SpaceX just filed. The clock is ticking. 

Three frosted glass panels displaying the logos of Axon, Sabesp, and Babcock & Wilcox on a conference table.

Key Points

  • Axon Enterprise has pulled back sharply from its highs, but institutional algorithms are flagging it as the top urgency buy in the protection and safety sector as it transforms from a hardware maker into an AI-driven public safety platform.
  • Sabesp, a dominant water utility in São Paulo, is riding a wave of Brazilian privatization reforms and sits in the strongest-performing international stock market region, drawing urgent institutional capital into the pollution control sector.
  • Babcock & Wilcox ranks first in urgency buying among 115 electronics-sector stocks, pivoting its century-old power systems business toward clean energy and grid modernization just as AI-driven electricity demand explodes.
  • Special Report: ATLX: Small-Cap Miner with Big-Time Potential 

 

Even when the broader market pulls back, money doesn't stop moving. It just moves somewhere most retail investors aren't looking. While geopolitical tension and a months-long software selloff dominate headlines, institutional buying algorithms are flagging urgent demand in three overlooked corners of the market: protection and safety equipment, pollution control, and electronics. Chris Rowe of True Market Insiders tracks exactly this kind of institutional urgency—where funds are buying aggressively and prioritizing speed over price—and all three sectors have a standout name that suggests the smart money sees something the rest of the market is missing.


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Axon Enterprise: The Taser Company That Became an AI Platform

The first sector drawing heavy institutional interest is protection, safety, and equipment—a group covering everything from drones and monitoring software to defense hardware. The standout name here is Axon Enterprise (NASDAQ: AXON), the company most people still think of as Taser.

That mental model is outdated. Axon has quietly built what amounts to the operating system for modern law enforcement—body cameras, cloud storage, real-time data analytics, and now AI-generated police reports. The company isn't just selling hardware anymore. It's locking agencies into a full-cycle, software-driven public safety ecosystem, and those government contracts are notoriously sticky. Switching costs are enormous, which gives Axon a moat most investors underestimate.

The stock ran from the $200s to the $800s over the past year and a half, then pulled back to the $400s—not on bad news, but because it simply got ahead of itself. That pullback coincided with a brutal software-sector selloff that dragged down anything with a SaaS component. For a company that straddles both hardware and software, the drawdown created exactly the kind of entry point long-term investors had been waiting for.

Here's why Rowe's algorithms are flagging it now: Axon's international market is barely penetrated. Latin America and Asia represent massive addressable markets that are just beginning to open. Annual earnings growth has been consistent, and with deeper AI integration and expanding software revenue, consensus estimates may actually prove conservative. Institutional algorithms rank Axon as the number-one urgency buy among the 29 stocks in this sector. Funds own more than half the float, and the buying isn't slowing.

One more name to watch in this sector: Evolv Technology (NASDAQ: EVLV), which makes AI-powered, touchless security screening systems designed to replace traditional metal detectors at stadiums, hospitals, and schools.

 The stock pulled back from $8 to the mid-$5 range after some estimate cuts, but institutional fund ownership has increased every quarter, management still holds 11% of the company, and earnings estimates show a swing from a 19% decline to 35% growth. It's a name with real momentum beneath the surface.

Sabesp: A Boring Water Utility With a Privatization Catalyst

The second sector flashing urgent institutional demand is pollution control—not exactly the kind of group most investors go looking for. But among the nine sectors bucking the broader selloff right now, this one is showing clear buy programs from funds.

The stock leading the charge is Sabesp (NYSE: SBS), a $20 billion Brazilian company that supplies and treats water for much of São Paulo, one of the most densely populated regions in Latin America. On the surface, it's a water utility. Beneath the surface, it's one of the simplest, most overlooked money stories in the market.

Brazil is in the middle of a major push toward privatization and efficiency reforms, and Sabesp sits directly in the path of that shift. What that means in practice is better pricing power, improved profit margins, and a wave of institutional capital flowing into the stock. This is a monopoly-like asset delivering an essential service—water is the last thing consumers cut—with a government-backed reform tailwind accelerating the growth story.

There's also a macro angle that matters. International stocks as an asset class are outperforming U.S. equities right now, and Latin America is the strongest region among all eight international markets. So Sabesp is a dominant utility, in a strong sector, in the strongest international region—a combination that explains why institutions are buying with urgency. The chart reflects it: SBS has been trending higher even as much of the broader market falters, and analysts still see room to run.


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Babcock & Wilcox: A Century-Old Power Company Riding the AI Energy Boom

The third sector seeing heavy institutional urgency buying is electronics, a tech subsector ranked fifth out of 45 sectors in terms of how aggressively institutions are accumulating shares. Among the 115 stocks in this group, one name ranks number one in urgency: Babcock & Wilcox Enterprises (NYSE: BW).

This is a stock that was trading under a dollar not long ago, the kind of name most investors would dismiss at a glance. That would be a mistake. Babcock & Wilcox has been building power systems for over a century, and it's now pivoting hard into clean energy, waste-to-energy conversion, and grid modernization—exactly the areas where capital is flooding in as AI data centers, electrification, and grid strain drive unprecedented power demand.

According to Rowe, the company just recently turned profitable, and the trajectory from there is steep: year-over-year quarterly earnings estimates show a progression from a 73% decline to projected growth of 116%, 219%, and ultimately 356%. Sales growth estimates are equally attractive. Over the past year, the number of institutional funds holding BW jumped from 53 to 68, and the urgency algorithm continues to flag the stock at the top of the sector week after week.

The risk is obvious—this is still a small-cap name trading around $14, and it carries the volatility that comes with that territory. The upside is that Babcock & Wilcox has legacy credibility, a real pivot into the center of a multi-decade energy infrastructure rebuild, and institutional momentum that's accelerating rather than fading.

What Urgency Buying Really Signals

The common thread across all three stocks is institutional behavior that prioritizes speed over price. When funds are buying urgently, they're not waiting for a dip. They're trying to build positions before the rest of the market catches on. That's the signal worth paying attention to—not because it guarantees returns, but because it reveals where conviction is strongest while most investors are still looking the other way. In a market full of noise, following the urgency may be the clearest signal of all.

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