The “Sleeper” Stock Quietly Beating Robinhood
This article is excerpted from Tom Yeung’s Moonshot Investor newsletter. To make sure you don’t miss any of Tom’s potential 100x picks, subscribe to his mailing list here . Markets Turn Tail… Again When Once Upon a Time in America was released in 1984, the late Roger Ebert called it “an absolute masterwork of cinema.” The film would go on to win multiple awards and remains a fan favorite on my family’s movie list. There’s just one little problem: The full version is almost 4 hours long. As riveting as the “epic poem of violence and greed” can be, I often sit through the movie feeling as if it’ll never end. Investors watching the markets can relate. Last week, the SP 500 recovered 6%, just to drop again this week. Short-term traders might call it a dead cat bounce while longer-term investors would call it a gratuitously long “masterwork” by the Fed. And we aren’t even at intermission yet. With interest rates still on track to rise at least another 150 basis points, investors need to switch tactics and buy stocks that benefit from rising rates.
The “Sleeper” Stock Quietly Beating Robinhood
This article is excerpted from Tom Yeung’s Moonshot Investor newsletter. To make sure you don’t miss any of Tom’s potential 100x picks, subscribe to his mailing list here . Markets Turn Tail… Again When Once Upon a Time in America was released in 1984, the late Roger Ebert called it “an absolute masterwork of cinema.” The film would go on to win multiple awards and remains a fan favorite on my family’s movie list. There’s just one little problem: The full version is almost 4 hours long. As riveting as the “epic poem of violence and greed” can be, I often sit through the movie feeling as if it’ll never end. Investors watching the markets can relate. Last week, the SP 500 recovered 6%, just to drop again this week. Short-term traders might call it a dead cat bounce while longer-term investors would call it a gratuitously long “masterwork” by the Fed. And we aren’t even at intermission yet. With interest rates still on track to rise at least another 150 basis points, investors need to switch tactics and buy stocks that benefit from rising rates.