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Latest Insights on GGR

The Fed Kills Momentum Trade The Fed Kills the Momentum Trade January 28, 2022 by Ted Bauman Big Picture. Big Profits., Economy, Investing In June 2020, Barstool Sports founder and wannabe investor Dave Portnoy infamously said that “stocks only go up.” In 2022? Sorry Dave. In today's video, Ted Bauman walks us through the consequences of the Fed's recent hawkish turn. Even after big declines since the beginning of the year, there's plenty of overvaluation in the market still. Ted reviews the history of stock performance in Fed tightening cycles, which is better than you might imagine. But there's one big fear hovering over the market … what if the Fed is tightening into a downturn? That would be bad and not just for momentum stocks.
3 Tips to Ease the Portfolio Pain 3 Tips to Ease the Portfolio Pain January 26, 2022 by Chris Cimorelli Investing, Trading Strategies, True Options Masters Like many other traders right now, Chris' portfolio is not faring well. It's down over six figures — but he has a plan to get his money back.
Unusual Options Activity: How This Insider Made $500k on PTON Unusual Options Activity: How This Insider Made $500k on PTON January 24, 2022 by Chad Shoop Trading Strategies, True Options Masters, Unusual Options Activity When a trader bet nearly $100k that PTON would crash 30% in a month, it seemed crazy... until it landed them $500k.
Mean Reversion: The Simplest Strategy for Sell-Offs Mean Reversion: The Simplest Strategy for Sell-Offs January 11, 2022 by Michael Carr Investing, Trading Strategies, True Options Masters Other traders may panic-sell or go bargain hunting — but Mike Carr uses this mean reversion strategy to profit from a sell-off.
Prepare for the Reversal of the Perpetual Motion Machine Prepare for the Reversal of the Perpetual Motion Machine January 3, 2022 by Ted Bauman Big Picture. Big Profits., Economy, Investing “Active managers” are hedge and mutual funds that constantly trade in and out of stocks to outperform the market. The opposite of active management is (you guessed it!) passive management, also known as indexing. An index fund holds stocks from a specific segment of the market, or index. Each stock is held in exact proportion to its weight in that index. The most common form of indexing is exchange-traded funds (ETFs). If you want to invest in the S&P 500, for example, you buy the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE: SPY). As the index performs, so the fund performs. If active managers are supposed to be so good, why do they keep underperforming the market and passive index funds? And what could change that? The answer will surprise you…

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