Rip your face off rally! Now what?

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Yes.
But it's not a victory lap moment. It's a heads-down, stay-focused signal. In the market's ebb and flow, today's win is tomorrow's baseline. We don't just celebrate, we re-calibrate. Napoleon knew it. We should too. Success demands more than a fleeting triumph. It's about what you do next. And next. And next. Keep your eyes on the prize.
For example, first thing yesterday morning, I was hiring a new tech concierge to help members navigate Portfolio Boss. I know from experience that a new bull market brings in tons of new people. Better to be proactive than reactive.
Switching gears...isn't it interesting how all those bears -- despite their 50 bajillion pieces of "evidence" and their wave counts, and their trend lines, and their patterns -- were insanely wrong?
You know what's even crazier?
The Twitter account I follow to get a pulse on what traders are thinking...after getting it wrong this whole time, he now says we have to be worried because Powell is "spooked." These people never learn. If you found yourself caught up in the bearish hype, let this lesson be forever burned into your noggin'. The public is years behind on average. The markets are forward looking.
That's why trading with a statistical edge works so well. Heck, my simple "7-lines" strategy from my book, Outfoxing Wall Street, easily beat the majority of investors -- and it's so dang simple that even an economist could understand it.

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Better yet, buy the book for yourself or someone that needs to clear their brain of malarkey and go with what works.
Thanks in advance! https://www.amazon.com/dp/0989483339#customerReviews
P.S. Pfizer continued its collapse today. Down another 6.7%. It still has a ways to go before it hits zero. They probably made BSX millions of new customers.
P.P.S. If the book gets to 50 reviews, I'll do something extra special this Christmas.
P.P.P.S. Thanks for looking down here. This is the average performance of the S&P 500 after a 1.85 standard deviation monster rally -- since 1928. In the immortal words of Napoleon: "The battlefield is a scene of constant chaos. The winner will be the one who controls that chaos, both his own and the enemies."

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