Rabu, 29 April 2026

Billionaire Trader Warns: Get Out of Stocks

Ray Dalio has made more money for his clients than any hedge fund manager in history. See why he’s warning of a "historic crisis" for stocks. ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­ ­


Dear Reader,

After starting out 50 years ago in a 2-bedroom apartment...

Today, Billionaire trader Ray Dalio has made more money for his clients than any hedge fund manager in history.

And he's done this by predicting – and reacting to – the "big picture" of the markets... in a way that even the smartest people in the world are unable to replicate.

Now, along with multiple Wall Street banks, Dalio is warning of a historic crisis for stocks that could keep your portfolio in the red for.

If he's right... if major banks like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are right... what we're facing today could be the worst environment for the stock market in decades.

That may sound strange to you – given all the excitement today around new tech like AI, but when you look closely, you'll see what they're talking about.

In the last three years alone, a combined $31.5 trillion has been wiped out of the stock market by yearly crashes.

  • In 2024, there were fears of the Japanese yen trade "unwinding" and $8.5 trillion was wiped out of the market in a matter of days.
  • Last year, we had the tariff crashes that caused the biggest 2-day crash in U.S. history and wiped out $11 trillion.
  • Then this year we got an oil shock and a new war which wiped out $12 trillion in 30 days.

Sure, there have been "good times". But many of those gains have ended up being destroyed by these annual surprise crashes.

Being a typical "buy and hold" investor at times like this... or trying to actively trade markets like these on your own... can often be a nightmare.

Today I'd like to offer you a much better, much less stressful way to track the market and find trade ideas – which sidesteps many of the stock market's biggest problems.

In short, this is a breakthrough from our financial tech department... which I believe will help you both protect - and dramatically grow - your portfolio this year... no matter what happens next.

And it could do this without touching gold... and without touching a single option, bond, penny stock, or cryptocurrency.

What we've discovered is something completely unlike any trading or investing method you've probably ever seen before.

It may seem like science fiction - at first - but not only is it real... more than 2,000 early adopters have already started using this to protect (and potentially grow) their wealth in this market.

Click here to see how you can try it yourself – completely free.

Regards,

Keith Kaplan
CEO, TradeSmith

P.S. This could be the worst news for investors in 50 years... and it could leave your portfolio in the red for 10 years or more if you do nothing. Click here to see the disturbing trend forming in the U.S. stock market – and learn what you can do to prepare your wealth.







Today’s editorial pick for you

Etsy Delivered A Strong Quarter 1 Report By Preying On Its Weak Consumers


Posted On Apr 29, 2026 by Grayson Cavern

Before the market opened on April 29, Etsy Inc (NASDAQ: ETSY) printed its Q1 2026 earnings report. Most people will misread the report because, on the surface, it looks clean and reassuring, with $631.30 million in revenue and EPS of 89 cents, both ahead of expectations, alongside a return to 5.5% GMS growth. All of which is enough to trigger the usual narrative that demand is stabilizing and the business is getting back on track. 

But as you’ll discover, nothing in this report points to strong demand. Once you accept that, the entire quarter starts to read differently, not as a recovery story, but as a company extracting more from a consumer that is clearly under pressure.

Etsy’s Little Game Of Extraction

To understand how ETSY extracted more from weaker consumers, you have to first start with the one number from the letter to shareholders that most people lean on: GMS (Gross Merchandise Sales)

Etsy generated roughly $2.46 billion in GMS, up 5.5% year over year, while GMS per buyer barely moved at +2%, which is not what strong demand looks like; it’s what weak demand looks like when it refuses to completely collapse.

That distinction matters because if demand is weak, yet revenue still beats expectations, then the driver cannot be volume; it has to be what Etsy is doing inside each transaction, and that’s exactly where the leverage shows up.

The company’s take rate jumped to 25.7%, up 180 basis points. This means that Etsy is extracting more out of every dollar that flows through the platform, not because buyers are spending aggressively, but because the system is built to capture more regardless of how those buyers behave. Hence, establishing the fact that this quarter wasn’t powered by growth, but by sheer control.

A Weaker Consumer Isn’t a Risk

Most platforms break when the consumer weakens. Etsy doesn’t.

In a world shaped by inflation, tariffs, and shrinking discretionary budgets, the expectation is simple: consumers cut back, and platforms tied to discretionary spend get hit. That logic works in traditional retail, where price is rigid, and demand either shows up or disappears.

Etsy sits somewhere else entirely.

Its marketplace is filled with lower-priced, flexible, non-standardized goods, which means when consumers pull back, they don’t stop buying; they downgrade, they adjust, they look for alternatives that feel cheaper or more personal without being unnecessary. Put another way, Etsy is sitting exactly where that displaced demand flows.

How The $1.2 Billion Depop Sale Crushed The “Growth” Narrative

Etsy used to depend on scaling volume, where more transactions drove more revenue, and revenue eventually turned into profit. That model required a strong consumer to hold together. That dependency is gone.

What you’re seeing now is a business that has separated demand from profitability, where net income flipped to $104.7 million from a loss last year, not because spending exploded, but because Etsy is now structured to take more from every transaction that happens.

That’s a completely different model.

The Depop sale to eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY), a deal worth about $1.2 billion, makes that even clearer, because it tells you Etsy is no longer chasing expansion for the sake of growth; it’s narrowing its focus to where monetization is already working and doubling down on it. As you can see, this is no longer a platform trying to grow faster. Instead, it’s tightening its grip.

Is The Market Starting to Get It?

Price action confirms that shift, even if the move looks messy at first glance.

Going into earnings, Etsy was stuck below a declining trendline, repeatedly failing around the $70-72 zone, with a base forming near $45-47, which is where expectations had already been beaten down.

Earnings hit a few hours ago, and the price pushed through $57.75 resistance, moved into the low $60s, and instead of fading, it held, which is critical, because weak rallies don’t hold; they collapse back into the range.

This one didn’t as volume expanded on the breakout, confirming participation, and price is still holding above the rising trendline from the February lows, which tells you this is not a dead-cat bounce or a short squeeze.

This is repositioning. The market isn’t chasing growth here. It’s starting to price a different kind of business.

etsy - StockEarnings

What If Consumer Spending Comes Back Strong?

Most bearish arguments stop at the same place. They see weak spending, modest GMS growth, and assume Etsy’s upside is capped because the consumer simply isn’t strong enough to carry it higher.

That framing misses what has already changed.

Etsy no longer needs a strong consumer to perform. It needs a responsive one, because the model has shifted toward extracting more value from existing demand rather than depending on demand to expand aggressively.

Now flip the scenario.

If consumers regain spending power, Etsy doesn’t reset – it scales. 

As we speak, the platform already controls a loyal base of buyers and sellers, and it has proven it can increase its take rate to 25.7% in a weak environment without breaking engagement. So if Etsy can drive revenue and profitability while consumers are constrained, then a stronger consumer doesn’t fix the business — it amplifies it. The same system that extracts efficiently in a weak environment becomes significantly more powerful when spending expands, because the ceiling rises while the structure remains intact.

So the downside argument depends on a weak consumer.

The upside case works in both environments.

That asymmetry is hard to ignore.




This is a PAID ADVERTISEMENT provided to the subscribers of StockEarnings Free Newsletter. Although we have sent you this email, StockEarnings does not specifically endorse this product nor is it responsible for the content of this advertisement. Furthermore, we make no guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above.

Your privacy is very important to us, if you wish to be excluded from future notices, do not reply to this message. Instead, please click Unsubscribe.

StockEarnings, Inc
33 SE 4th St, Suite 100, Boca Raton, FL 33432 USA
W: 877.6.STOCKS

StockEarnings.com



Tiada ulasan:

Page List

Arkib Blog

Cari Blog Ini

We're excited to have you on board

We'll be sending you the latest buy and sell ratings from Wall Street's top analysts, but first,...