WEEKLY ROUNDUP What Satellites Can Teach Us About 1,000% Stocks VIEW IN BROWSER Hello, Reader. It’s a bird… it’s a plane… it’s a Starlink satellite. In 2019, Elon Musk’s SpaceX began launching Starlink satellites. Now, around 7,600 of them dot Earth’s low orbit. Around 2,000 of those were deployed this year, alone. Now, I don’t mention these small satellites to comment on Starlink’s pursuits… but to better describe an orbital term… Apogee. It’s a word you’ve heard me use here at Smart Money over the last week, as it’s the name of my new stock-picking system, which I’ve been telling you about. (Also, I’ll be hosting a free broadcast event on Wednesday, at 10 a.m. Eastern, where I’ll be debuting Apogee to the public for the very first time. Just click here to reserve your spot.) And, I’ll admit, apogee is an odd word. In astronomy, apogee describes the point in an object’s orbit when it is farthest away from the body around which it is orbiting. The image below illustrates this point between a satellite (Starlink, or otherwise) and Earth.  Now in finance, apogee describes when a stock is furthest away from its ultimate potential. So, you can think of Earth in the image above as a company. Let’s say, Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), when the stock had crashed after the early-2000s dot-com bust. The satellite would then represent the company’s highest gain potential. In the early 2000s, there was quite a distance between Amazon and its true potential. For investors, it feels natural, smart even, to turn away from a company at its lowest point. And I understand. Who wants to add a down-and-out company to their portfolio? The risk feels too great, and the reward seems nowhere in sight. But that is why I named my new trading system Apogee. It finds stocks when they are furthest away from their true potential and gives a buy signal as they are moving toward that potential. My system follows a series of patterns to identify if – and when – a company starts moving toward its great potential. This distinction separates my trading system from others… and creates an incredibly high ceiling for optimizing returns. This risk-reward profile is at the center of Apogee’s decision-making. The point of my system is to find stocks with massive potential and relatively little downside risk. And I’d like to share one of Apogee’s first official picks with you today, ticker and all. But first, let’s take a look back at what we covered here at Smart Money last week. |
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