You cannot succeed at something if you don't have an image of it and a vision. And you won't have a vision worth succeeding at unless you see the world end your future in a positive way.
The only thing that stops violent men from raping you and your society are other men who are equally willing to be violent in stopping the rapists. The West has decided that the highest virtue is to quietly comply with the destruction of your civilization because to do otherwise is bigoted toward the rapists. It really is that simple.
Last week, Michael Harnett of BofA included this chart in his May 22 "Flow Show."
As this reposted thread below details, we have not seen the market this concentrated around a single theme in 150 years.
At 24 years old, I just had my first ever 7 figure month.
All because:
I didn't try to become a geopolitical expert...
&
I followed price and took advantage of the opportunities in front me
Don't overcomplicate what's happening...
Just focus on the charts.
They investigated for two years. Found nothing. Indicted no one. Then shut the bank down anyway.
IRS Emails Confirm Illegal Conspiracy to Destroy Innocent Bank as PR Stunt
https://t.co/g5n3gQmXPy
Don't overcomplicate trading.
-Track the strongest stocks in the market
-Let those names setup big bases off the 21 EMA
-Buy the relative strength off weakness
If you do this, you will be successful.
3 things I wish I knew earlier about trading:
- Patience is a skill, not a personality trait
- The strategy was never the problem. I was
- The goal isn’t to make money. It’s to protect it
The moment you genuinely understand this is the moment you’ve won.
Something I wish I understood earlier in my trading journey…
The market isn't the hardest thing to study in trading.
You are.
I spent years learning technicals, levels, strategy. All of it mattered.
But real progress didn't start until I turned the same attention inward.
The impulses, emotional patterns and execution errors I kept repeating.
That's where the edge was hiding.
No course fixes that and no mentor can do that work for you.
The journal does.
The honest review after a bad trade does.
The daily reflection nobody sees does.
The most valuable investment in trading is the process of becoming someone who can execute data.
There was a time I thought trading wasn’t for me.
Questioned everything.
Couldn't stay consistent.
Couldn't imagine making big money from it.
Now I'm pulling $1M weeks.
Parents retired.
Never had a red year in 16 years.
I started with $6,000.
Take the damn risk.
There are reportedly tick outbreaks all over the US right now… and a significant rise in Alpha-gal syndrome (also known as the “red meat allergy”
This is something to consider…
- Bovista 200
- Lycopodium 200
- Arsenicum album 3.
- Twice daily.
Bill Ackman just explained the two trades that made him $5.2 billion in three years.
Both started the same way. He saw a storm coming that everyone else was ignoring.
Trade one: COVID, January 2020.
Ackman read the early data and concluded the world might have to shut down its entire economy to stop the spread. Equity and credit markets were priced as if everything was fine.
Over 10 days, he bought $74 billion of notional credit insurance. The premium cost him $27 million. Ten days later it was worth $2.6 billion. He took every dollar of that and bought stocks with the market down 30%.
Trade two: inflation, late 2020.
He saw the setup clearly. Trillions in government spending. Rates at zero. A vaccine coming that would unleash pent-up demand. Supply chains already disrupted. He concluded a massive demand shock was coming into a constrained supply environment and that inflation was inevitable.
He bought interest rate options when the 2-year treasury was at 12 basis points. The strike was at 94 basis points, 0.94%, which at the time looked impossibly out of the money. It still looked like a low rate.
Those options turned into another $2.6 billion in profit. He bought stocks again.
His framework hasn't changed across either trade.
Two storms. $27 million in. $5.2 billion out. Stocks bought both times at the bottom.