Tomorrow, you could begin doubling your account every single month starting with one letter.
The letter will come from a 20-year trading professional named Ian Cooper. He says, “In 2017, following my trades you would be doubling even tripling your account some months. Let me show you how.”
He will show you exactly what to do... and he’ll give you the blueprint for just $1.
Top Stocks for Hurricane Season 2020
by Ian Cooper
The 2020 hurricane season has been very active.
And it’s far from over.
According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the season will be “extremely active” with 19 to 25 potential storms. "This year, we expect more, stronger and longer-lived storms than average, and our predicted ACE range extends well above NOAA's threshold for an extremely active season," NOAA said, as quoted by CNN.
“So far, Cristobal, Danielle, Edouard, Fay, Gonzalo, Hanna, Isaias, Josephine and Kyle have set records for being the earliest named Atlantic storms of their respective place in the alphabet. Only Hanna and Isaias have developed into hurricanes. Isaias weakened into a tropical storm before it hit the northeastern US.,” says the New York Post.
With hurricanes, there are also plenty of stock opportunities to consider.
Some companies see a jump in costs as they repair businesses. Other companies generate more business as they supply the products and services needed in the rebuilding effort.
Generac Holdings (GNCR)
GNRC is an $11.7 billion leader in power generation equipment and other light-motor equipment for residential and industrial customers. The company is the market leader in home standby generators and the leading global manufacturer of mobile generators for industrial use. Beyond the physical damage to homes and businesses, one of the biggest inconveniences of a powerful storm is electrical outages.
Lee Gettess is a top trader who is excited to bring you his video newsletter. Each week, Lee will share his predictions on what he anticipates from the bond and S&P markets.
A word that consistently gets thrown around by traders is the "edge," and the notion of traders possessing it. Once an edge is attained, it is assumed that vast riches accompany this acquisition.
The reality is much different. The very definition of an edge means that one has found an unpopulated niche. This is fleeting at best. The nature of the market is to discover, expose, and then populate every possible working niche until it is completely saturated. This idea lends itself to the notion of capacity, threshold, and most importantly…
In every endeavor, there is a boom, bust, rebirth, and saturation cycle. Day trading is no different. The 1998 to 2000 era of Internet mania was the day trading boom cycle, the good old days. Electronic trading had gone mainstream and every other person dreamed of being a day trader. Those were the days of the 30-point intraday ranges on AMZN, BRCM, JDSU, and so forth. It was absolutely an amazing time. Stocks made phenomenal moves in quarter- to half-point increments. The fraction based pricing made for a lot of fat profits for scalpers, brokers, and market makers alike.
The bear market didn’t kill day trading. It was the decimalization system that killed day trading, along with the pattern day trading rule, which is total BS.
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