The hardest thing to do right now is anything. Stocks at all-time highs. Valuations stretched. Cash paying less than inflation. Nobody wants to chase. Nobody wants to miss out.
There’s a third path. The stocks Wall Street has already given up on — beaten down, written off, abandoned — and already delivering some of the biggest gains of the year. One stock I named in my Personal Finance research was trading below $40 a share when Wall Street wrote it off as a “lost decade.” Today it trades near $390 — a return of more than 800% in twelve months, without options or leverage. I called the turn before Wall Street caught up.
On this free Halftime Report, I’ll show you every comeback stock I named for 2026 — by name, with the actual return — plus the three-step framework behind them, and three brand-new picks for the back half of the year. One pick is yours, free. No subscription required.
The exact technical signals Jim Pearce looks for before he moves a beaten-down stock from his watch list to his buy list. The same indicators he uses live during the Halftime Report.
A short personal video from Jim — what to expect on the call, what he’ll be covering, and the one thing he wants you to bring with you when you log in.
Small- and mid-cap comeback stocks bought below sector-peer valuations — held until Wall Street recognizes the recovery.
Cash flow machines — businesses with predictable free cash flow and capital-return discipline, built to pay you while you wait.
International and sector funds — broad exposure with quarterly rotation guidance from Jim’s macro framework.

Jim Pearce has spent more than three decades managing money, writing about markets, and helping individual investors navigate complex cycles. His weekly “Hot Takes” inside Personal Finance interpret every major economic data print, and his three managed portfolios — Growth, Income, and Fund — give subscribers a complete framework for compounding through any market environment.
His 2026 Comeback Stocks call surfaced names trading at single-digit price-to-earnings ratios that have since returned more than 800% — months before Wall Street caught up. The Halftime Report is his honest accounting of those calls, by name, and his framework for what comes next.