind for long-term investors.
Next week, the company is hosting the Adobe Summit 2025 in Las Vegas. It will be interesting to see if this successfully pumps the stock or worsens things.
Stay tuned...
Here are the latest earnings reactions from the S&P 500 👇
More top decision-makers are buying their own companies’ stock.
📌 Today's most significant insider move comes from LendingTree $TREE Chief Operating Officer Peyree Scott, who purchased $1.3 million worth of shares.
As COO, Scott has direct oversight of the company’s operations and execution. His buy suggests confidence in LendingTree’s business model and future growth.
When a top operator puts their own money on the line, it’s worth paying attention.
Here’s The Hot Corner, with data from March 13, 2025:
Click the table to enlarge it.
📌 In energy, Marathon Petroleum $MPC Chief Commercial Officer backed his company with a $269,000 buy.
As CCO, his focus is on revenue generation and market expansion. His purchase could signal optimism in the oil & gas sector.
But why have European stocks and China done so well?
They don't have any US Growth stocks in their indexes.
While the selling pressure in these stocks has accelerated recently, the underperformance has been there since last summer. We've been pointing out that High Beta never broke out relative to Low Volatility stocks while the major indexes were making new highs.
And now they're making new lows. Look at the underperformance from Tech along with the underperformance in High Beta:
And I'll be the first to tell you that it affects me too. Remember, that on a personal level, my wife and I have retirement accounts and we have 3 kids with college funds. I'm not immune to the selling in US Growth stocks.
I'm right in there with you guys, regardless of what I do for my day job.
Now, this is a great example of why we don't want to limit ourselves to a long only strategy in U.S. stocks.
I've already got plenty of that stuff. Too much, if you ask me. So I need to go out of my way to find additional sources of income and returns.
While the U.S. equity markets have been under pressure, we've been hunting for pockets of relative strength.
These are the areas that will perform best once the selling subsides.
If a stock can buck the trend now, imagine how well it can do once the bulls regain control of the tape.
On Wednesday, we heard from the $2.4B customer experience management (CXM) solutions company, Sprinklr $CXM.
For the 2nd consecutive quarter, the company reported a double beat and rallied.
The company increased its number of $1M customers by 18% year-over-year. This growth in high-value customers underscores the platform's value and potential for future revenue expansion.
As a cherry on top, the management team believes this growth will continue. They issued much better-than-expected forward guidance.
The market loved everything about this report, and the stock was rewarded for it.
This was the stock's 3rd best earnings reaction ever. We tend to see big earnings reactions before big trends in the stock price.
Here's the technical setup in CXM 👇
Sprinklr is on the cusp of resolving a textbook...
When CEOs put their own money on the line, it’s worth paying attention. Insiders sell for all kinds of reasons—taxes, diversification, personal expenses.
But there’s only one reason to buy: They think the stock is going higher.
Today’s standout moves come from top executives making sizable bets on their own companies.
New Fortress Energy $NFE CEO Wes Edens just bought 100,000 shares.
First Citizens $FCNCA Chairman and CEO Frank Holding reported an $824,000 buy.
Funko $FNKO CEO Cynthia Williams filed a Form 4 revealing the purchase of $106,877 worth of shares—small in size but still a bullish statement from leadership.
Here’s The Hot Corner, with data from March 12, 2025:
Click the table to enlarge it.
Outside of direct CEO buys, Victoria’s Secret $VSCO saw BBRC International PTE LTD...
Whether you're looking at short, intermediate, or long-term trends, 100% ofthe major indices are currently trading below their key moving averages.
Here’s the table:
Let's break down what the table shows:
The first column of the table lists several major indexes. Each subsequent column represents a different moving average, ranging from the 5-day average to the 200-day average. A green box indicates that the index price is above the particular moving average, and a red box shows that the index price is below that moving average.
The Takeaway: The way I learned it was not to fight the trend… Also, nothing good happens when price is below moving averages.
And right now, all I can see is red... Every major index is below its 5-day moving average all the way to its 200-day moving average.
When prices fall below their moving averages, they are not in uptrends. They may not necessarily be in downtrends, but they certainly are not trending higher.
If stocks continue to decline, uptrends cannot persist....