It's a question we all try to answer with every trade we make. And while there's no definitive "right" answer, there is one strategy you can almost always bank on.
You have to buy the same stocks that major institutional players are buying.
Considering the resources and talent behind major Wall Street firms, following their moves is a near-foolproof method to making money.
But for most people, it's impossible to do.
These firms move under the radar, trading in "dark pools": secretive and tightly controlled exchanges where what they buy, how much, the price they pay, and even who they are is not publicly available.
These deep, murky trenches of capital conceal the greatest wealth-building mystery the financial world has to offer: the ticker symbol of the next potential millionaire-maker stock.
That is, they used to…
One incredibly talented analyst and former Wall Street insider, who we're proud to call part of our network, has swam in the dark pools himself. Some even say he was instrumental in building them.
His name is Jason Bodner. And today, I'll show you how he built a system specifically designed to catch dark pool trading activity… and ride those signals in the best-quality stocks to help everyday investors hang with the billionaires.
There are many forces that move stocks — but none more than the massive amount of money that flows in the Dark Pools. Just what are the Dark Pools? And how can understanding them help you make huge gains?
To understand why Jason is so effective at sniffing out dark-pool activity, you have to understand the power he held during his time on Wall Street.
He previously worked at what his firm, Cantor Fitzgerald, called "central command" — a desk overseeing a trading floor filled with throngs of prominent Wall Street dealmakers.
From here, he and his firm would regularly trade millions of shares of stock in a single day. And it was from this spot that Jason got a life-changing phone call.
A client, operating under the veil of secrecy, needed Jason to find $2 million worth of shares in a specific company. Jason quickly found them… but the client wanted more.
By the end of the day, the client had bought up $22 million in shares. The next day, another $22 million. And then the next day. And the next…
Over the course of a month, this client bought over 20 million shares of this one stock, worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Turns out, this mysterious client was on a mission to buy up as much of this stock as possible from Jason and other competing brokerages. By the end of the month, this single investor owned 13% of the company, worth billions of dollars.
The stock soon went flying higher, up 70% from where Jason started seeking out shares for this mysterious client.
It was in that moment that Jason understood the near-divine power of money flow.
This stock was surging because a billionaire investor was taking a massive position well before the public knew about it. By the time word got out, the biggest money had already been made.
Jason learned how to spot the signs of huge institutional money flow because of this experience.
And ever since he left Wall Street, he's used this edge in his analysis to uncover huge gains for his readers.
A former hedge fund manager who is known for helping the ultra-elite protect their portfolios from massive wealth shifts has uncovered a bubble you NEED to know about.
Rookies will scroll past thinking that they're safe from this bubble. But tens of billions have been pouring into money market funds every week in 2023, which should be setting off alarm bells right now.
We're in the final stretch before this bubble pops.
Jason's taken everything he's learned about institutional order flow and condensed it into a simple signal — what he calls the Big Money buy signal.
When Jason sees this signal, he's fully confident that a major Wall Street institution has made a move in a dark pool. And what almost always comes next is a surge in the stock price.
Take Tesla (TSLA), for instance.
Jason's system identified major institutional buy signals in TSLA stock all the way back at the start of 2020. So, Jason recommended buying TSLA.
I know what you're thinking, but the pandemic crash that occurred two months later didn't change a thing. And ultimately, TSLA stock ran 684% higher from Jason's signal.
Not long after, in April of 2020, Jason's system highlighted Fiverr International (FVRR), which went on to surge 495%.
But you should know, Jason's system isn't relegated to tech stocks.
Here's a stock his system found in the energy sector back in 2022, before anyone knew that energy would be the big winner that year.
Scorpio Tankers (STNG), for 310% gains…
And it even finds stocks you wouldn't expect to surge, like small-cap cosmetics company e.l.f. Beauty (ELF) from last year, which his system flagged before it ripped 182%.
But institutional capital isn't the only thing Jason needs to see before he recommends a stock. It's just the first step.
Jason also screens for stocks with sublime fundamental health… and a strong technical uptrend. All the institutional capital in the world doesn't mean a thing if a stock doesn't tick these boxes.
That's all I can say right now… but there's much more to come.
I'll share more details on these two other aspects of Jason's system in the coming days… Along with an exclusive interview with the man himself, releasing this Saturday, where you'll hear them firsthand.
You'll also gain access to exclusive articles and video from Jason, where he'll share never-before-seen insights on the world of institutional order flow.
And it all culminates in an exclusive webinar airing Dec. 13, where Jason will share details on several new recommendations set to ride a second wave of institutional AI investment…
TradeSmith is not registered as an investment adviser and operates under the publishers' exemption of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. The investments and strategies discussed in TradeSmith's content do not constitute personalized investment advice. Any trading or investment decisions you take are in reliance on your own analysis and judgment and not in reliance on TradeSmith. There are risks inherent in investing and past investment performance is not indicative of future results.
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