Big potential stocks: growth, insider, large earnings beats
"The World is my country, all mankind are my brethren, and to do good is my religion-Thomas Paine
Two days in a row, 8/9 stocks green. 😅
- $IREN got very close to $70.
- $PENG smashed it +20% throughout the day.
- New stock $XFAB +20%.
- My favourite nuclear stock $SMR +8%.
- Bought $AAOI yesterday, already up 25%.
- $NUAI doing great.
Incredible day. 🙏
@RealJGBanks They should give larger accounts an option to prevent an image copy of their portfolio, + make unverified accounts a different color background. With a little thought & effort they could fix it.
the only trading philosophy you'll ever need to make your first million dollars in the stock market.
apply this principle when analyzing charts for opportunities
$ONDS (Update) +10.5% day on entry (+3R first day)
9% ADR name, 140% RVOL on $700 mil avg dollar vol but first M30 ORH is less than 40% LoD.
All 3 ingredients are what @Qullamaggie preached for 7 years in his stream. Be a sniper to execute at the most optimal entry condition.
https://t.co/5WNs49VHKD
“What do you do when there are so many stocks to choose from?”
There are thousands of stocks in the market, and when you follow multiple people online, especially on X, you end up seeing different stock picks every single day. It can become overwhelming very quickly.
This is personally what I do.
The first thing I do is create a simple table on Excel. I list every stock I’m bullish on. If I follow ten different X accounts and they are all buying different stocks, I write every single one down.
Then I start narrowing things down.
The first filter I use is sector strength. I ask myself: where is the money flowing right now? Which sector is attracting the most attention, capital, and momentum?
Right now, for example, I do not think software is the strongest place to have money. That could change next month or even next week because markets constantly rotate, but at this moment, a lot of capital is flowing into the AI infrastructure trade. That includes data centers, memory, energy, cooling, networking, semiconductors, and everything connected to that ecosystem.
Once I identify the strongest sector, I remove stocks that are not relevant to it.
After that, I filter by market cap.
Personally, I am more interested in small and mid cap companies because I believe they offer the biggest upside potential. Some people prefer large caps, and that is completely fine. Everyone has different goals and risk tolerance.
For me, I usually remove large cap stocks and focus on smaller companies with real potential. At the same time, I avoid most penny stocks. I generally want companies above a certain market cap because I still want some level of quality, structure, and legitimacy behind the business.
Then I go deeper.
I study the company’s position within its sector. I compare it against competitors and other companies operating in the same space. I want to understand what makes it unique.
Does it have a real advantage?
Does it have strong technology?
Does management have a good track record?
Is there something special that the market is missing?
Because I focus on smaller companies, I am honestly less concerned about current financials if the company has something truly unique. Some of the biggest winners in the market started with almost no revenue. Those are the types of companies I’m interested in because they have the potential to become something much bigger in the future.
The below is an example of a tier list of bunch of stocks I've done research on. I ranked them based on my conviction.
Note - this is part one. I made this post for my subscribers, aimed at beginner investors. Because of how well it was received, I decided to share it with everyone on X.
There will be three parts.