Algorithmic trader. Design quant strategies. Free algo: 44% CAGR over 6 years. Built Amplitrade after bank pissed me off. Dad of 2. Porsche over Lambo.
In 2012, a bank told me I’d make 7% annually if I was lucky.
I walked out pissed.
Built an algorithm instead.
44% CAGR over 6 years.
10,500 investors are using it.
You can too. Free.
Here’s how it works:
The algorithm holds 1 ETF at a time.
Updates monthly (low turnover).
That’s it.
No complexity. No daily trading. No guesswork.
It sequences through: Stocks → Gold → Long Bonds → Ultra-Short Bonds.
Follows momentum and mean-reversion.
Perfect for small accounts.
You get the ETF before market open on the first trading day of each month.
Copy them in 2 minutes.
Use your own broker. I never touch your money.
The best part?
It’s completely free.
No credit card. No trial that converts to paid.
Just results.
Why free?
Because I built premium portfolios that do 296% CAGR.
This is the gateway.
You see it works, you’ll want the others.
Simple business model.
10,500 people already in.
Some stayed free. Some upgraded.
Everyone wins.
Reply “I want in” and I’ll send you the link to get this one for free.
Bookmark this if you want to come back later.
But honestly?
The best time to start was 6 years ago.
Second best time is right now.
I'm not sure why you'd compare NVDY to anything else than NVDA.
And like I said, you're leaving half of your money on the table for convenience. It's your money, if you're fine with it, it's your decision. I don't care. But some people may be mislead by your post. I want to make sure people can make educated decisions seeing both sides of the medal.
@HighYieldHustle@yieldandgrace Now compare to the underlying... NVDY did +280% while NVDA did +550% over the same timeframe.
You're literally leaving HALF your money on the table for the convenience of monthly distributions.
This all sounds good on paper, but go to the mall and you'll see a different story.
Lululemon is not "cool" anymore. There are cooler brands, like Alo, stealing market share.
They also need to adapt to new trends soon... or die a slow death and become an outlet brand, and selling at Marshall's.