Saturday, March 14, 2026

Why the 1927 Fed mistake is your biggest advantage right now

Let's talk about it tomorrow at 11AM ET
 
   
     
1927 was a significant year in the markets. 

That was when the Federal Reserve lowered rates to help boost European economies, especially the UK’s. 

This move made borrowing cheaper and increased stock speculation and margin trading, with economists across the board arguing that this policy helped fuel the Great Depression.

Now, I’m not telling you this because a bubble is about to pop. 

But that same year, a market pattern was born and has called the shots on the charts ever since, and no media outlet is talking about it at the moment!

The good news is I’ve been able to tap into that pattern with a strategy to target what I call weekly turnarounds…

This approach has locked in 8 wins out of every 10 trades.

 
 
And tomorrow at 11 AM, I’ll go live to reveal the details…

You’ll get the entire story on the 1927 pattern I’m talking about. 

Not that alone…

You’ll also see how you can take advantage of this strategy, plus a shot at the next weekly turnaround trade.

 
 
Now, I won’t make reckless guarantees about the markets…

But as you’ll see, this strategy helped me get on my feet after I blew my first $5,000 account.

If you’d like details on this 1927 strategy and would like to jump on the next weekly turnaround trade…

Tap this link to save your seat for tomorrow’s event.
All the best,
 
 
We develop tools and strategies to the best of our ability, but no one can guarantee the future. There is always a risk of loss when trading. Past performance is not indicative of future results. From 11/28/22 - 3/3/26, on live trades issued in real time, the win rate has been 81.38% with an average return of 9.40% per trade (including winners and losers) and an average hold time of 4 days. 
     
   
 

No comments:

Page List

Blog Archive

Search This Blog

The Company Trump Just Defended Could Be Wall Street's Next Giant

One little-known U.S. stock is 20x cheaper than AMD--yet more profitable than Airbnb, Chipotle, and Hilton. Backed by Trump an...