 So we can really leverage your money well with $1 options. It's been a strategy that I've worked on for a number of years because you know what? A lot of people like to buy cheap options, and then they blow up their account, and then they think, I'll never do that again. And the reality is you need to figure out how to leverage these great moves in stocks, folks. I mean, it's been a phenomenal trading year. I'm sure Fawcett showed you the grace. It's been really one of the best years in memory. Everybody else is talking to me about how 2020, they can't wait for the year to be over. I would love another trading year like 2020. Sure, we don't want a pandemic to go with it. But you know what? You need to be taking advantage of these moves, folks. So we're going to walk with you through how to make sure that. Yeah. Quick, it looks like your screen is sharing your notes on the right, too. Yeah, I'm on the wrong screen there. Let me try a new share there. It'll do screen number two. Thank you, sir. I thought it wasn't sharing properly. See, we've got the full screen up there, baseball. You know, it's a World Series time, Fawcett. It's great to be able to talk about a baseball analogy right in the middle of the World Series. Most people are out there looking for singles in this market because they've been kind of so either beat up by their past issues that they've had in trading or they've heard people that haven't done well in trading. And they're missing these bigger opportunities to make doubles, triples, and home runs. And so basically, that's what I want to walk folks through. So what we don't do in this strategy is we don't go for the small fish. We really are looking for the bigger moves, the bigger opportunities. We're not just trying to get on the first base. We're trying to go for at least second base, which is at least a double in trading terms. Of course, that's 100% gain on your money. What do you do if you double your money in any investment, in my opinion, whether it's a stock, an option, Bitcoin, futures, 4x. If I get a double on anything, folks, I sell half of it no matter how good it looks, no matter how good you feel. You know, let's face it, we all want more wins and less losses in our portfolio, but you're gonna feel really good when you get a double. And yet my experience is those are the trades that you need to be able to keep a part of your money going for even bigger gains. I don't know about you, but for me, when I'm right, I tend to be right really quickly and right bigger than I expect a lot of times. And when I'm wrong, I tend to stay wrong. And so the reality is you've got to be more impatient with your winners, hang in there for at least half the position. We go for the next target of a triple, which is a 200% gain. We sell half of our remaining investment. And then we're going for our final piece. The four-bagger is a 300% return on your money. That's where we sell our final piece at a 300% gain. Now that doesn't happen every trade, but the point being that, you know, when you get just even one of these, even if you were doing it the way I'm gonna teach you here today, which is if you just started with four contracts and a dollar option means you're controlling 100 shares of stock for 100 bucks on an option trade. So that means if you buy four of these to do this proper capital allocation, it costs you no more than 400 bucks and sometimes less. We buy a half-dollar option, it costs you a couple hundred bucks. You sell two of them out and when you double your money from 400 to 800, you take another piece out when you're up another 300 bucks on that triple and then the final piece is worth 400 bucks on that last contract, you'd make 1100 bucks profit off of that $400 investment. So it's one of those things where one of those trades making a grand on just 400 bucks, it makes it really fun to trade again. That's what I love about this strategy. So we're gonna walk you through it, teach you about gamma, teach you about the elements of the indicators and go into a lot of case studies. Now, if you said, well, so why should you care? If you were following this approach and never putting more than 1000 bucks into any one trade, that basically start with 10K, you'd be up to 33 and a half thousand as of the end of September. So basically we update our numbers at the end of every month for these little graphics. And basically the point being that, the leverage is there, you say, sure it's been a good market, but the reality is we've done well in up markets, we've done well in down markets. And the key is knowing that where the opportunity is and knowing how to strike past performance does not guarantee future results. And so you wanna keep that in mind as well. So let's just look at an example here. This is AMD. I don't know how many of you might trade AMD advanced micro devices. Everybody's always talking about Apple and Facebook, but AMD has been on a phenomenal tear over the last few years. It's one of the best performing stocks in the S&P 500 the last two years. And so the point being that it's a chip stock and the key is we've got indicators here that we wanna talk about. We're not gonna get into more than just three key elements that make this service up. And the big thing that I wanna kind of highlight for you all today, that the way that I'm different at big trends, you know, I've been trading, if you don't know me, I've been trading for now over 30 years. I graduated from Duke University. Then the classic early mistake I made was I thought I was smarter than the market. I thought because of a great education, because I did my homework. And I know you all have been there too. You do a lot of work, you study all this stuff. You investigate these companies. You figure out when they're making money, when they're losing money. You say, I've got the surefire bet and then it doesn't fire. You're like, well, I hang in there. It's gotta come around. My research has gotta be right. And guess what? A lot of times if the market doesn't validate you, you don't get paid. And worse yet, you lose. You can't dig in the market. You gotta stay flexible. But the point being that what I've learned is that when something goes quote, overbought, like AMD did back here, we've got a few indicators here. This top one here is what's called the CCI. We're gonna get into these. That's the commodity channel index. The percent R, Larry Williams, percent range indicator. This bottom line, this green line here is the one we all wanna look at is the ADX. It wasn't close to firing on that first setup. That first attempt that AMD made, this is back in, you can see on this chart. I went back to early to late July when made the trade. But the early July trade, when it sets up like that, it's gotta get through those highs going forward. This is called confirmation. And one of the things that you see on this chart is that it's a big exit does not keep going. It tries, it sets up, and it fails. And the big part of trend trading is that you see lots of what I call fake outs that are not the true breakouts. And a lot of times the first attempt is a fake out. And if you tried to buy there and you got burned, and then the next time it truly breaks out, you go, oh, you know, fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me, right? You're going, okay, well, this is starting to set up again here. But look, two days later, that first day it doesn't confirm, but the second day it does, that's the confirmation check mark. We want to get on board this. We were in there buying this next morning here on this red negative candle. We were briefly down for the day. This is by the way, all these charts I'm showing you are daily charts. We keep it really simple here with this strategy. You don't have to monitor every second. I know Fausto is more of an expert at that than I am. Bottom line is that I'm an expert at finding the bigger trends and riding the heck out of them and getting the more for your money. And the bottom line is that for me, okay, so we buy in there, we're down about 30% on this aggressive option after one day. I don't want you to think that it never loses or that you never have to endure trades that are occasionally down or may finish down. That's why I say never commit more than your risk capital and don't over commit on any one trade. Even if it's going great, you know, we want to say never commit more than 10% of the capital you allocate to trade the service into any new trade. So if you got a 10 grand account, don't put more than a thousand bucks into a trade. It's just bad capital management if you get that greedy. Okay, if you got a $5,000 account, don't put more than 500 bucks in. You can still do that with 500 bucks to trade on this service. So the point being that, okay, now it's, we're in that trade, we're waiting for it to fire. We're in at a buck, $100 per contract, controlling the 100 shares on every one of those contracts. Well, with a right to buy at 75 and look where the stock was when we purchased that. It was right off of that open right up there it was in the neighborhood about 61 bucks. Now note, a socks at 61, why would you buy a 75 strike call? It means a right to buy a sock at 75. It's 14 points below that. Why not buy in the open market? Because we're buying an option that gives us the right to potentially do something with that option and turn it into stock later. And we're never going to exercise that right with the strategy. We're just trying to take advantage of the fact that as it goes from out of the money to you see it gets up here into the low 70s it's about 72 bucks. It never even gets to 75. And we're able to sell out at 100, then 200%. And then the final piece was sold on that last bar there at 300% that morning, cashed it out, sold it and said, thank you very much, we're done, we're out. Whether it goes on to a 500 or 1,000% gain, I don't care because all I want to do is catch my piece. I call it taking the meat out of the middle of the mood what I call the sweet spot of the trend. As it just kicks off and you get that confirmation there's likely to be a flood of initial buyers trying to get a piece of that too. Let's face it, you, me and everybody else out there out there wants trades that are moving in our favor and wants to get rid of trades that aren't. So the bottom line is that you're getting on that train. And as I said, it's not just about winning, it's also about knowing how to manage your losses. Babe Ruth to me is we're in the baseball season here at World Series Time here, Mr. October, but also you can see his career home run record, 714 career home runs. What you may not know is that look at this stat here. 1,330 career strikeouts, almost double his number of home runs. And yet he was at six someone say seven time world champion with the first one I didn't count because he never played even a single at bat or pitch on the Red Sox when they first won with him on board. But you know, two World Series with the Red Sox, all you Yankee fans glad that he was traded to the what they call the curse of the Bambino when the Red Sox traded him away, then they didn't win another championship for a century, right? But the point being that this is what I see a lot of traders having trouble with. This four letter word called fear. It's probably the most brutal word even more than the other four letter words you might think of because fear is what's holding a lot of people back from making great money in the markets because you're afraid of striking out. You may have had that experience, heard somebody that did. And that's why I say, okay, you know what? That fear is holding you back and it's getting in your way. It's preventing you from hitting those home runs and really growing your portfolio and enhancing your wealth and building your family's future as well.