When the discounter is winning, it's telling you two things at once — one good for Dollar General, one worth watching about the American budget. A balanced book should own both sides of that.

Dollar General (DG) reported strong results this week and raised its outlook for the rest of the year, and the stock popped 8.2% to around $22.63. Management's own explanation for the strength: “value-seeking consumers” — shoppers trading down to make a paycheck stretch further. That's a genuinely double-edged signal. It's terrific for Dollar General, and it's a quiet caution flag about how the everyday American household is actually doing. Both can be true at the same time.
We don't think you have to pick which story is right. A well-built portfolio should hold something that does well in each case. That's the whole idea behind owning a discounter alongside a basket of expensive AI chips.
Think of it as a barbell. On one end, our chip and power names (Nvidia, Broadcom, GE Vernova) carry the book if the melt-up keeps going. On the other end, a defensive discounter with pricing power and a freshly raised forecast is exactly the ballast you want if the consumer wobbles and the air comes out of the priciest end of the market.
Dollar General also does two un-flashy things we value: it pays a dividend, and it trades at a far more forgiving valuation than anything with “AI” in the pitch. In a market making records on nine straight up days, a reasonably priced cash generator is a useful thing to own.
We added Dollar General (DG) to the Aggressive Growth tactical tiers and the Dividend Income model at a ~1.5% weight. It's a deliberate counterweight: if the AI trade stumbles, this is one of the names we'd expect to hold up — and it pays us to wait.
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