written by reader What’s the story with Money Markets money calendar

by backoffice | March 21, 2016 9:34 pm

If executed tomorrow morning at 9:30 a.m. – as soon as the opening bell rings – we believe this trade will make you a fast 231% gain.
And if history is any indication, you will make this money in 28 days or less…
How do we know for sure?
Nothing is certain. But we can say that the last three times we closed out a trade recommendation like this one, readers saw 300% total gains (100% with each). And the average trade lasted only 21 days.
He gives the dates between March 21 and April 26 with all the Mondays circled with a Tuesday and a Wed. thrown in.
Any hints? Also, if done right you can see returns up to 993%.Thanks Travis

Source URL: https://www.stockgumshoe.com/2016/03/microblog-whats-the-story-with-money-markets-money-calendar/


3 responses to “written by reader What’s the story with Money Markets money calendar”

  1. The ads don’t hint at all about the specific companies, but there have been a few attempts in the past to pitch these kinds of “seasonal” trading systems — finding particular stocks that tend to go up in February, for example, and trading options on them to magnify the impact if you’re right.

    I think most of the seasonal trading stuff is hooey, frankly, as with many of the “systems” that are based on five or ten years of data. There’s a lot more chance and randomness in life and in the markets than these back-tested theories imply, though I’m sure it works sometimes and there are some stocks that really do have seasonal patterns a lot of the time. Goldman Sachs and thousands of hedge funds are trying to trade anything that can be found to be at all predictable via backtesting using their supercomputer clusters to harness a few cents a share over and over and over, and that probably has more chance of success than making a dozen options trades a year — particularly if there are a few thousand other newsletter subscribers trying to make that same trade at the same time in what are generally illiquid derivatives.

    So there’s the cynical take — measure that against the ad and let me know what you think. There are a few Money Calendar reviews from other readers here.

  2. modernrock says:

    options stuff

  3. Bob says:

    They are options trades. Either call or spread call options. Max cost is $500 per trade. The trades either double or end up worthless. He always hypes the doubles but never mentions the losses. So far with three months of trading I have put on 24 trades. Right now I am down $350 plus the cost of membership, $2,000. I’ll stick with it for the year and hope the returns improve.

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