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How Traders Can Earn Higher Short-Term Returns

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libertythroughwealth.com

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ltw@mb.libertythroughwealth.com

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Mon, Jul 8, 2024 03:30 PM

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This is how to seriously goose your profits... SPONSORED [Forget 99.987% of Stocks ] A strange marke

This is how to seriously goose your profits... [Shield] AN OXFORD CLUB PUBLICATION [Liberty Through Wealth]( [View in browser]( SPONSORED [Forget 99.987% of Stocks (Use This ONE Instead)]( [Treasure Chest]( A strange market force studied by the likes of Harvard University, the Federal Reserve and the Securities and Exchange Commission has shown the opportunity to make profits of 141%, 333% and even a rare 2,614% in under 11 days... With just ONE ticker! See how to make massive profits by abandoning 8,251 of the 8,252 publicly traded stocks. [WATCH DEMONSTRATION]( THE SHORTEST WAY TO A RICH LIFE [How Traders Can Earn Higher Short-Term Returns]( [Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club]( [Alexander Green]( If you're a trader who'd like to earn higher short-term returns, here's a tip... Don't look for bargains in the stocks making new lows. Look instead for opportunities in the stocks making new highs. It seems counterintuitive to many, but decades of research have shown that the stocks that reward investors with the biggest short-term returns are the ones that are already the strongest price performers. Nvidia (Nasdaq: NVDA) is a fine example. As Isaac Newton said (in a very different context), "an object in motion tends to remain in motion." Market outperformers are generally companies that have outstanding sales and earnings growth, a durable competitive advantage, and increasing ownership by mutual funds, hedge funds and other institutional investors. By contrast, stocks making new lows have often disappointed investors with subpar sales and earnings growth and margin contraction. The big financial institutions are bailing out. In short, a long-term investor wants to buy low and sell high. But a short-term trader should look to buy high and sell higher. (Of course, when you sell high, your entry price always looks low.) However, there's a way for traders to tweak their investment strategy to increase their short-term returns. Yet it requires them to take a page from the long-term investor's playbook. Let me explain... SPONSORED [This FREE Package Reveals AI Stocks That Pay You CASH]( It's 100% free. Take it and [learn how to get paid to invest in AI dividends](. Sophisticated investors know that their asset allocation - how they divide their portfolio up among different types of stocks and bonds - is responsible for 90% of their long-term return. Since their goal is to buy low, they generally invest in the asset classes that are laggards. Why? Because they want to be holding that asset class when it returns to being a leader again. Take small cap stocks, for example. Companies with a market capitalization of $3 billion or less have averaged about 12% a year over the past century. (Market cap is determined by multiplying the price per share times the number of shares outstanding.) That is considerably better - 20% a year better - than the roughly 10% average annual return of large cap stocks. Right now, however, small cap stocks are inexpensive based on price-to-earnings, price-to-sales, book value and dividend yield. (That's what makes them so attractive to asset allocators.) Over the past decade, U.S. large cap stocks have returned 12.6% annually vs just 7% for small caps. Yep. Small caps have been big laggards. But when the cycle turns - as it always does eventually - small companies will once again outperform big ones. That's why contrarian asset allocators are now piling into the Russell 2000 index, the most prominent small cap benchmark. However, if you blend these two approaches - buying market leaders but in an unappreciated asset class (the small cap sector) - you can seriously goose your returns. Let me give you an example... Last October, I recommended Blue Bird Corp. (Nasdaq: BLBD) in my small cap trading service, Oxford Microcap Trader. The company makes and sells school buses. (Try to contain your excitement.) Yet here's something most investors don't know: school buses are America's largest mass transit system. And the market is highly regulated. Schools want buses that are low-emission, durable, serviceable and, above all, safe. I noted to readers that the nation has an aging school bus fleet, and that Blue Bird is the market leader. Over 180,000 of its buses are in operation today - and sales were growing at a 43% rate. The market soon saw what we did - and within a few months we stopped out with a 56% gain. Here's another example. On December 19, I recommended that subscribers purchase Sweetgreen (NYSE: SG). I told them that the company was revolutionizing the fast-food industry with delicious, seasonal meals made with fresh, locally sourced ingredients. The company was opening new stores at a torrid pace, using proprietary robots to assemble meals and cut costs. Revenue was growing at a 24% annual pace. I told readers that, "rising sales, additional stores and the new efficiencies created by automation should drive earnings per share substantially higher in the months ahead." That's exactly what happened. Sweetgreen smashed estimates. We locked in a 109% gain less than five months later. And earned an 892% return on a related call option. What do these two trades have in common? AI? Semiconductors? Software-as-a-Service? Absolutely not. The two companies are not tech-related at all. But they were rapidly growing companies in an underperforming sector: small caps. And the asset class remains inexpensive today. The Russell 2000 barely eked out a positive return in the first half. Yet if you look for rapidly growing companies in this asset class, you'll be surprised by the short-term gains they can deliver. As the old Alka-Seltzer ad promised: "Try it. You'll like it." Good investing, Alex [Leave a Comment]( [OXF Seven]( BUILD AND PROTECT YOUR WEALTH - [This Company Just Solved Europe's Energy Crisis... Wall Street Now Projects a Near 10-Fold Rise in 18 Months.]( - [Two New Deals...]( - [How to Profit From the Surge (Outside the Stock Market)... Click Here.]( - [5 Ways AI Will Transform Your Trading]( JOIN THE CONVERSATION [Facebook]( [Facebook]( [LinkedIn logo]( [LinkedIn]( [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth...&body=From%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth:%0D%0A%0DThis%20is%20how%20to%20seriously%20goose%20your%20profits...%0A%0D [Email Share](mailto:?subject=A%20great%20piece%20from%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth...&body=From%20Liberty%20Through%20Wealth:%0D%0A%0DThis%20is%20how%20to%20seriously%20goose%20your%20profits...%0A%0D MORE FROM LIBERTY THROUGH WEALTH [Token Offerings]( [Earnings Season Has Arrived]( [Token Offerings]( [These Sectors Are About to Surge]( [Token Offerings]( [This Is What’s So Great About America]( [Token Offerings]( [Ten Things Every Smart Investor Should Know]( SPONSORED [The Ultimate Passive Income Play]( [isometric happy businessman and money working]( The #1 income play for 2024 is NOT a stock, bond or private company... Rather, it's a [little-known alternative investment]( that could hand you big monthly income from oil and gas. [Find Out What It Is Right Here]( [The Oxford Club]( You are receiving this email because you subscribed to Liberty Through Wealth. Liberty Through Wealth is published by The Oxford Club. Questions? Check out our [FAQs](. Trying to reach us? [Contact us here.]( Please do not reply to this email as it goes to an unmonitored inbox. [Privacy Policy]( | [Whitelist Liberty Through Wealth]( | [Unsubscribe]( © 2024 The Oxford Club, LLC All Rights Reserved The Oxford Club | [105 West Monument Street](#) | [Baltimore, MD 21201](#) North America: [877.806.4508](#) | International: [+1.443.353.4610](#) [Oxfordclub.com]( Nothing published by The Oxford Club should be considered personalized investment advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed personalized investment advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after publication before trading on a recommendation. Any investments recommended by The Oxford Club should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. The information found on this website may only be used pursuant to the membership or subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of The Oxford Club, LLC, 105 West Monument Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.

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