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Spending on contracting and supplies is the second-biggest major spending group for the federal government, according to usaspending.gov. More than $1.1 trillion was spent on deals negotiated by the government to hire contractors for work. The category has increased by 19% from five years ago. 

‘We expect massive cuts of all federal contractors and others who are overbilling the federal government,’ said DOGE co-leader Vivek Ramaswamy on Fox Business’ Sunday Morning Futures.

Contracting commercial companies for government goods and services dates back to the late 1700s. Over the years, laws have streamlined the process and helped make contracts more competitive. 

‘We’re on the side of change. We got started by helping the Navy and then the Army get ready for World War Two to move faster, to do things better,’ Booz Allen Hamilton CEO Horacio Rozanski said. ‘Now we’re the largest player in AI and cyber in the federal government, and we’re very proud of that whole history. But that’s a whole history of change. My sense is we’re ready for change. The country voted for it, and we need to see it happen.’

Booz Allen Hamilton is among the largest government contractors. In 2024, the company had more than $8 billion worth in agreements from agencies like the Defense Department, the General Services Administration and the National Science Foundation. 

‘One of the things we’ve been talking about for years is this notion of outcome-based contracting. Instead of trying to figure out what does everything cost and how to do it. Let’s define an outcome, something that the government really needs, and let private industry compete for that,’ Rozanski said. 

Federal agencies are responsible for negotiating the best deal for the government, but contractors have a history of overcharging. In 2014, a Defense Department Inspector General report showed that the agency was charged as much as 831% for spare parts. Another more recent audit found a 7,943% markup on a soap dispenser sold to the Air Force. 

Military contractors are only required to provide an explanation for prices if the contract is worth more than $2 million. If an item is labeled as ‘commercial,’ companies do not have to justify prices. 

In 2023, Booz Allen Hamilton agreed to pay $377.45 million to settle allegations that the company improperly billed commercial and international costs to its government contracts. 

‘I think part of the challenge is the system. This system is built to manage risk and to get things done with the lowest risk possible. It is not built for speed,’ Rozanski said. ‘We need DOGE to succeed in shifting towards efficiency, towards effectiveness. It’s what our clients want, it’s what we want. Will there be winners and losers in that? Of course. I expect I want Booz Allen to be a winner in that. But at the end of the day, we need to compete.’

The Department of Defense obligated around $550 billion to government contracts in 2024, more than half of all government spending on contractors. Some analysts estimate the department could save millions by streamlining negotiations. 

‘They’re for reducing some of the bureaucracy, but they’re also for understanding that there is a difference. To paint the entire federal government, the giant DMV is not fair,’ Rozanski said. ‘There are all these areas where more can be done to do it faster, to do it better or to not do it at all, to get things done.’

Some small businesses say that DOGE likely won’t have an impact on their work. 

‘From a sort of an efficiency standpoint, we all of us have to operate at the optimum level of efficiency,’ Arkisys co-founder Dave Barnhart said. ‘I’m not quite sure that’ll have an effect, because we’re essentially already operating as quickly as we possibly can within the U.S. government.’

Arkisys has a contract with the Space Development Agency, which is part of the Space Force. The Port would give service providers, making repairs in space, a permanent station to deliver cargo or supplies. The federal government has specific contracts set aside for small businesses that helps level the playing field. 

‘This particular arena of space and most especially the domain that we are talking about, which is servicing, that is doing something to a spacecraft in space after its launch, hasn’t been done before. It’s a wide-open research area. All kinds of innovation can happen,’ Barnhart said. 

Other small business owners say they believe DOGE could help make the contracting process move faster. 

‘One day you come up with the idea quickly. You got to get the funding and you got to develop it,’ Aspetto co-founder Abbas Haider said. ‘You put in your white paper, that’s phase one funding. Then it’s phase two funding, then it’s phase three funding. By the time you’re on phase two, it’s months. Someone else has probably already copied your idea or already done something similar. So, why would I go to the government for those funding?’ 

Instead of applying for specific contracts the government needs, Aspetto sells its high-tech body army products to various agencies within the U.S. government. 

‘In our case, we’re just going to go ahead and take the risk and fund it ourselves, because it would just move things a lot faster,’ Haider said. 

Aspetto makes bullet-resistant clothing, women’s body armor and K9-bullet-proof vests. The company has contracts with the Defense Department, the State Department and NASA. The FBI is also outfitting U.S. Border Patrol agents with Aspetto products. 

‘I do believe they’re going to focus on innovation. If you’re going to compete with countries like China, you have to focus on innovation,’ Haider said. 

NASA contributes most of its funding to contractors to develop innovative products for space travel. In 2024, the agency allocated more than 76% of its budget to contracts. 

‘With the right incentives, the private industry can also bring existing technologies that have already been proven in the private sector to the government to make that happen faster,’ Rozanski said. ‘I really believe that there’s a significant opportunity to save money, to do it faster.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

We monitor the weekly SPY chart and present it to our subscribers every Friday in our DP Weekly Wrap. We have been watching a bearish rising wedge on the weekly chart. The rising wedge pattern implies that you will get a breakdown from the rising bottoms trendline. That is exactly what happened this week.

The one problem with these patterns is that they don’t give us a minimum downside target as most chart patterns provide. For me, my back of the napkin calculation is to look at the beginning of the pattern and determine the height. That is at around 60 points (500 + 60 = height of the back of the pattern). That would imply a drop of the same amount from the breakdown point. It happened just under 600 so I would say the downside target of the pattern would be to 540 which is a strong area of support.

The weekly PMO has topped and given us a new Crossover SELL Signal as of last Friday. We will say that the weekly PMO is flat above the zero line and that typically implies pure strength in a move, however this Crossover SELL Signal is an attention flag. We can also see that the PMO carries a negative divergence with price tops.

Conclusion: The market is long overdue for a correction if not a bear market. The breakdown on the weekly chart and the new weekly PMO Crossover SELL Signal are attention flags that the correction may be upon us. It’s probably a good idea to make sure your positions have listed stops.

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Bear Market Rules

As digital payments and fintech services continue to reshape the global economy, Block, Inc. (SQ) stands out as a potential beneficiary of this shift. A favorable technical signal and an attractive fundamental backdrop present a compelling bullish thesis for SQ. In this article, we will explore the reasons behind this positive outlook and discuss a strategy you can use to capitalize on it — all identified instantly through the OptionsPlay Strategy Center on StockCharts.com.

Technical Analysis

A closer look at SQ’s chart reveals several bullish indicators:

Breakout and Retest of Support. After breaking above the $84 resistance area in November, SQ has since come back to retest this level as support.Strong Risk/Reward Setup. The successful retest suggests a favorable risk/reward, where the downside risk is far more limited than the upside potential to our upside target of $150.

FIGURE 1. SQ STOCK DAILY CHART. The stock is retesting its $84 area as support.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

Fundamental Analysis

From a fundamental perspective, SQ’s outlook remains promising:

Attractive Valuation. Despite Block’s strong growth prospects, the company is currently trading at a 30% discount relative to its peers.Robust Growth Metrics. SQ’s expected 44% earnings per share (EPS) growth is nearly three times higher than its peers’ 13%, highlighting the company’s potential for earnings expansion. Projected 11% revenue growth outstrips the industry median of 7%, confirming the company’s ability to expand its top line.Recent Earnings Insights. Block’s Q3 2024 results showed robust growth in gross profit and a significant turnaround in net income, fueled by the strength of its Cash App and Square ecosystems. While there were some concerns around revenue shortfalls and ongoing regulatory scrutiny of Cash App, the company remains optimistic about continued margin expansion into 2025, forecasting at least 15% overall gross profit growth and new initiatives to drive further gains.

These fundamentals suggest that SQ is well-positioned to capitalize on the continued rise of digital payments, offering investors a potentially rewarding opportunity at current valuations.

Options Strategy

To leverage SQ’s bullish outlook, the OptionsPlay Strategy Center suggests selling the Feb 14 $86/80 Bull Put Spread @ $2.30 Credit.

This entails the following:

Sell: February 14, 2025, $86 Put at $4.60Buy: February 14, 2025, $80 Put at $2.30Net Credit: $2.30 per share ($230 total per contract)

FIGURE 2. DETAILS OF A PUT VERTICAL SPREAD IN SQ STOCK.

Trade Details

Maximum Potential Reward: $230Maximum Potential Risk: $370Breakeven Point: $83.70 (strike of the sold put minus the net credit per share)Probability of Profit: ~56.46% (if SQ closes above $83.70 by February 14, 2025)

By selling a higher strike put and buying a lower strike put, you collect a premium upfront and benefit if SQ stays above the breakeven price at expiration. This strategy offers a balanced approach to potential upside while containing risk.

Unlock Real-Time Trade Ideas With OptionsPlay Strategy Center

This bullish setup in SQ was identified almost instantly using the OptionsPlay Strategy Center at StockCharts.com. By running a Bullish Trend Following scan, the platform highlighted SQ and structured the optimal options trade without the need for extensive research or guesswork.

FIGURE 3. THE BULLISH TREND FOLLOWING SCAN HIGHLIGHTED SQ AS A POTENTIAL OPTIONS TRADING CANDIDATE.

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Don’t let valuable opportunities slip away. Subscribe to the OptionsPlay Strategy Center today, and elevate your trading with the guidance and clarity you need to make informed decisions. Find the best options trades swiftly, every single day, and empower your investing journey with this cutting-edge tool.

The scenes from New Orleans just one day after an attack that killed 14 people and wounded dozens of others were encouraging. Bourbon Street was closed on New Year’s Day as law enforcement investigated the attack, but it reopened Thursday afternoon. There was the usual bustle of tourists. The Sugar Bowl played on. Life in the city seemed to quickly return to normal.

That normality, and the speed with which it arrived, isn’t surprising. This is New Orleans, after all. Few American cities have recently endured tragedy like this one while, simultaneously, and seemingly always, finding a way to rise above it.

This is a city I’ve been to dozens of times. Have family and friends there. Was there after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The storm killed thousands of people and caused property damage estimated at hundreds of billions of dollars. Its impact can still be felt today and might be forever. But New Orleans still stands tall.

New Orleans, again, is giving the country a lesson on how to get back up. It always has. It always does.

‘This city is amazing. This city is known for its resiliency,’ said Anne Kirkpatrick, the city’s police superintendent, at a news conference on Thursday. ‘This is a city that is still impacted from 20 years ago with Hurricane Katrina. This city knows pain. But this city also knows how to recover.’

No, New Orleans isn’t perfect. Like other cities, especially in the South, it has an extensive history of slavery, segregation and anti-Blackness. But from those tragedies, centuries of them, arose Black political leaders and power.

Even the city’s NFL team has seen stunning lows and come back to remarkable highs. The Saints were one of the original joke franchises, fans perfecting bag-over-head. Then quarterback Drew Brees came to town. He’d become a leader off the field as well in the aftermath of Katrina.

‘When I was first drafted by the Saints, I am not going to lie, I was pretty scared,’ former Saints running back Reggie Bush once said. ‘I was nervous. I didn’t know what to expect. It was a year after Hurricane Katrina, and they didn’t even know if they were going to have a home field to play on. I didn’t know what to expect.

‘Drew Brees called me the night I was drafted and told me he was excited to play with me. He told me how he got to play with LaDainian Tomlinson and he was looking forward to playing with me. That changed my entire view on what I was going into. It also eased my mind. I had a chance to watch Drew play when he was with the Chargers, so for a guy like Drew to call me says a lot about him. It eased my emotions about what I was getting into.’

Will the city be ready for Super Bowl 59 next month? Well, a better question might be, why would you ever bet against this city?

‘…We here in New Orleans have proven time in and time out that we can provide safe environments,’ said Kirkpatrick. ‘Look at (the) Taylor Swift (concert) that was just a few weeks ago – incredible environment of fun, incredible environment where they can come and know they’re safe. We have plans.

‘This is a terrorist. The terrorist is going to be hell-bent no matter what, to create carnage and to destroy, but we as a city and as a law enforcement community have already proven over time that we can handle and manage these large crowds.’

We’ve seen this New Orleans story before. The city is expert at the comeback.

It’s happening again.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy struck a hopeful tone on Thursday during a televised interview and said he believes President-elect Donald Trump could be ‘decisive’ in ending the war as Kyiv stares down the third anniversary of Russia’s invasion. 

‘Trump can be decisive. For us, this is the most important thing,’ Zelenskyy said according to a Reuters report. ‘His qualities are indeed there. 

‘He can be decisive in this war. He is capable of stopping [Russian President Vladimir] Putin or, to put it more fairly, help us stop Putin,’ he added. ‘He is able to do this.’

Zelenskyy said Trump assured him that Kyiv would be among his first presidential visits following his inauguration later this month as Ukraine looks to stabilize the front lines. 

Stopping Russian advances early in the new year is a top priority for Zelenskyy, who also reportedly claimed that Putin feared negotiations as it would be seen by the Kremlin chief as tantamount to a Russian defeat.

Despite nearly three full years of war, Russia has been unable to achieve not only its initial war aims, but even Putin’s amended plans, which he announced last year when he said his main goal is now to take all the Donbas – a region in eastern Ukraine encompassing much of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

However, it is not only Putin who views potential peace negotiations with apparent trepidation. 

Zelenskyy has said he welcomes peace talks, but he has also made it clear that any negotiations on ending the war will only be accepted if Ukraine is granted certain security guarantees – like the possibility of joining NATO.

‘Naturally, any security guarantees without the United States are weak security guarantees for Ukraine,’ he said, though he added that Washington must take into account Kyiv’s future security.

‘It cannot be otherwise,’ he added. ‘We are Ukraine, and it’s our independence, our land and our future.’

Putin, on the other hand, has said he will not accept any cease-fire negotiations that do not include guarantees that bar Kyiv from joining the 32-member body, which under Article 5 of the alliance’s treaty says an attack on one member will trigger an attack from all NATO nations and would effectively ensure a united strike on Moscow should it once again target Ukraine. 

Zelenskyy, who has led the country since 2019, was also asked if he would consider re-running for the presidency. 

The Ukrainian president reiterated that the nation cannot hold elections while in a state of war under the nation’s existing constitution but said he may consider it once the conflict has ended. 

‘I don’t know how this war will end,’ he said. ‘If I can do more than I am able, then I will probably view such a decision [seeking re-election] more positively. For now, this is not an objective for me.’

Fox News Digital could not immediately reach the Trump transition team for comment. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The son of a history professor, Steve DiMeglio had encyclopedic knowledge of the game of golf. If you ever had the chance to follow him around a PGA Tour event like I did, you’d see he couldn’t walk two steps without running into a friend − players, their caddies and other reporters – and telling a joke with a fist bump and ‘Hey, big man” as his usual greeting.

He was teased by friends for his diminutive stature, and he’d give it right back with his quick wit and fun-loving nature.

He was opinionated but fair in his scrutiny. He was generous with friends but could also be frugal. I knew he’d catch rides at tournaments with fellow reporters to save money on a rental.

He was funny and always supportive of outsiders like me, who entered the inner sanctum of golf and got to see the game through his eyes when I was his editor at USA TODAY and later at Golfweek.

DiMeglio died this week at the age of 63 after battling cancer, a journey he documented regularly with posts on social media. His passing touched the biggest names in golf, with Tiger Woods writing, “Unfortunately the golf world lost part of our family today, beloved golf writer Steve DiMeglio. I was always very close to Steve and we texted and talked about how he needed to keep fighting to get better so we could see each other in the Bahamas last month. And we did. I am so grateful for that. This is a very sad day for all of golf. We truly lost a friend.”

‘He was quick to laugh about everything, including himself’

Most of us who worked closely with Steve knew one of his super powers was his ability to build relationships.

“He was incredibly well connected. I think without trying to curry favor, he had favor with the golfers,” said Reid Cherner, a former sports editor at USA TODAY. “He was pretty even-handed, he wasn’t light-handed. He criticized when it was needed, but I think he was always in bounds. I don’t think anybody ever thought he went out of bounds with that criticism. He was so tuned in and knew so much that when you were his editor, you just didn’t have a whole lot you needed to guide Steve on. He just did it.”

All his editors can tell stories about the push-and-pull we’d occasionally have with Steve. Rachel Shuster edited Cover stories at USA TODAY and remembers calling him for occasional assignments.

“First, he’d say, ‘Really? You really need this now?’ It was a game we played,” Shuster said. “I would ask for something, he would bitch and moan and say, ‘Well, I’ll see what I can do.’

“In no time at all, he’d come back with a full story and everything we wanted. I sort of looked forward to those because I knew what was coming, but I also knew he’d get what we needed.”

Joe Fleming was DiMeglio’s longtime golf editor at USA TODAY. They met more than three decades ago when both worked at The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, California.

“He really knew golf, he knew about equipment, he knew about the history, he knew what the players did well and what they weren’t so good at, he knew all that stuff,” Fleming said. ‘He watched a lot of (golf), and he was a really good player, too. He couldn’t hit the fades and the draws as well as the pros, but he knew how to do it. He knew how hard it was.”

DiMeglio was a politics writer covering Capitol Hill before he started at USA TODAY, first on the baseball beat before he switched to golf full time. Lee Ivory, the former publisher and executive editor at Sports Weekly, hired him to cover baseball.

“I thought he was obviously a solid journalist and had a passion for the craft,” Ivory said, when asked about what he saw in DiMeglio. “All of the attributes that you look for in a solid reporter, honest, forthright, passionate and a truth teller. He also brought with it a great personality; he was quick to laugh about everything, including himself.”

Without a doubt, his ability to joke and tease endeared him to his colleagues. USA TODAY columnist Christine Brennan recalls the back-and-forth banter they’d share when covering tournaments together, even though they’d have friendly disagreements at times.

She remembers DiMeglio walking through the press room while covering the Masters, where they sat side-by-side for years. “It was made for Steve DiMeglio. He walked those rows, someone would tease him, someone would stop him to ask a question,” Brennan said. “He couldn’t make it to the aisle because he had so many friends and colleagues that wanted to talk to him.

“He was a golf writer, but he could really run for office on the PGA Tour. He knew everyone, and he just loved the banter, the fun, the teasing. And of course, they just loved him.”

The Masters food, a stash of Diet Pepsi

Augusta National was a place DiMeglio loved, and it’s not hard to see why. The history, the traditions, the beauty of the course leave every reporter in awe as they drive through the gates.

And the food. DiMeglio loved the food, USA TODAY columnist Nancy Armour recalls.

“Some people bring home golf shirts or flags from the Masters. DiMeglio brought home caramel corn,” she wrote.

“In addition to pimento cheese sandwiches and peach ice cream sandwiches, the Masters has a caramel-pecan popcorn that’s delicious. Think Cracker Jack times a million. DiMeglio loved the stuff.

“Any time he’d make a trip to the media dining area, he’d come back with a bag or two of it. By the end of the day, his backpack would be filled with bags of caramel corn and a sandwich or two. The sandwiches he’d eat at night, back at the house the USAT staff rented, chasing them with a Diet Pepsi and a cigarette. But the caramel corn he took home and stashed in his freezer. He once told me, very proudly, that he had enough to last him until mid-summer.”

Scott Zucker, who edited DiMeglio’s baseball stories at Sports Weekly, said DiMeglio was known for his generosity and wouldn’t hesitate to give you the shirt off his back. (He often gave his buddies golf shirts or other freebies he’d get in the mail.)  “He was a funny combination of super cheap and also very generous at the same time,” Zucker said with a laugh.

Cherner remembers a trip to Las Vegas the two had when DiMeglio opened up his suitcase.

“He had very little clothes. It was filled with cigarettes and Diet Pepsi,” Cherner said. “I would say to Steve, you know you can buy both here in Las Vegas.

“That was another thing about Steve, he was a funny guy, and he had a great sense of humor about himself.”

I was lucky to share quite a few laughs with Steve myself, but also some hard times as he lost both parents in recent years. I got to see a side of him that was patient, nurturing and kind. He was my guide inside the golf world in 2018 and he boosted me when I questioned myself or wondered if I belonged.

I texted him from a golf event in 2019, feeling like a fish out of water.

“You are NEVER out of place. Have fun,” he texted back.

We will all miss you, big man. But know that we’ll never forget your love of the game and all the stories you gave us.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The big question coming out of the College Football Playoff quarterfinals: Can anyone beat Ohio State?

After demolishing Tennessee in the opening round, Ohio State rolled out to a 34-0 lead and cruised to a 41-21 win against previously unbeaten Oregon in the Rose Bowl. In the month-plus since losing to rival Michigan for the fourth year in a row, the Buckeyes have turned back into a juggernaut.

OSU will next take on Texas, which rode Quinn Ewers’ late-game heroics and survived a major scare against Arizona State in the Peach Bowl. Ahead 24-8 in the fourth quarter, the Longhorns needed double overtime to escape with a 39-31 win. Beating the Buckeyes in the Cotton Bowl will take more consistency than what Texas brought into the matchup against the Sun Devils.

Penn State slowed down Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty and scored a 31-14 win against the Broncos in the Fiesta Bowl. The Nittany Lions have outscored two playoff opponents by a combined 69-24.

They’ll meet Notre Dame, which scored 17 points in a 54-second span across the second and third quarters to beat Georgia 23-10 in a Sugar Bowl delayed one day following the deadly attack in New Orleans early Wednesday morning.

The national semifinals will begin on Jan. 9 with Ohio State as the favorite for the national championship. Before looking ahead, here are the winners and losers from the quarterfinals:

Winners

Ohio State

Oregon never stood a chance. After topping OSU 32-31 in the regular season, the Ducks were swamped by one of the most electric offensive performances in Rose Bowl history. The Buckeyes put up an even 500 yards of offense on 8.8 yards per play, led by quarterback Will Howard’s 319 passing yards and three touchdowns without an interception. The backfield pairing of TreVeyon Henderson and Quinshon Judkins combined for 179 yards and two scores, both from Henderson, on 25 carries. But the star was freshman receiver Jeremiah Smith, who looked more than NFL-ready with 187 yards and a pair of touchdowns on 26.7 yards per catch. Not to be outdone, the OSU defense had eight sacks, 13 tackles for loss and became the first team to hold Oregon under 300 yards since Utah in the 2021 Pac-12 championship game.

Ryan Day

Day has exorcised the bad vibes stemming from another loss to the Wolverines by orchestrating this dominant start to the playoff. Going into the 12-team tournament, the thought was Day had to win at least one and maybe two games to get himself into more secure territory with the OSU fan base; so far, consider this a job well-done. But you have to ask: Given how they’ve looked in these two games, would Day come under fire again if the Buckeyes don’t win the whole thing?

Notre Dame

Beating Georgia marks Notre Dame’s biggest win in years and solidifies the school’s decision to gamble on an unproven Marcus Freeman three years ago. Credit the Fighting Irish for taking advantage of the opportunities provided by Georgia’s missteps, including a crucial fumble and a strip-sack that resulted in a Riley Leonard touchdown late in the second quarter. The Irish also returned the opening kickoff of the second half for a score. On the other hand, Leonard averaged just 3.8 yards per attempt, though he did have 65 yards on the ground; the receiver corps really struggled to get separation against Georgia’s secondary, with a long reception of just 14 yards; and the typically potent backfield pairing of Jeremiyah Love and Jadarian Price had only 51 yards on 13 carries. Notre Dame also went just 2 of 10 on third down and scored just two field goals outside of the 54-second barrage that decided the game.

Penn State

The Nittany Lions’ defense got the job done against Boise State despite losing star edge rusher Abdul Carter to an apparent arm injury in the first half. That sapped what is typically a very strong pass rush and made things a little easier for Boise quarterback Maddux Madsen. But the defense was up to the challenge of stopping Jeanty, who had his worst game in what had been a memorable 2024 season. If we’re nitpicking another double-digit playoff win, PSU made the curious choice to shy away from a very effective running game and had several questionable play-calling decisions on short-yardage plays, allowing the Broncos to hang around longer than expected before the Nittany Lions delivered the knockout blow on Nick Singleton’s 58-yard touchdown run.

Quinn Ewers

Texas survived and advanced despite Cam Skattebo’s best efforts. The senior put together perhaps the most impressive individual performance of the postseason, running for 143 yards and two scores, pulling down a team-high 99 receiving yards and even throwing a 42-yard touchdown that sparked the Sun Devils’ fourth-quarter comeback. But Ewers had one of the best games of his college career with a terrific final stretch. He was perfect on the final drive of regulation to set up a missed 38-yard field goal and then threw a pair of touchdowns in overtime, including a ridiculous 28-yard strike on fourth down to force the second extra frame.

Losers

Oregon

That Oregon lost might not be surprising, even given the regular-season win against the Buckeyes. What was startling, though, was the ease with which OSU marched through the only unbeaten team remaining in the Bowl Subdivision and the playoff’s unquestioned top seed. This might not force Oregon to return to the drawing board — this team was the best in the country during the regular season, with wins against the Buckeyes, Broncos and Nittany Lions. But this is a definite letdown that will lead to some offseason soul-searching in Eugene.

Georgia

A startling number of mistakes doomed any chance Georgia had of winning with backup Gunner Stockton starting in place of an injured Carson Beck. Stockton acquitted himself well, all things considered, completing 18 of 29 throws for 225 yards and a score, but his fumble after being sacked with under a minute to play in the first half led to Notre Dame’s first touchdown. Running back Trevor Etienne’s fumble late in the first quarter ended a 71-yard drive that lasted over eight minutes. Georgia also committed a crucial offsides penalty to extend Notre Dame’s backbreaking drive late in the fourth quarter. But you can toss out the self-inflicted errors and focus on something even more painful for Georgia: Notre Dame was the better team in the Sugar Bowl, and it wasn’t that close.

Arizona State

There might not be a huge sense of disappointment around ASU after an amazing push to the Big 12 championship and the program-establishing double-overtime loss to the Longhorns. (At a minimum, there’s no doubt there would have been much more heartbreak on the opposite sideline had Texas lost.) What the Sun Devils achieved this season will probably make them the preseason Big 12 favorite heading into next September and one of the top contenders to get back into the playoff. But there were missed chances here to take down the Longhorns, not to mention a dose of controversy: Officials didn’t call a targeting on Texas defensive back Michael Taafe on a third-down completion during the Sun Devils’ final drive of regulation, which would’ve set up ASU for the potential game-winning field goal.

Ashton Jeanty

That Jeanty still went for 104 yards against one of the top run defenses in the FBS should be commended, even if that total was 23 yards shy of his previous season low and even if the Nittany Lions became the first FBS opponent to keep the Heisman Trophy runner-up out of the end zone. Disappointingly, however, Jeanty came up just short of Barry Sanders’ single-season rushing record. That shouldn’t detract from one of the best years by a running back in FBS history.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!

Ever since the introduction of RRG back in 2011 many people have asked me questions like: “What is the track record for RRG” or “What are the trading rules for RRG”?

My answers have always been, and will continue to be, “There is no track record for RRG as there is not one set of rules”. Relative Rotation Graphs are primarily a data visualization tool that can be applied to many different markets, on many different time frames and with varying degrees of risk.

Most of the time I countered these questions with “What is the track record of a bar chart?” or “What are the trading rules for a bar chart?”

However, it is possible to come up with some “rules” or “conditions” that can be tested and repeated. Two pre-requisites for a quantitative and rules-based approach. On and off over the last few years I have been “playing around” with a few different approaches to get to something that can run objectively.

This is still very much a work in progress project but my plan for 2025 is to share the outcomes of version 1 of this approach, using the 11 SPDR sector ETFs, in this blog on a weekly basis and track the results.

I am not planning to disclose all the ins and outs of the methodology at this point in time as this may lead to an investable product at some stage. But the basis lies in combining various weekly and daily RRG data points into one metric and create a ranking for the 11 sectors which allows me to determine “The best five sectors”.

Going forward I will publish this list on a weekly basis and track the performance of a portfolio that consists of the best 5 sectors each at a 20% weight.

In the first week of 2025 this is the portfolio we start with:

XLYXLCXLFXLKXLI

Weekly RRG

Daily RRG

Price Charts

Consumer Discretionary

Consumer Discretionary is holding up well after the upward break. The area around 210 should act as support in case of a decline.

Relative strength continues strongly.

Communication Services

Communication Services is testing the former rising resistance line as support while relative strength broke out of its trading range and seems to be moving higher.

Financials

The rhythm of higher highs and higher lows on the price chart remains intact. Relative strength is now testing the upper boundary of the former trading range as support.

Technology

Technology continues to struggle with overhead resistance around the 240 area but there is no significant drop in prices as seen in other sectors. Relative strength remains within the boundaries of its trading range.

Industrials

Industrials is testing the rising support line, as long as this holds things are still ok. Looking at relative strength it is clear why this is the fifth sector. A small double top has completed and some relative weakness seems to be lying ahead.

#StayAlert and have a great weekend, –Julius

Miami Heat president Pat Riley recently made it known that the team had no intentions of trading Jimmy Butler.

Butler, however, made it known Thursday night that he very much wants to be traded.

The six-time All-Star said after Miami’s 128-115 loss to Indiana that he wants to ‘get my joy back from playing basketball. Wherever that may be. We’ll find out here pretty soon.’

Butler scored just nine points on six attempts during Thursday night’s loss. His comments came after he was asked about his role in the Heat’s offense.

Butler made it a point to say he was happy in Miami … ‘off the court.’

All things Heat: Latest Miami Heat news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

‘I want to be back to (being) somewhat dominant. I want to hoop, and I want to help this team win. Right now I’m not doing that,’ Butler said

Asked if he could get his joy back on the court with Miami, Butler replied: ‘Probably not.’

Last week, Riley issued a simple statement commenting on Butler trade rumors. ‘We usually don’t comment on rumors, but all this speculation has become a distraction to the team and is not fair to the players and coaches. Therefore, we will make it clear – We are not trading Jimmy Butler,’ Riley said in the statement.

Thursday’s events will only ramp up the speculation as the trade deadline draws near.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who unsuccessfully sought to oust House Speaker Mike Johnson from the speakership last year, said that she will vote on Friday for Johnson to retain the gavel.

Last year, the congresswoman lambasted Johnson as ‘the Uniparty Speaker,’ asserting that he ‘is exactly what is wrong with the Republican establishment’ and had ‘done nothing for conservatives and given everything to Joe Biden and Democrats.’

But she now plans to vote on Friday for Johnson to remain in the leadership post.

‘Let’s put aside our pride, let’s put aside our egos, and let’s put aside the infighting,’ she said in a video, adding that it is time for the GOP to join together and ‘do whatever it takes to make sure that we deliver the mandate that the American people told us to do.’

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who supported the effort to oust Johnson last year, has declared that he will not support the speaker’s bid to remain in the role.

‘You can pull all my fingernails out, you can shove bamboo up in them, you can start cutting off my fingers, I am not voting for Mike Johnson tomorrow,’ Massie declared during an appearance on ‘The Matt Gaetz Show.’

President-elect Donald Trump endorsed Johnson for the job earlier this week.

‘Speaker Mike Johnson is a good, hard working, religious man. He will do the right thing, and we will continue to WIN. Mike has my Complete & Total Endorsement,’ Trump declared in a Truth Social post.

Johnson’s path to victory is precarious, and could be derailed if another Republican opts to join Massie in opposing Johnson’s bid.

Fox News Senior congressional correspondent Chad Pergram has explained, ‘The winning candidate must secure an outright majority of all Members voting for a candidate by name.’

Pergram described a possible scenario in which just two Republicans could prevent Johnson from reaching the threshold necessary to win. 

‘So let’s say there are 434 members and all vote for someone by name. The magic number is 218. If Johnson gets the votes of all 219 Republicans, he wins. If Johnson gets 218 votes, he also wins. But 217? No dice,’ Pergram noted.

During an interview on Fox Business’ ‘Kudlow,’ Johnson indicated that he believes he’ll win the gavel in the first round of voting and is ‘hopeful for that.’ 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS