| 20-Plus Years. No Losing Years, Ever | Imagine trading in the stock market for 20 years straight and never having a single down year.
Sounds impossible, right?
It's not.
And for a limited time, you can learn the trading strategy that 10-time champion trader Chuck Hughes used to play the stock market for 20 years without ever posting a losing year. | | | | The Investor's Dilemma: Which Candidate Is Best for Your Portfolio? | With yesterday's presidential election, investors have a choice. Depending on your viewpoint, you might even call it the investor's dilemma…
Do you want to be right? Or do you want to make money?
In other words, is your opinion the most important? Or is the stock market's opinion of your opinion a better — meaning more profitable — measuring stick?
Being right means believing the stock market must go up — or down — in a big way… for weeks and months at a time because one party or the other won the White House… control of Congress… or both.
But here's the investor's dilemma and the rub: When Republicans held the House of Representatives, where the U.S. sets its spending priorities, those numbers were almost exactly reversed.
Similarly, being right means believing the stock market must go down — or boom higher — because of recent economic data. Or because of what we see happening in our communities, states, regions and in the national economic picture. | | | | Profit From Different Presidential Outcomes | We just witnessed one of the most polarizing elections in U.S. political history.
As traders and risk managers, we are preparing for all possible scenarios to trade accordingly.
In this state of certainty, here are a few facts regarding markets and presidencies:
Markets have historically performed better when there is a Democratic president. Markets prefer when the presidency changes guard to the opposing political party. The S&P 500 Index performs better in a president's first term.
| | | "Dear Roger… You are getting even better! There is so much nonsense on the web. You're like a fountain of truth in the desert and I suspect traders are gravitating to your leadership and clarity of message.
Ken R. | | | Signal Lines are used in technical indicators, especially oscillators, to generate buy and sell signals or suggest a change in a trend. Oftentimes, signal lines are moving averages of a technical indicator, such as the moving average convergence-divergence (MACD) and stochastics oscillator. A signal line is also commonly known as a "trigger line."
| | | Disclaimer & Disclosures The information in this email is intended for informational purposes only and does not guarantee specific results as there is a high degree of risk involved with trading. Also, our traders are real traders and may have financial interests in the companies discussed. Please see our Terms and Conditions for more information.
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