Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Tracking BlackRock's Invisible Fingerprints

Tracking BlackRock's Invisible Fingerprints

 

Howdy ,

 

I've made my fair share of discoveries in the stock market, but nothing beats the simplicity of this one.

 

Imagine a completely un-optimized indicator that gives you a green light on when to buy, and a red light on when to sell.

 

Then you place some limit orders under the market so you get a good deal on your favorite stocks.

 

It has nothing to do with anything you've ever heard before. This is completely original work by yours truly.

 

On the suggestion of a member of my Dirty Dozen trading group, I did a deep-dive into BlackRock fund flows.

 

Yes, that BlackRock.

 

The one with $10 trillion in assets under management.

 

Their invisible fingerprints are all over global markets.

 

They can't be seen by the naked eye, but a computer can shine a light on 'em.

 

Anyway, I ran The Boss on a basket of NASDAQ 100 stocks using BlackRock fund flows to generate trade signals.

 

Here's the one line of "C code" that it came up with (I didn't program this strategy...the supercomputer did).

 

It shows a 50.04% annual gain. This is literally the most simplified trading strategy of its kind.

I'm going to discuss the BlackRock strategy LIVE TODAY at 11AM Pacific.

 

You must be a member to attend.

 

I'm so confident you've never seen anything like this that I'll cut you a check for $25,000 if you have.

Click here now >>

 

P.S. I'm going LIVE Tuesday @ 11AM Pacific to spill the beans on this BlackRock fund flow strategy. You have 24 hours.

 

Learn how to become a member now >>

Trade smart,

 

Dan "Prince of Proof" Murphy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Portfolio Boss, Inc.

260 Newport Center Dr, Suite 100 Newport Beach, CA 92660

 

Don't want to stay in the loop with Dan? We'll be sad to see you go, but you can unsubscribe to no longer receive emails.

 

Government required disclaimer: The results listed herein are based on hypothetical trades. Plainly speaking, these trades were not actually executed. Hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual performance record, simulated results do not represent actual trading. Also, since the trades have not actually been executed, the results may have under (or over) compensated for the impact, if any, of certain market factors such as lack of liquidity. You may have done better or worse than the results portrayed.

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