Whooph Trades ——Sell Signals
Two investors, one never sells to lock in gains to retire with $200k, the other sells just 2x per year as recommended and retires with $6M. ….Umm, say what?…
The difference of just 18% extra in gains per year for 21 years in a 401k amounts to $6 Million v. $200k — no additional contributions. Based on ONE $10,000 contribution. The difference means retiring adequately, versus NOT retiring.
Market Swing Effect
Many investors misunderstand the purpose of selling at recommended levels. So, they miss out on the reward of Market’s Swing Effect. The prospect for an additional 9% gain TWICE per year, compounded.
When you KEEP gains, you HOLD your 401k progress steady, and CASH ready. You also get the wisdom of being ABLE to reposition cash when corrections hit!
The Un-RICH
A well diversified portfolio with a Buy and NEVER SELL investor driving will average 15% per year. The un-rich hears the principle of Market Swing Effect, sees it in practice and still chooses to the infamous Buy and Never Sell strategy for an average $15%
The Rich Make Themselves ELIGIBLE
Following best practice doesn’t just preserve capital and lock in gains, it makes an investor ELIGIBLE for an additional 18+% gain per year plus the market’s 15% average for an additional prize of $6 Million.
The bonus granted by a Market Annual Swing Affect means adding MILLIONS to your net worth over just 21 years.
So, what’s the SELL SIGNAL?
How can an INVESTOR capture the prospect of adding millions needed for retirement from Market Swing Affect? It’s neither hard, nor time-consuming.
It’s about Price-Indicator Disagreement. In a typical bull market uptrend, Price vaults mindlessly higher, often overshooting, while the rich are watching Indicators. And over in the corner, arms folded in disagreement, the Indicator speaks.
Charlie Whooph teaches this market indicator language. He explains the sell-signal — Disagreement. And in various posts called Whooph Trades he shares how he does it, through examples.
Charlie Whooph has traded since 1999.