Hello Friend, I want to tell you about one of the most fascinating studies to come out of the financial world in decades… something called Bessembinder’s 4%. Several years ago, a finance professor named Henrick Bessembinder made an amazing discovery that got him named the high priest of moonshot investing. He conducted an exhaustive study of stock market returns over the past 100 years… and concluded that just 4% of stocks accounted for all net wealth creation over that period. Now, that may sound like depressing news… But, it’s all how you look at it. This study showed that 4% of stocks were lucrative enough to make up for all the other 96% of stocks that are duds AND still make the stock market into one of the greatest wealth creation mechanisms history has ever seen. They’re incredibly powerful… so powerful in fact that the study estimated that over the past 100 years just those 4% of stocks created $35 trillion in wealth. So, if there’s someone out there giving you financial advice, whether it’s your broker, your brother-in-law, or maybe a so-called expert and they aren’t trying to do whatever they can to find and get you into a stock that’s among that 4%... Run as far away as you can… Because if they recommend anything else, they’re recommending one of the 96% of stocks that are bound to lose you money. So, how do you go about finding the 4% of stocks that ALL the money in the market? It’s not easy to do, but 20-year Wall Street veteran Jason Bodner seems to have found a way. And it has to do with tracking Wall Street’s massive investment capital flows across our financial ecosystem, a lot of which is funneled through private hidden networks known as Dark Pools. And on Wednesday, December 13th at 8 pm, Jason is putting on a Special Event called The Dark Pool Summit, in which he’s going to explain exactly how the Dark Pools inform him which of the markets thousands of stocks are among the 4% that make all the money. The event is FREE to attend, but you have to register in advance. You can sign up by going here. Regards, Keith Kaplan CEO, TradeSmith |
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