You can focus on being smart. Or making money. These are NOT the same thing. David Prince of T3 Live’s Inner Circle explains.
Continue Reading -->David Prince of T3 Live’s Inner Circle updates us on his trading strategy into June of 2024. David goes over: How to view the underperformance if IWM vs. SPY Why options buyers could be disappointed by Dell’s (DELL) earnings on May 30 Why Dell outperformed momentum favorite Super Micro (SMCI) How he played tricky solar name Enphase Energy (ENPH) And More!
Continue Reading -->The weight-loss drug market is booming as you see with $LLY and $NVO.@epictrades1 explains why $VKTX is one to watch, and why it could be taken over. ⭕️ https://t.co/XT0fy7n48t to join David pic.twitter.com/vZ3Z4rhbcY — T3 Live (@t3live) May 1, 2024 David Prince has been a long-term bull on Viking Therapeutics (VKNG) for some time as a prime play in the weight loss drug space, which has been dominated by Eli Lilly (LLY) and Novo Nordisk (NVO). In this video from May 1, David explains why the company might be taken over in the future by a larger company like Pfizer (PFE), Merck (MRK), or Bristol-Myers (BMY)
Continue Reading -->The FTX collapse and associated mess in the crypto market isn’t the first disaster of its kind. And it won’t be the last. Richard Feynman said “The first principle is that you must not fool yourself—and you are the easiest person to fool.” I tell my Inner Circle traders it’s better to be humble than smart. The number-one problem with smart people is they know they’re smart. They’re in love with their own brainpower and can’t question their instincts. Humility makes you question yourself. Take VCs. They are in love with the idea of finding the next Mark Zuckerberg or Steve Jobs or Warren Buffett or Elon Musk or Shopify (SHOP) or Salesforce (CRM) or whatever. And that is their greatest weakness. This mission to find extraordinary opportunities creates blind spots. Which is how they get fooled by fooled by hucksters like Sam Bankman-Fried, Elizabeth Holmes, and Bernie Madoff. When you’re a billionaire that’s financed 10 Silicon Valley unicorns, you never imagine that you could be the victim of a hoax. And there is a lesson for traders here too. Love people, not stocks. Stock traders fall in love with finding the next sexy asset class or the next Apple (AAPL) or Tesla (TSLA). And they never ask themselves “what if I’m wrong?” That turns research and analysis into confirmation bias. Everything you see — even if it’s bad — confirms what you believe. Let me give you an example. Say a semiconductor company reports a massive spike in inventories. The blind bull will say “that’s good because it’s more product to sell.” But if you have an ounce of skepticism, you’ll ask questions like “is demand drying up?” If you never ask tough questions, you will go broke in this bear market. I guarantee it. Confirmation bias wins because humans are determined to be right. That is why FTX will happen again and again for the next 10,000 years. There were TONS of red flags around Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX. Like lack of experienced management in a complex, difficult field… including no CFO! There were obvious conflicts of interest with Alameda. And a huge money funnel to Washington. Smart people armed with confirmation bias will make up excuses for anything and everything. “They don’t need a CFO because they’re MIT geniuses.” By the way, you’re about to see the biggest comedy in the world. Some of the biggest crypto players are out there aying “Crypto is still great! It just needs regulation so I’m marching to Washington to get it done!” Up until a week ago, no regulation was the whole point! The scary thing is crypto will get even messier. So remember this kids: be smart, but stay humble!
Continue Reading -->A bear market can leave you broke, angry, and feeling like a fool. The bear doesn’t just want your money. He wants your sanity, confidence, and self-respect. In a bull market, you get rewarded for taking risks. And the bigger the risks, the bigger your profits. Remember 2020 through early 2021? If you bought stocks, you did well. But if you bought cryptos, NFT’s, Lamborghinis, Miami real estate, and Rolex watches, you did even better. But in a bear market, you can do what feels responsible… and still get your head handed to you. So I want you to take my 7 unbreakable rules of bear market trading and put them to work for yourself. Starting with… Rule #1: Do Not Buy Stocks Just Because They Are Down A few weeks ago, a colleague asked me: “Should I buy Zoom (ZM)? It’s down 87% off the highs and at pre-Pandemic levels.” My answer was no. And you should be able to guess why. Zoom is at $78 right now. You could have made the same “but it’s down so much” case at $100 when it was 83% off the highs. Or at $125 when it was 79% off the highs. You buy a stock because you can make a strong case for it going up. Not because it dropped by some random percentage. Because if a stock can go from $588 to $78, don’t count out $68 or $58, because… Rule #2: The Fundamentals Just Don’t Matter Sometimes According to SlickCharts.com, just 87 stocks in the S&P 500 are up this year. And most of the names in the green are in energy, defense, health care, and consumer staples. That makes sense because of the war in Ukraine and the Fed’s tighter monetary policy. So if you made money this year, it’s because you understood the environment. You most likely did some combination of the following: Got long energy Shorted tech/growth names Focused on short-term trading. It certainly hasn’t been analyzing cash flow statements and forecasting earnings. In fact, I’ve been telling my community over and over that this coming earnings season is not about earnings. Yes, there are times when fundamentals matter, but right now, it’s about whether the Fed gets back on our side. And as we saw in 2009, the market bottomed way before the numbers got better. Rule #3: Buy Ugly and Sell Beautiful One of the most unusual things about a bear market is how hard stocks can rally. The market can be on the verge of death… only to skyrocket faster and harder than you can ever imagine. But the strength tends to disappear in a flash. It’s like the sellers are pulling a prank on you. So you have to buy when it feels most wrong to buy. And you have to sell when it feels like the market is finally turning around. Take this XBI chart. As you can see, I sold some at point B, and it kept going up. You could say I sold that piece too early, but I know from experience that in this market, those gains could have been gone just minutes later. And of course, I sold more at point C, after which XBI dropped. This process of trimming and trailing has been key to Inner Circle’s success in the 2022 bear market. Rule #4: Leave Emotion At The Door This is easier said than done. But, I have a simple rule for managing your emotions when the market is spiraling out of control: Size down, because size dictates emotion. That applies whether you are going long or short. The more money you have on the line, the more stressed you’ll feel. So you don’t want to press too hard. Because when you’re wrong, your losses will be smaller. And yes, you must get used to taking losses. And when you’re right, you’ll tell yourself “I knew I should have bought more.” But you have to remember that since bear market rallies are so powerful, you can make quite a bit of money from smaller positions. So don’t worry about missing out. As long as you can hit singles and doubles while minimizing your losses, the money will pile up. Rule #5. Averaging Down is Pointless In a bear market, you could be tempted to buy a stock like Tesla (TSLA) at $250. Then you’ll watch it tick down to $245, then $240. So you buy a few hundred more shares. It hits $230 and you buy another 100 shares. And so on. Before you know it, you’re out $100,000 because you bought a “good” stock on sale. And just because the bear can be so cruel, you hit the eject button… right before the stock goes up $100 in a week off a strong earnings report. Instead, be ready to dump anything that is not working. Since bear markets gyrate so much, odds are you’ll have another chance to get in down the road. Averaging down is for bull markets only. And even then you have to be careful. Rule #6: Always Have Capital on Hand Bull markets always push things too high. And on the flip side, bear markets always push things too low. You must always have capital on hand, because you want to put money to work at the extremes. And if you play it right, you can make life-changing money. Do you realize that you could have bought Apple (AAPL) under $3 in 2009? (adjusted for splits) If you bought 1,000 shares at $3, you’d be sitting on a $142,000+ position today and you’d even be collecting some dividends. These opportunities don’t come along every day, but you only need a few of them! Rule #7: Don’t Be a Hero Unless You Look Great in Tights As general life advice, you should try to be the hero in your own story. But you’re not in a movie about a trader that’s one trade away from fixing their life. Sorry Kevin
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