 All right. Here we go now. Welcome everybody. Lee Lowell here from smartoptioncell.com today is Saturday, January 15, 2022. Welcome to another edition of our Saturday Synopsis. What do we do? We look at the charts. That's what we do. We look at indexes. We look at individual stocks. I'm here to show you what I do and what I see on the charts. I'm a technical analyst. I study the charts. That's what I've been doing for the last 30 years. So I'm here to make these videos, these YouTube videos to try to help you understand what I'm seeing and how I could help you become a better technical analyst. It helps to have an idea of when to get in and when to get out of trades. I get lots of people email me asking me, Lee, how do I know when it's time to get into a trade? How do I know if I'm going to buy a stock? What's the right price? How do I know if it's overpriced, underpriced? I just don't know when to get into a stock. Now, in addition to fundamental analysis, which is what you can do to look at the underlying fundamentals of a company, meaning what are their sales? What are their earnings? What's their PE ratios? How are their projected revenues? Those are all the numbers that you can look at a company to see how they've been performing over time. But all those numbers are certainly a good thing, but it doesn't tell you when you should get into a trade or when a stock may be overbought or oversold or underpriced or overpriced. So for me, it's all about looking at the charts because all of that underlying data gets reflected into a price chart. Everybody that trades stocks has the same information that everybody else does. Unless you're an insider and you're getting some inside information, but we all know that's illegal, so we don't even talk about that. But everyone else that trades in the market has access to the same information. And all those numbers, all those sales, earnings, revenue, PE ratios, whatever, all gets reflected on the chart. And the market will tell you when a stock is overbought or oversold or when it's the right time to get into a trade. That's why I focus on technical analysis. That's why my main thing is 99% of the time, technical analysis is when I make a decision to get into or out of a trade. So I'm here to help you. I'm here to show you what I do, what I see and what I look for on the charts. And it's all about technical analysis and I'm going to show you what we use or what I use as my indicators. Now, whenever you look at a chart, you can look at a plain price chart. The price action is how has the stock been moving over time? Has it been going up? Has it been going down? And to help you along the way to help you figure out where's the momentum or if a stock has momentum or is it very choppy or is it moving in one direction, you can use moving averages and other types of technical indicators. Look at support and resistance levels. Where's the stock having trouble breaking through? Or where's the stock having trouble not falling below? Where's the support? Where's the resistance? So all these things you can look at on a chart to help you gauge whether it's time to get in or out of a position. Now, what you see here on the chart, I keep it very simple and very old school. I don't use a lot of indicators. What you see on the chart in front of you is a bar chart, daily bar chart. And which means every one of these vertical lines you see here is one day's worth of trading. And the top of the bar is the high of the day. The low of the bar or the bottom of the bar is the low price of stock traded for that day. And over time, it forms a pattern or it forms, you know, it has a direction. Now, what you're seeing on the chart here is what we look at for the overall broadest view of the market. And what we're seeing is the SPY, which is the exchange traded front for the S&P 500 index. The SP500 index to me is the broadest measure of the market as a whole. So I like to concentrate on that. And the SPY is a tradable fund, trades just like a stock. So it gives us an easy way to get long or short the market, whatever you feel. And it's a great vehicle to trade in. Now, for me, I have a long term approach. I'm bullish on the stock market for the long term, years and years and years. So to make it easy for me, all I do is when I want to invest in the market as a whole, I just buy shares of the SPY or I buy long term deep in the money call options, which is a subject for another day. But what I like to do is I try to buy the SPY on pullbacks. Whenever it has a decent pullback, I buy a few shares here and there and just do that month after month. And I create this long term position for my account. Now, I also get people that email me each week saying, Lee, I want to trade this thing. I want to get it in and out. I want to become a trader. So there's a lot of people that tell me what happens to their trades is that a lot of these people, they want to make money fast, so they're trying to trade very short term with options. They try to buy very short term call options, and those have a high rate of failure. Trading like that, it's a hard gig. It's very hard to do. If you're trading short term options, you've got to be really good at picking the direction of the stock because if the stock doesn't move in that short timeframe, those options that you bought are going to expire and you're going to lose your money. I'm sure a lot of people out there have tried it. That's not my game. I'm in for the long haul and when I do trade for our newsletters, our time frame is roughly one to three months, but we're trading out of the money options. That gives us a lot of cushion for directional error. That's what we like to do. We like to sell options because it gives us an opportunity to still make money even if the stock moves in the wrong direction. You really can't do that. If you're buying stocks, there's only one way to be right and that's the stock has to go up. Or if you're shorting stocks, there's only one way to be right and the stock has to go down. If it moves in the opposite direction, you're toast. We like to sell out of the money options. That gives us a lot of cushion for directional error because we all know we're not going to get the direction right all the time. You might as well play and put the odds in your favor by selling out of the money options because it gives you a lot of cushion for error. That's how we do it. That's how we do it. Let's take a look at the market and see what's going on and give an idea of where it might be heading next. On the charts, I have my three normal moving averages. I have a 20-day, 50-day, and 200-day moving average. Those are up here on the price action. Down here, I have the 14-day RSI overbought, oversold indicator. I got the 80-level, 20-level as my overbought, oversold levels. Down here, I have the stochastics, which I've recently added. Just trying to see if it could help me time my trades a little bit better. I don't know if I'm going to use it long-term. I'm giving it some time to see if it can help me. Anyway, this is the stochastics down here. The numbers are 12, 26, and 9 because when you pull up the stochastics, you have to put in some levels. 12, 26, 9. On the RSI, it's a 14-day RSI. Let's take a look at the market and see what's happening here. I have these markings on the charts that I've kept for a long time. I'm going to take these off now so we can kind of look at more of the price action without all this mumble jumble on here. I've had these lines in here for a very long time. For some of you that have been with us for a while, you know you've seen these patterns here. I'm going to get rid of a lot of this stuff. We can start from a nice clean chart. You can see this W pattern, which is a bullish pattern. Obviously the market went up at that point. I'm just removing all this. Now we have a nice clean chart. You can see just the beautiful momentum, the upwards momentum the stock markets had since the pandemic. I'm going to pull back a little bit here. Here's February, March, 2020. Had the V-shape recovery and the markets just gone up since. You've been in the market long-term bullish. You've had a hell of a run. Now if you're trying to shade this thing short-term, you may have been whipped out back and forth, back and forth. I'm just trying to tell you if you're trading short-term options, it's a tough gig. So where is the market headed? Well, obviously you can see it's going up, but a lot of people get caught in these little pullbacks right here. One to two-week pullbacks, people get nervous and they sell out of their positions and they get frustrated because the market has a little bit of pullback for a couple of days. But if you think about it, the stock market is at all-time highs. We're going to pull out to the monthly here. You can see the S&P 500 all-time highs just this month alone. Back here on this was the first couple of trading days of January, hitting all-time new highs. Let me open this up a little so you can see it better right here. So this was on January 4th, right here, all-time new highs. So if you look back, the market's been great and we're trading at all-time new highs, but it's these little tiny pullbacks that get people all crazed. They think that this is the start of the next bear market and they bought their call options up here on the tops and the short-term call options they bought. A couple of days later, those things expire and people are losing money. So they get very frustrated. That's not how I like to play. That's not how we play it in our newsletters. We're just going along with the momentum and we're looking to buy or we're looking to get into our long positions. Those are selling put options and selling put option credit spreads. Those are bullish positions. So we look for the pullbacks and then we enter our trades. Well, how do we know the market's on a pullback? Well, that's when we start to draw our trend lines. So I'm going to just start drawing some new lines here and I won't go all the way back. So you kind of connect the bottoms of some recent moves here. So here's your little uptrend on the bottom of the channel and I'll just connect some of these lines up here. It doesn't have to be exact and what I put on the chart might be something different than somebody else might put on the chart. But right now you can see that the S&P 500 or the general market is sort of now in this little uptrend for the last three or four months or so. So if the market goes along with the pattern that it's been, and I say this a lot, an object in motion will tend to stay in that same motion until something comes along and knocks it in another direction. And stocks trade the same way. They trade with momentum. They're going to keep going in that same direction until something pushes it in another direction. Now that push could be a one or two week down move or it could be something like the pandemic where it pushed it really far down. But for now, we're in this nice little channel here. So you can see when it connects to the bottom leg of the channel, it will tend to go up. It's not guaranteed. There's no guarantees in trading, but you want to pick higher probability entries. So here is a more higher probability entry or anytime that the market, the price action has come down to the channel. Or on other times you can see the price action bounces every time it hits the 50 day or the 20 day moving edge. Here's the 20 day, the blue line, 50 days, the red line. So if you're trying to try to gauge your timing, you can gauge it off of the moving averages or you can draw yourself some channels like this. Now what I've been doing is I nibble. And when I say nibble, I buy a few shares here and there of the SPY. I just keep building my long term portfolio, but I buy in dips. Okay, I buy in these dips down here. Today I bought some more of the SPY right around 460. Right around 460, I bought some and the market closed at 464.72. I'm not scalping. I'm not selling these things out. These are things that I'm holding for the long call. And all along the way, the little down moves, I buy a little more, I buy a little more. So I keep building this position. And, you know, one of the times I bought here, we'll look where it is now. So you want to use these little pullbacks as your gauge. Now, if you want to short the market or sell the market, you could try to sell it when it hits along the top leg here. But you got to be fast because the market is meant to go up over time. So if you're short and you sell, you better take profits pretty quickly or else they're going to evaporate because the market is just going to keep going up over time. So what we do in the smart option seller, we look at the charts. We try to time these entries here. When it looks like it may be bouncing off the bottom leg here, that's when we enter a naked put sell or a put option credit spread, which is also a bullish strategy. So that's what we do. And that's as simple as that. Now, the RSI is, you know, right in the middle of the range, it's not overbought, not oversold. So that just tells me the market is content and it's just moving up nicely along its nice momentum. Stochastics here, you know, not telling me all that much. If anything, it may be getting a little on the overbought side, but the RSI is not telling me that and the price action is telling me it probably could bounce here. So I'm not convinced that the stochastics is helping me enough. So I'm not sure if I'm paying, if I'm going to pay a lot of attention to that. But anyway, so for me, once again, I nibbled here the other day, I nibbled down here. A couple of weeks ago, I nibbled down here. And that's just how you can build a long term position. If that's what you want, I'm not telling you what to do. This is not, I'm not giving you any recommendations. This is not personal investment advice. This is just me telling you what I've been doing. Okay, so here's the the S&P 500. And I think it's going to keep going up over time. That's just how the market works. Sure, there the narrative out there is an inflation is creeping up or it's been creeping up. It's been very high actually, you know, things cost more money these days, everything that you buy. That's just what's happening out there. The US Federal Reserve is going to start raising interest rates to help fight off this inflation. And typically stocks can sell off when interest rates rise. But we know interest rates are not going to rise dramatically. They come in little baby steps, not enough for you to pull your money out of the stock market and start investing in long term, you know, US Treasury bonds. Those still don't pay you hardly anything. It wasn't going to give you 2%, 3%. Whereas in the stock market, the long term average is somewhere between 7% and 10%. If you look at the S&P 500 over the last couple years, it's been returning 27%, 28%. It's been crazy. So the stock market is still your best bet for long term, long term wealth. So if the Fed starts to raise interest rates, you're not going to see this gigantic sell off because people know better. People are smarter than that. So the stock market is meant to go up over time. It's just the short term speculations that people have where they, you know, they swear off the market forever, they're never going to play again because they try to make money quick and they get whipsawed out. It's just too hard of a way to make money. So I'm in it for the long haul. For our newsletters, we're in one to three months at a time and we sell out of the money options because it gives us more directional cushion for error. All right, so let's take a look at the NASDAQ represented by the QQQ and the tech stocks have been having a little bit harder time of late. Now you can see I've marked this up pretty good as well. We've got this long term uptrend, which has been very nice as well. You've had some pullbacks here. It's been sideways here. So let me open this up a little bit. So I probably drew this, this little channel very recently. So it's been bouncing in between this little channel fell through it a little bit this week. Pop back up and then you can see here to yesterday on Friday, it closed. Here's a little dash mark on the right side of the bars where it closed for days. So it closed above the bottom leg of the support here. So maybe next week, if the news is not that bad, maybe the NASDAQ will pop here and head back up. Now, if you're looking to get long, you're looking for higher probability trades. This is where you might want to nibble a little bit. Not saying to bet the farm, don't bet the house, but there's a good possibility that the NASDAQ could bounce because it's following along the patterns. And this long upwards pattern is still intact. If you just extend this long blue line, you'll see it matches up right with the bottom edge here. We can take this off and we can draw a new one here. We can go back as far as you want. So you just kind of connect some of the bottoms and there you go. It's still within the long, long-term channel there. So you're looking for higher probability setups. The market's still going up. Maybe you wait for it to come down a little more to see if it bounces. If it bounces, then you get in. You may never get the bottom, but you'll get it on a nice move up. So the market, to me, looks good for the long haul. That's just how it works. You're going to have fits and starts. It's going to go up, it's going to go down, but you have to be willing to see through it. You have to be willing to get through those times. If you're playing very short-term trading, you better be super good at picking direction in the short-term. You better know where the stock is going in that one week timeframe. And that's very hard to do. So just be careful if you're playing short-term. So the NASDAQ's still going up, going through fits and starts. Are we going to have a bear market? Because there's always bears out there. There's always people saying that we've hit the top, we can't go any higher. And why do they say that? Because they're probably not in the market and they're just wishing the market will come down so they can get in. Or they're just, they don't know any better. So they could have said, we're never going up again. And after the pandemic, they said, we're never going higher than this and they've tried to sell here. And they try to sell here and they try to sell here, but yet the market keeps going up on them. So the bears have been losing pretty badly. So the broader market, the NASDAQ, the S&P 500, even the Dow, we can look at the Diamonds DIA. That's the exchange-traded fund for the Dow Jones. Dow Jones going up as well has a nice movement up higher. And the market, the overall market is going to keep going up as well. So we look for the pullbacks and we get into trades. Now, we did sell a put credit spread on the QQQ this week. Can't tell you the exact specs of the trade because that would be unfair to my paying members. But we're using the pullback as an entry, as a bullish entry. And we're hoping that the market will go up, which will make our trade work out. These are higher probability setups that we're looking for. All right, so let's take a look at some individual stocks because that's what we do as well. We trade individual stocks too. And we always tend to look at some of the same stocks because these are the stocks that we trade. And I pull up some other stocks just to show you some patterns. So let's look at Apple first. Now, you can see that I have tons of things under here. I've got channels and triangles and W patterns, channels. So where is Apple looking? Well, Apple had just hit all-time highs again right around the beginning of January, along with everything else, had the pullback. And now it's sort of trying to find its footing here. Is there a pattern that I can see? You always want to try to look for patterns. What I can see here is maybe we've got some support right around here. Support comes when a stock makes a number of moves to a certain area where it can't get through, whether that's trying to get up through resistance or trying to drop through support. So around the 168 level seems to be a bottom for now. Is there any other pattern I can see? Apple is still on this nice little uptrend here. And maybe we have a little resistance up here. It's forming this ascending type of triangle here within a sort of a sideways pattern. It still has the momentum. So maybe it's going to bounce off of this trend line that I just drew and maybe it'll start to go up. And maybe it'll try to get through this resistance line right around 182, 183 right up here. So you can see Apple's probably going to move along this bottom leg of the trend line and try to get up through this resistance. Or if we have really bad time in the market, then it's going to drop down through the support and trade somewhere in between the 50-day and 200-day moving average. So those are the scenarios. These are the things I look for. Try to gauge which way the market or stock might go. So to me, if the market is strong next week, Apple's going to move along this bottom leg here. So people say, when do I get in? How do I know it's a good price for a stock? Well for me, all those fundamentals I talked about are reflected in the price chart. So it's all about trying to find the higher probability setups, where the stock may go next. And if you want to get along the stock, then you wait for that point where you think it's going to bounce. That's how you do it. So that's Apple. Let's look at Tesla. We look at Tesla every week. Tesla is just still a crazy stock. I talk about it all the time. It's very hard to chart. Sometimes it's very hard to drop a chart on Tesla because it's very erratic. It's very volatile. For right now, maybe it's in this little downtrending channel, but it popped above it, popped back down, popped above it again. So this channel, maybe it's not the greatest thing to look at. It's hard to sometimes gauge where Tesla might go. We may have the support right around 900, could be good support right there. I'll draw the line, make it long so we get some time here. If Tesla does come back down this week or next week, it would probably find some support right around 900. And we'll see. So the moving average, the 200-day moving average is sloping up the R-size. Right smack in the middle, Stochastic's right smack in the middle. So Tesla's not oversold right here. It's just probably going to move along, maybe along with the downtrending chart, or maybe the downtrending line, or maybe it'll just start to go up again. For me, it's very hard to gauge where Tesla wants to go next. The technical tools I use, sometimes it's hard to apply to Tesla. That's just the kind of stock it is. So that's Tesla. Let's look at some others. Let's look at Disney. We've looked at Disney before. Like Disney down here, bought some off the bottom of the R-size. I got real oversold, the Stochastic started to turn up from there as well. Kind of meandering along here, but had a big down day today. So it's been knocked back down. Where's Disney going to go from here? It could be anybody's guess. Could be starting another downtrend here, maybe a little bit. But we know in the long run Disney's going to go back up. Going to find its supports at some point and find new highs. What I get in here, I don't see anything that's telling me one way or the other I should get into Disney, either on the long side or short side. I'm not doing anything on Disney because the chart just doesn't look right for anything. If anything, Disney might sell off a little bit more. The R-size turned lower. The Stochastics may have a crossover to the downside here. So staying away from Disney for now, nothing there for me. Let's look at Walmart. Walmart is in this longer sideways channel that I drew here. Got the upside, got the downside. It's right in the middle. Some people could say, we also have, you've got a triangle pattern, congestion pattern right here. What does that mean? That means that the ranges are getting tighter and tighter and eventually it's going to blast out either to the upside or to the downside. That could be one scenario or the other scenario is it could just, you know, trade, keep bouncing in between the channels here. But for now, this congestion triangle pattern, Walmart will probably blast out to the downside or the upside pretty soon. And I'm hoping to the upside because I'm long some Walmart for the long term. I want to see it go up, but there's no way of telling yet. Now we do have earning season starting next week. Earning season is getting underway, so the next month and a half is going to be a lot of earnings. So we're going to see lots of companies moving big in one direction or another. All right, so we got Walmart. Let's look at Clorox because I've been talking about Clorox. I have a position in Clorox and I had mentioned a few weeks ago that, you know, let me pull back here a little. So I show every week Clorox was in a nice uptrend, was in this nice downtrend. It finally was trading sideways for a while. I was saying, okay, as soon as it gets out of this sideways channel and gets above the 200-day moving average, I'm getting in. Okay. And right here, this section right here, around the middle of December, I bought in around $176 a share. I thought that was going to be the breakout and would just go higher from here. It came back down into the channel, but found the support at the uptrend in 20-day moving average. And now Clorox is looking pretty good. Had a good day yesterday, Friday, January 14th. So I'm in the black here, which is good. I think Clorox should probably keep moving higher from here. What other stocks do we like to take a look at? Pepsi. Coke and Pepsi we'll look at. Pepsi still looking strong. Just has this nice, beautiful following along the trend lines. I think this is all-time highs for Pepsi. Let me take a look. Yep. All-time highs for Pepsi. Pepsi just has this nice, just beautiful, beautiful, just hugging along the 20-day moving average. Pepsi I think could just keep running higher, just going to follow along on the moving average. But just remember, if you get into a trade, keep an eye on when earnings are. We don't like to have positions over an earnings announcement, so we keep that in check. Let's look at Coca-Cola. I think we just hit. Let me double-check the monthly chart here. Yep. All-time new highs for Coca-Cola right here. Just today, I think it was. I'm long Coca-Cola shares. Good dividend. All-time new highs, the end of yesterday, Friday. So Coke looking strong. I really can't see any reason why it would come off from here. All right. I wish I could get a trade going naked put-selling, but it just doesn't offer me enough downside cushion when we sell put options. But Coca-Cola, great long-term company for long-term. What other stocks? AMD. We always look at AMD. AMD's been pretty erratic of late. The tech stocks have been getting hit. AMD's part of that. Coming down, get down to this 130 level that I drew support line. I don't remember when I drew it, but obviously we had a big blast through it here. But this was the end of last week, I think, and had that nice reversal. Had that big reversal day, which was nice in the market. And so AMD is now back above the support line. It may have a little bit of a down trend there. Some people would see this as a bearish type of pattern where it's going to keep trading in here and then eventually fall through. I don't know yet. I'm keeping an eye on AMD. We don't have any trades in AMD at the moment. I'm just waiting to see where it goes. Let me take a look at my stocks here and see what else I have on the list. Let's see. Oracle, let's take a quick look at Oracle. We've had a put-selling Oracle that has moved in the right direction for us, even though the stocks come down. We got into Oracle right around here. It had a nice bounce, and then it pulled all the way back. So we got in right around here somewhere. We sold the put and the market and the stocks hasn't really gone much. Hugging along the 200-day moving average here is the cast is kind of hugging along the bottom. Probably going to find support hopefully and move back up. I like Oracle for the long term. We sold the put on it with a lot of cushion, so that worked for us. Let's look at Cisco. You know, not seeing much there. Cisco, let me move this over. Let me move the title over a little bit. And not seeing much in Cisco. Let's take a look at what else we got here. Whoopsie. Hang on. Sorry about that. Saw my emails in there. Let's take a look at some other stocks. We looked at Disney, Walmart, Tesla. Now the healthcare stocks have taken a little beating this week. Not BMY, though. Pfizer, Merck. Healthcare looks decent. Kellogg. And let's take a look at Kellogg here. Kellogg's had this nice sort of roundish bottom and starting to move higher. Kellogg and General Mills. They kind of grouped them together, make a lot of cereals. They've both been moving higher. You know, just kind of hugging along their 20-day moving averages. What else we have? Verizon I talked a lot about as well. Had the bullish move finally off the bottom. Had a bullish flag pattern did go up. Maybe making another bullish pennant here could be possibility. Will Verizon bounce right off the 20-day moving average and move higher from here? I'm watching Verizon next week, actually. And see if it bounces here and goes higher. If it is, I may start to nibble here and may get us in for a new trade. So that's Verizon. Same thing with AT&T. AT&T had actually a bigger move. Went from $22 to $27 a share. So they're moving in tandem. Let's take a quick another look here. What other stocks we have? The payment sector. PayPal and Square. I've talked about them as well. PayPal. It's been trading sideways here. I don't like this last little move here. It's sort of getting through the support line. You know, PayPal could have a few more days of downside. I don't like how it kind of fell through that 180 level here. Keep an eye on PayPal. If you long, you may want to tighten up those stops possibly. I'm going to give it a few more days. The RSI is still sort of in the middle, but could be in the stochastics, could be starting to turn down. We'll see if it crosses over next week. Square, the other stock in the payment sector. Getting beat pretty good. Getting beat pretty good. Price action still going down, but the RSI is just kind of hugging along the bottom, not making new lows as the price action makes new lows. That's sort of a bullish divergence. I'd like to see Square kind of find a bottom here. The stochastics kind of hugging along the bottom also. So maybe the selling is starting to dry up in Square, but I'd like to see it trade sideways for a little bit, and then it should start to move higher. All right, let me see if there's anything else here. Let's see. What do we got? Twitter? Twitter still kind of, Twitter still going down. I'm not sure Twitter's found a bottom yet. Still going down, but the RSI hasn't made new lows either, and the stochastics still kind of going up. So maybe Twitter's getting close to a bottom there as well. Let's see what else. Anything else that strikes are fancy. Facebook just going along. Chewy. Chewy's kind of stuck in a downtrend here. Still in this downtrending channel for Chewy. Chewy might have a little bit more to go on the downside. Bitcoin stocks, Marathon, Mara. Bitcoin doesn't get going. These are going to drop a little tube. Riot and Mara. Riot kind of falling through the support that I drew there. All right, I think that's about it. We look to Coke. We look to Clorox, eBay. Anything happening in eBay? If anything, you might have a little more to the downside. All right, so that's it for the synopsis here. These are just things that I'm seeing. Get good with your technical analysis. Start looking at charts. Start looking at support and resistance. Start seeing where the moving averages are, and it'll help you with your timing. It'll help you time your trades. It's just another tool to have in your toolbox if you understand how to do technical analysis. All right, so that's it for that. It's been helpful to you. Let's quickly go to our website. SmartOptionSolo.com. You know we talk about put selling a lot here. So go to our website. Click on the put selling basics, our website, smartOptionSolo.com. Click on put selling basics. We got a free copy for you. Put your name, email, address here. Send your free copy. What else we have here? Our services tab. We have our two newsletters and our one-on-one coaching if you need some help getting to the next level. All right, so that's it. That's all for this YouTube video. Leave me a comment if you would. Don't forget to subscribe. If you'd like, hit that red subscribe button in the bottom right-hand corner. And leave me a message. Send me a message. Email me. I love hearing from you. And I will always try to answer you back. All right, that's all for me today. Hope everyone has a good weekend and a great trading week ahead. And I hope to see you back here next Saturday. All right, this is Lee Lowell signing off.