Below is the 8th ASC Mastermind Course. In this video, I got a helpful assist from All Star Charts Director of Research Steve Strazza.
There's something psychologically magical about dividends. For decades, investors have flocked to all sorts of investment strategies that seek to maximize dividend gains...perhaps because they simply like getting paid to invest.
But these strategies that focus on dividend-paying stocks...they miss the point entirely. The best way to make money with dividends is not to own the stocks that simply pay the highest yield...it's to own the stocks that pay a dividend while also going up in value.
This is how we avoid common dividend traps like Verizon, AT&T, Phillip Morris, and other companies that have a nice yield but are otherwise garbage investments.
At All Star Charts, we came up with a new to find the best dividend-paying stocks. We call it The Young Aristocrats. And in this Mastermind course, you'll learn how it works.
In today's Flow Show, Steve Strazza said: "Bull Markets give us options."
And he's right.
There is an embarrassment of opportunities right now. And he came to the show with a list of ideas that we reviewed.
You can watch the full episode here:
There were two trades I wanted to put on that were discussed during the show.
Today, I'm choosing to enter the Gamestop $GME idea.
So here's the $GME chart:
Now, forget everything you ever learned in technical analysis school. And you can certainly throw your fundamental texts in the garbage. None of that will help you with this stock. It doesn't follow the rules or even logic and certainly not common sense.
This is and will likely forever be a story stock. A meme stock. Nothing else.
And right now, $GME is showing signs of waking up again. With options premium in out-of-the-money calls insane, it sets up a nice opportunity for us to leverage that premium to our advantage.
Here's the Play:
I like buying a $GME January 30/40 Bull Call Spread for approximately $1.35 net debit. This means I'll be long the Jan 30 calls and short...
Gold futures have been down in 6 out of the last 8 sessions since the winner of the U.S. Presidential Election was announced.
The US Dollar Index $DXY has been adding fuel to the selling pressure as it has screamed higher toward the upper bound of a multi-year range.
However, the dollar is entering one of its weakest seasonal periods of the year and should start serving as a tailwind for our shiny rocks.
And if the dollar is about to roll over, our equal-weight basket of precious metal stocks will likely resolve its multi-decade base and make new all-time highs:
I promise there is a trading lesson here. Stick with me...
Two-point lead. Ball on the opponent's 27-yard line. 4th and 2. Two minutes and 27 seconds left on the clock.
The choices are this:
1. Attempt to kick a make-able, but no gimme 44-yard field goal to go up by 5 points.
2. Pooch punt to pin the opponents inside their 10-yard line for their next drive.
3. Call a play to attempt to gain the 2 yards needed to earn a fresh set of downs and continue running the clock.
Choose option 1 and there is a very real possibility that the Buffalo Bills' sometimes undependable field goal kicker could miss the 3-point try. This would leave the Kansas City Chiefs, and their future Hall of Fame Quarterback Patrick Mahomes with more than two minutes on the clock to move the ball less than 35 yards to put themselves into position to kick the game-winning field goal.
Even if the Bills' kicker makes the field goal, putting the Bills up by 5, there will still be more than two minutes on the play clock. For the team from Kansas City with countless late comeback wins, there is not a...
We've had some great trades come out of this small-cap-focused column since we launched it back in 2020 and started rotating it with our flagship bottom-up scan, Under the Hood.
For the first year or so, we focused only on Russell 2000 stocks with a market cap between $1 and $2B.
That was fun, but we wanted to branch out a bit and allow some new stocks to find their way onto our list.
We expanded our universe to include some mid-caps.
Nowadays, to make the cut for our Minor Leaguers list, a company must have a market cap between $1 and $4B.
And it doesn't have to be a Russell component — it can be any US-listed equity. With participation expanding around the globe, we want all those ADRs in our universe.
The same price and liquidity filters are applied. Then, as always, we sort by proximity to new...