Barron's Streetwise - The Cheapest Stocks in America
Episode Date: April 10, 2026Jack screens the S&P 500 for its 10 lowest P/E stocks — a group that's beaten the market by 300 points over a decade. Also: fireballs, insect dye, and Canadian Froot Loops. Learn more about your ad... choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, when I sell my business, I want the best tax and investment advice.
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I might have chemical burns on my tongue.
Let's just start there.
Don't be alarm, Jackson.
Oh, no.
This is the Barron Streetwise podcast.
I'm Jack Howe listening in our audio producer Jackson Cantrell.
This is a fireball situation.
And as you know, I've developed a little bit of a problem with the fireballs.
And to make this clear, this isn't the little bottles that they sell at the gas station.
This is the candy.
That's right.
That's an important thing to lay down right from the beginning.
Yeah.
No, a colleague brought in a big canister of the candies and I started popping like a couple of day and I'm up to, let's say five.
I'm not, after five, I'm not counting.
And you can get a little bit numb after a while.
So I was looking up whether, like I looked up, can you have too many fireballs?
And there's something, the heat comes from something called capsaican.
I might not be pronounced that right.
Kepsaicin, I think.
You went on to WebMD about your fireball.
habit.
So I went to the emergency room.
No, yeah, I just on the internet and comes from peppers.
And that's where the heat comes from.
And it said, yeah, you know, sometimes you have to, you might have to take a break.
Okay, nice.
So I took a day off, but I'm back.
This episode is not just about fireballs, although I am going to talk about a fireball related
stock recommendation that comes from Wall Street.
Let's say a food coloring related recommendation.
Mostly, we're going to talk after that about the 10 cheapest stocks in the S&P 500.
Wait, I thought you just said stocks were, we did that stocks are expensive last week.
That's not inconsistent, right?
I said the market is more expensive than it looks, and I gave you some reasons.
But these are the stocks that are the cheapest in the market.
And really, when I say the cheapest, it's a screen I ran for price earnings ratios,
and that's not the be-all and all of whether a stock is cheap.
I like to look once in a while for the things that are the most broken in the stock market and try to figure out why they're broken and whether they're going to stay broken.
And I think some of the returns we're going to talk about might surprise you.
Just as a teaser, the cheapest on the list is up more than 500% over the past year.
I know what you're thinking. Doesn't that mean it's no longer in the cheap category?
Well, no, it doesn't mean that.
You'll be surprised, like I said.
Okay, Sensian Technologies, Sensient Technologies.
The ticker there is SXT.
UBS initiated coverage of that company and predicted 30% upside for stockholders.
This is a small cap company.
The past decades' returns have been pretty disappointing,
but there's this sweeping movement afoot now to replace artificial dyes and foods with natural ones.
And there is good money to me.
in that. What happens is the natural stuff isn't as vibrant as the artificial stuff,
so it takes eight to ten times as much of it to do the job. And Sensient is poised the cash in on
that new volume. Yeah, I guess their options are either swap out the dye and use more of it,
or we end up with a great Bayshining of all of our... Because you take out the vibrant,
right. Well, it's funny you say that because if you've ever seen a box of fruit,
Loops spelled F-R-O-O-T, fruit loops, but not here in the U.S. in Canada.
And they show sometimes pictures side by side with a bowl of American fruit loops and Canadian.
And the Canadian ones, they've gotten rid of the artificial colors up there, and they look like they're the color of, you know those terra chips where the chips are made, the chips are made from like sweet potatoes?
Yeah.
They look like vegetables.
And they should change the name to root vegetable loops.
because that's what it looks like.
And that might fly in Canada,
but I don't think you're going to be able to sell
earthy-looking breakfast cereal like that in the U.S.
So the challenge for manufacturers is
you've got to figure out a way to do this
and still keep your food popping
for the people who like those bright colors.
But we're getting ahead of ourselves.
The sweet heat marbles that have stolen my free will,
my fireballs,
they contain something called red number,
40. I'm sure we've all seen that. And I have heard that that could be doing meaningful harm,
and I've heard that it's doing no harm at all. People are divided on the batter. Same goes for
yellow number five. They're both made from petroleum. They're both approved in the U.S. for food
and drugs and cosmetics. In Europe, natural colorants have already taken over 80% of the market,
but in the U.S., the natural stuff is only 30% of the market, but it's rising. This topic is a
passionate one for many people. I wouldn't describe myself as a natural foods guy. My wife
likes to stock our kitchen with raw almond butter and artisan orange peel marmalade and flowerless
sprouted grain bread. And I recently felt like making a PBNJ and I saw all of that stuff.
And then I ran out to the store for Jiff and Smuckers and Wonder. You should have just cut out the
middleman and got an encrustable. That's right. You ever see someone eat it?
uncrustable while leaving the crust of the uncrustable behind? Because that's a thing. That's
happening out there. Anyhow, my point here is that I'm a bad person. In our health and human
services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., he's made phasing out Red 40 and Yellow 5 a central
part of the Make America Healthy Again movement. I think there's momentum for that. It's always
hard to pin these things down because the current administration came out with something in support
of another controversial food chain chemical, one that's found in Roundup weed killer.
I don't have a position on either of these things. Sometimes I try to predict which way the
political winds will blow, but I'm not very good at it. But for years I've heard parents say
that foods with artificial dyes make their kids hyperactive. And I believe these parents. And in
Europe, products with these dyes have to carry warning labels to that effect.
I've seen claims of even more worrisome health effects than that.
I have no idea.
There is a totally different colorant, unrelated to Red 40.
It's called Red No. 3.
It's made from iodine, not petroleum.
And that was banned for some uses starting in 1990, due to studies that linked very high doses to thyroid tumors and rats.
What matters most for our purposes here is what shoppers want, and enough of them are demanding
cleaner ingredients that food companies are responding. Pepsi, Nestle, J.M. Smucker, Hershey,
Kraft Heinz, General Mills, Kellogg. These companies have announced plans to phase out
artificial colorants, mostly by the end of this year and next year. Stores like Walmart and Target
are cracking down too. And California and West Virginia are banning artificial colors
and school meals. You can't just flip a switch on this stuff if you're a food company.
As we were saying, you don't want your breakfast cereal to come out looking too
earthy and dull. You also don't want it tasting like veggies if it's supposed to taste like
fruit. You have to find colorants that won't hurt your sales or fade.
Although I'm a fan of Beats, so I'm not sure I'd mind.
So anyone out there who wants to do beet loops? Well, we'll come to Beats in a moment.
Beats play a pivotal role here. If you're going to make a big change like this or these
massive food companies, you have to have colorant dealers whose supply chains can respond quickly
to what you want. And that brings this to Sension. It's a vertically integrated company down
to proprietary crop breeding. That gives it an advantage. The company started as a whiskey and
gin dealer more than 140 years ago. During Prohibition, it leaned heavily on selling its yeast.
And today it sells mostly flavors and colors for food, cosmetics, and drugs. Back in 2000, it
change its name from Universal Foods. It is not a fast-growing company, at least not up until now.
In recent years, it's been growing sales by about 3% a year on average, but UBS reckons it'll
achieve 10% yearly sales growth over the next five years, mostly from the shift to natural
colorants. This year, sales are pegged at $1.7 billion, up 8% from last year.
Cension has about $100 million in exposure to artificial colorant sales.
but it figures it can convert that to 10 times as much in natural colorant sales.
Shares recently traded at 25 times this year's earnings forecast.
You mentioned beats, Jackson.
It turns out Sensient has a product called Super Red
that can produce these really vivid shades of red.
That might be something for my fireballs.
And that's made using the company's proprietary Uber Beat technology.
That word is taken.
Uber beat. Don't try to use that.
Every idea I have has already been taken.
That's too bad.
There is another natural red that I read about in the company's site called Carmine.
Have you ever heard of that? Carmine.
I have not.
Well, we're going to end this bit on a fun fact that Carmine has been around for ages.
In fact, the British, the red coats used it for their uniforms during the American Revolution.
And it's still used widely today, including in foods.
my only hesitation about Carmine and Jackson, you know me.
I try not to be fussy.
It turns out that it's made from something called,
and again, I hope I'm pronouncing this right,
cockaniel insects.
Wow.
The official name for the entomologists out there is dactylopius cacus.
These are apparently tiny, scaly sap suckers that like to live on prickly pear cacti.
And the cacti are grown for that purpose in Mexico and Peru.
and chili, and the cockaniels are collected by hand, and then they're dried and crushed into
powder so that their carminic acid can be extracted for dye. And Sensing says that Carmine
could be the new Red 3 or Red 40. Oh my gosh. I'll give you a quote. You're saying your
mouth is watering? No, no. I'm just seen from vegetable to bug fruit loops. Now that's cool.
that might get kids interested.
Well, as the company's senior technical director explains in an article, quote,
at one point, the insect source of Cocheneo was under some scrutiny.
But lately, insects are an emerging food trend.
Not in this household.
I guess I'll leave you.
I guess there's all kinds of possibilities for my fireballs.
I'm stocking up with the red 40 ones, but let's see what happens down the road.
By the way, the atomic fireballs have been discreet.
continued by the manufacturer. Did you know that? That's a not fun fact, okay? Sorry to end on a down
note. Stock up while you can, folks. Was it the red dye? I don't think it's the red dye. I think it
might be just lack of popularity. I don't, I don't see anyone else out there carrying around a big
bag of fireballs. It's just me, but I'm going to send you a picture, Jack, just because it's,
it's something to do with what we're talking about. It's from my fourth grade birthday. Oh, man,
Look at what is this?
What is this?
How old are you in this picture?
Isn't that crazy?
I must have just turned 10.
I guess it's in fourth grade.
And we'd done the Revolutionary War unit.
Oh, my Lord.
Look at your uniform.
You're in full.
You're a red coat.
I mean, you got everything.
This is such a professional looking.
Got the wig, the tricorn hat, and boots that are probably five sizes too big.
And the slim.
And you dressed as one of the red coats?
I don't know why, but yeah, apparently.
I know why.
I know why.
I got to think, maybe I shouldn't put this out there.
I mean, they had better uniforms, right?
They were just flashier.
I mean, they were out there with those bold red uniforms.
I mean, that's a look.
I don't know if it's what you want in the woods.
I don't think that's necessarily.
Yeah, take their side on fashion only.
Where do you get a uniform like this?
Where did you get it?
Yeah, this was a,
costume shop near Burbank.
Right. And you went in and you said to the fellow at the counter,
Hey, Mr. I'd like to be a revolutionary war soldier.
And he said, I see young man.
You'd like to look like an American patriot.
And you said, not exactly.
Guess again.
Guess again.
All right.
That brings us to the 10 cheapest stocks in the S&P 500.
Let's do a couple of them now.
Then we'll take a break.
Then we'll come back with the rest.
I'll tell you two things right off the top.
Number one, this is not, I repeat, not a sound investment strategy.
This is not me saying, hey, buy these 10 cheapest stocks in the S&P 500.
They must be a great deal.
You can't just do that.
It's an overly simplistic approach.
But the second thing I'll tell you is it's worked pretty darn well recently.
If you had pulled up the 10 lowest PE stocks a year ago and put equal dollar amounts in each,
you'd have made 70% with dividends,
you'd have beaten the SEP 500 by 49 points.
If you had done it two years ago,
you'd have outperformed by nine points.
Five years ago, you were ahead by 73 points.
And if you did this 10 years ago,
you beat the market by more than 300 points.
That's nuts.
I think it also has to be a fluke.
I think the P.E is a pretty simplistic signal of value.
and the cheapest stocks in the market aren't always or aren't usually the best stocks.
I'll come in a little while to why the cheapest stocks have done so well.
But let me start with the cheapest one on the list.
And really, of course, when I say cheap, I just mean lowest PE.
I can't tell you whether this stock is going higher from here.
The stock is Micron Technology and they make memory and it's up 520% in a year.
and it trades at 4.4 times earnings.
That compares with just over 20 times earnings for the S&P 500.
How can a stock that's up 520% a year still trade at 4.4 times earnings?
It must have traded at 0.9 times earnings last year.
Well, you would think so.
What's actually happened is you can get a low P.E ratio by having either a low P or a high E,
or both at the same time.
But you can also have a rising P with an E that's just rising a whole lot faster.
And that's what's happening in this case.
Did that make sense, Jackson?
I didn't mean to bring fractions.
That fractions make people angry.
Denominator is growing faster than the numerator.
You're making them angrier.
No one likes the word denominator.
Let me show you what I mean.
Memory, of course, is in fierce demand for AI.
data centers, and that's led to shortages and soaring prices. And so Micron is a company that never
earned more than $12 a share. The highest year for earnings was back in, I believe, 2018, and it was
$11 in change. But earnings for this fiscal year, which runs through August, they're pegged at
$56 in change. And for next year, $93 in change. And that compares with just over $8 last year.
So earnings are just multiplying rapidly for this company because of the increased demand and the high prices.
And if we were willing to pay anything more than $0 for music royalties, we'd start playing lion eyes from the Eagles.
Because that's basically the approach I think investors are taken to this stock.
They see the earnings.
They see that the stock looks cheap, but they say, my eyes deceive me.
Or at least, I have seen enough semiconductor boom.
in the past that fizzled, I'm not going to be fooled by this one.
I'm not going to jump in with this stock up 500%,
so the stock stays at four times earnings.
But then gradually investors come around,
and the stock keeps climbing.
I don't know whether that will continue.
And I don't think that whole thing would make a very good song.
It's going to be a tough rhyming job.
You can't hide your lion eyes from our 2.8 terabyte per second,
massive data throughput.
Now, see, throughput is a tough one.
That in semiconductors.
So that's micron stock.
It's basically climbing, if not a wall of worry, a wall of disbelief, a wall of distrust.
A wall of, I ain't going to be the last person paying these prices for micron stock just before the whole AI theme collapses.
But of course, there are many sensible people arguing quite reasonably that this AI spending spree has much longer to run.
So we'll see.
By the way, all this AI spending is.
has done something similar to shares of a hard drive maker called Western Digital.
You need a lot of hard drive storage in those AI data centers.
This stock is not on the lowest PE list, but it was on it a decade ago,
and since then it has returned more than a thousand percent.
That's one reason why I think the low P.E.ers have done so well over the past decade.
Another reason is a company called United Rentals.
That was on the list is no longer on the list.
it has cashed in on a trend toward companies borrowing rather than buying construction equipment.
Let me tell you one more stock that is on the list and a couple that have graduated off of the list.
We've talked about all these names recently.
General Motors, that's 6.2 times earnings, and it is no stranger to the lowest PE list.
But we should point out, that stock has also returned 68% over the past year and 127% over the past
three years. It has easily beaten the market. GM is generating a lot of cash by focusing on
pricey trucks and sport utility vehicles. Demand for those is pretty solid. I know vehicles have gotten
so expensive. They're difficult to afford, but there's been this split that we've seen in a lot of
parts of the economy. Higher income folks are still buying, and car companies are catering to them,
and that's keeping their costs down and their margins up. So maybe GM will even be able to gain
its way off of this list at some point. That's what's happened to Delta Airlines and United Airlines.
We talked about them recently. They would have easily made a list of the 10 lowest PE stocks in the
S&P 500 a decade ago. Even with this recent price spike for jet fuel, those two companies are
generating tons of cash. In fact, if this proves a difficult period for weaker airlines,
it might actually benefit those two in the long run. Anyhow, that's two companies down, eight to
but we're going to tear through those eight.
What if we take a quick break here, Jackson?
You go see if that red coat uniform still fits, and we'll be right back.
I wonder if my parents still have that.
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productivity and innovation. Learn what's driving Canada's productivity decline and discover actionable
solutions to reverse it. Welcome back. We're not just talking about cheap stocks. We're talking about
the cheapest stocks, or at least the lowest PE stocks in the S&P 500. I screen for those every once
and a while and mostly an act of morbid curiosity, although a bunch of them have done well lately,
especially some ones from the list in recent years. There have been some structural changes that have
gone on in autos and airlines and some of these formerly humble semiconductor pockets like
memory and hard drives. Let's pick up with our list. I'm going to go through most of these quickly.
I don't have much to say about most of them. Have you heard of Global Payments or FISA
Global Payments is 4.7 times earnings and FI serve is seven times earnings and they do pretty
much the same thing. They're part of Fintech, which is supposed to be exciting, but they're in the
least exciting part of it, which is processing card payments for merchants. These companies are
heavily indebted, but they're also generating plenty of free cash. They've done some dealmaking in the
past. I have to believe that the goal now is to use that free cash to pay down the debt going forward.
Based on the valuations, investors don't seem super jazzed about this line of work. We'll see how it
goes for them. There are two insurance companies that made the list Prudential, Financial,
and a reinsurer called Everest Group, Prudential's 6.9 times earnings.
Everest is 6.3 times earnings.
You have to be careful about judging insurance companies by price to earnings ratios.
It's more common to judge them by price to book value ratios.
Earnings for them can be lumpy.
Is that because of natural disasters or the patterns of paying out reinsurance or is that for other reasons?
Sometimes they have to take big charges because of stuff like that.
Sometimes they release excess money into earnings.
Generally, insurance companies make money two ways.
They sell coverage for something, which means that their goal is to charge you more
than they're going to end up paying out on average.
But of course, there's often a big time difference between when you pay them and when they pay you.
So the second way they make money is by taking that float of funds that are available to them
and investing it. So their prosperity can be sensitive to things like changes in interest rates and
how well investment markets are doing. Also, how competitive their particular industry is,
whether there are rivals that are pricing low in order to gain market share. Anyhow,
the only thing I'll point out about those is that Prudential has by far the highest dividend
yield on the list, 5.8%. I do want to mention cable companies. Charter Communications is on the list,
5.2 times earnings. We know the cable companies have been losing pay TV customers to streaming.
That's been going on for years. The thought initially was that's okay. They don't mind that so much
because as they lose pay TV customers, they're going to keep broadband cable customers. People who are
paying the cable company for their fast internet service at home. That can actually be a higher margin
business for cable companies. When you buy pay TV service, the cable company has to then pay the
TV networks to include them. But when you're buying broadband, more of that money goes to the cable
company. However, telecom loves this business too and is making inroads with fiber optic service,
which is faster than coaxial service. What happened was the phone companies went through this
massive spending period to upgrade their networks for 5G. They were also competing fiercely on price.
Both of those have subsided. They're not spending as much. They're not competing quite as fiercely.
cash flow in that business is great, and that's leaving a lot of money to be put to work on
something, and they have decided that the best something is fiber optic broadband, and so they're
rapidly expanding their networks, and they're able to bundle that service with their wireless
service, and that makes wireless stickier, meaning you might be willing to jump from company
to company with your cell phone service, but you're probably going to stick with a company
that's providing your broadband for a while. You probably don't think about that company that much,
And if you have the two on a bundle with a discount, you might be more likely to stay with the same company for wireless for longer.
So the phone companies really like that business.
And that means the cable companies are under fire now for basically both of the ways they make a living.
And that's got investors pretty pessimistic about those shares.
Have you heard of Gen Digital?
That's 6.8 times earnings.
That's a mashup of two players in home cybersecurity.
The companies are a vast and something called Norton LifeLock.
This company is growing, but it's also heavily indebted.
There was a big run-up over the past decade for shares of enterprise cyber security giants
like Palo Alto Networks and CrowdStrike.
Gen Digital did not participate in that, but it has participated in much of the recent
downside for these stocks on AI disruption fears.
Did you hear about the latest AI cybersecurity news from the United,
news from this week.
Anthropic?
Yes, from Anthropic.
What a story in Barron's.
You explain it while I pop in this fireball.
Anthropics developing this new model called Mythos.
And in the development, they decided to delay its release because it was finding a very dangerous
cybersecurity bugs and software that's been out for 20 years, 25 years, like Linux, for
example. And now they're so worried about releasing it to the public that they've given it to
CrowdStrike and Palo Alto networks as well as Amazon and Apple to test out before they release.
That's the kind of, let me take my fireball out. Hold on. That's the kind of thing that's going on in
this industry. Like investors are having a hard time figuring out whether AI helps or hurts.
And maybe it does both, right? Yeah, exactly. The question there is, hey, if these AI models are
finding these security vulnerabilities, maybe your security system is just asking your
latest version of Anthropic to find all your vulnerabilities and fix them for you.
But of course, the argument from the cybersecurity companies will be we're on top of it.
We're using AI to get even better.
Next up on the list is a company called AES, and we can cross it off the list immediately.
It's five times earnings.
It's a debt-heavy utility, but it also recently agreed to a buyout by BlackRock's
global infrastructure partners and other investors.
So if my count is correct, that's number nine.
That leaves one more left.
There is just one last stock left.
And it is Viatris.
I don't know if we've ever talked about this stock.
I've written about it in the past.
I think I've heard is the EpiPen company, right?
They've changed their name.
As I wrote in Barron's, this company, it began trading in November 2020.
it might as well have been named Hate Sponge Incorporated because I think, I mean, maybe it's just me.
I think this was one of the most loathed companies out there.
There was a drug company called Mylan, and they were best known for buying, not creating, but buying EpiPen.
Do we all know what that is?
It's a life-saving injector for severe allergic reactions.
And I think it's commonly associated with, like, you know, kids who have a nut allergy and they have a reaction and their life's in jeopardy and you give them this pen and they can live.
Well, Mylan bought this pen and then multiplied the price sevenfold in under a decade.
Now, I mean, I'm all for capitalism, but, you know, that's the kind of thing that doesn't sit well with, I mean, picture the parents out there.
Of course, you don't wait until you need this thing to buy it.
So if you're a parent of a kid who has allergies, you have to stock these things.
And they expire.
There's a shelf life.
So, you know, and they sell them in two packs.
So at one point, it was, you know, six or $700 for a two pack.
And you have to buy them every so often because you don't want to have one past expiration.
And then even parents whose young children don't have allergies read, well, sometimes you have one of these reactions for the first time.
And you didn't know your kid was allergic.
So you better have these pens on hand anyhow.
I'm just saying that it felt like kind of a burden to these people who had to buy these things.
Okay, so that was the old company, Milan.
So what they did was they merged that together with part of Pfizer, probably was, should I call it the ugliest,
the least exciting part of Pfizer at the time, which was called Upjohn.
And Upjohn had these former blockbuster drugs that were now off patent.
they were for things like cholesterol and impotence and arthritis and depression.
And they were generating tons of cash.
So they merged that business together with Mylan.
And the idea was to use all this free cash flow to produce new and growing drugs.
And I think a side benefit was you get a company with a new name and maybe over time people
forget about the whole Epipan price hike thing.
And it doesn't help their cause me reminding you here.
But I think their strategy is, I'm not.
not going to say it's working, but I certainly don't feel anywhere near as disgusted over Viatris
as I once did over Mylan. And I noticed that if you look at consensus estimates on Wall Street,
Viatrice's earnings per share are expected to grow slightly this year for the first time since the merger back in
2020. The estimates have been slipping a little bit, so let's see if that actually happens. So maybe
Viatris will one day be able to work its way off the cheapest of the cheapies list, too.
If you had to buy one of these stocks, which one would it be?
Now, you're asking this because you know that my instincts on this sort of thing are not good.
And so you're going to use this as a contrarian indicator. Have I got that right?
But think about the clicks. The picks get the clicks.
Don't tell me that that's something that people say.
That's what I'm saying.
right now. I mean, I do like that big giant dividend on Prudential. With Micron, the thing to do is to jump
into the price momentum, but I'm always too chicken for a thing like that. That global payments,
that's, that's like almost boring enough to work. But I like the idea of Viatris going from
shrinking earnings to growing earnings, even if it looks like meager growth to begin with. Maybe that's
something that investors will reward it for. That seems like the safest pick. The safest pick,
from a bunch of picks that are definitely not safe.
Okay, so don't, and this, by the way, I'm not picking it, all right?
Don't run out and put Little Tim or Susie's college fund in Viatris because you heard it on a podcast,
but you could look into it on your own if you like.
What about you, Jackson?
Is there one of these that appeals to you or you don't like any of them?
I like, I like cable.
Yeah, just because it's, it sounds like such a bad idea on the tin that it's got to be good.
I'll say I miss cable.
I miss all those shows.
I don't watch enough of those.
You like cable.
I was going to say, I don't think I've ever heard those three words together like that.
How would you describe a show like Storage Wars and Ice Road Truckers and that?
I miss watching those.
I think I know what you mean.
Well, those are reality shows, right?
But not like the Kardashian kind of ones.
Those are like, like one of my favorites was a bunch of people with beards.
Well, the men had beards.
And they were in Maine and they were restoring cabins.
And the title is something.
like that main cabin people you know and as i've mentioned before i like the ones with all the
fishermen the wicked tuna i was a big wicked tuna guy for a long time did you know there's a wicked
tuna video game have i no way told you that yet oh yeah spotted it at a um what's the place
where they have the restaurant the uh the uh the the d and b something d and b day david d buster
dave and busters d'n buster's yeah i was thinking done and brad street that's a that's a wall street
brand from a thousand years ago.
That's a much less fun bar.
There's a wicked tuna video game and it's got all my favorite wicked tuna fishermen like
saying their things in the game.
I played it with my daughter.
She beat me.
Well, I'm long wicked tuna.
And that is my hottest tip of this week's episode.
Get yourself around a wicked tuna over at Dave and Busters before, you know, while the getting's
good.
And when I'm giving fishing video game recommendations, that means it's,
It's time to wrap up.
So thank you all for listening.
Jackson Cantrell is our producer.
If you have a question you'd like played and answered on the podcast, go ahead and send
it in.
It could be in a future episode.
Just use the voice memo app on your phone.
Send it to jack.
dot how.
That's H-O-U-G-H at Barrens.com.
You can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcast, Spotify, wherever you listen.
And if you listen on Apple, you can write us a review.
Jackson, want you fire up your AI jukebox and play us out with, let's say, an Eagle-style
semiconductor song.
and we'll see you all next week.
Denominator growing faster than you do think.
520 up and still it's dirt cheap.
The old timers remember when the chips came down
you can short any time you like,
but you can never leave.
Welcome to the Hotel, My Crown, California.
Such a lovely price, such a lovely nice,
plenty of room at Hotel, Micron, California.
What a nice surprise, can't hide your lion eyes.
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