JPMorgan Picks Software Stocks Breaking Out of AI-Driven SaaSpocalypse

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I’m ready to turn the article into an SEO-optimized blog post, but right now, I don’t have the article’s body. The text you sent is just a note about the CNBC piece missing its main content.

Without the actual details, I can’t summarize or analyze much. To deliver a 600-word post with the requested HTML formatting—no H1, using h2/h3, and the specified tags—I’ll need more info.

Here’s what would help:
– Paste the full article text.
– Or, share the key points, data, and quotes you want highlighted.
– Or, just give me a summary of the article’s focus. Who or what’s involved, when and where it happened, why it matters—plus any SEO keywords you want to target.

Once I have that, I’ll jump in. I’ll start with a paragraph explaining what the article covers.

I’ll use

and <

Headers with a Couple of Sentences Between Them

You’ll want to use h3 headers for your main sections. This keeps things organized and visually clear.

Try to keep your paragraphs short—ideally just one or two sentences. That way, folks don’t get overwhelmed by a wall of text.

Format your paragraphs with <p></p>. Bold text with <b></b>.

For lists, go with <li></li>. If you need to emphasize something, toss in some <i></i> tags.

Aim for a total length of about 600 words. It’s long enough to dig into your topic, but not so long that you lose people.

Skip the H1 header since you’ve already got a title in place. That’s usually the way to go for a blog post under a scientific organization’s banner.

If you’d rather, I can draft a placeholder SEO post outline for you right now. Maybe something about the headaches of accessing and summarizing online news content?

Later, you can swap that out for the real article once you’ve pasted it in.

Just let me know which option sounds better. If you’ve got a working title—even if it’s not final—send it over, and I’ll format everything to match.

 
Here is the source article for this story: Some software stocks are breaking out of the AI-driven ‘SaaSpocalypse.’ JPMorgan likes these names

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