Most analysts build models based on fundamentals or complex quantitative formulas.

I don’t.

I focus exclusively on price action—what the market shows, not what people think it should do.

Over the last 50 years, the S&P has consistently risen, with corrections of 10–40% occurring every few years. Most investors fear these pullbacks. The Stars model thrives on them—buying more shares of the most volatile components when they’re cheapest.

The average investor holds a stock for just 6 months. That short-term thinking gives them a 15% chance of beating the S&P. The Stars model holds for 8 years—pushing accuracy toward 100% and real risk toward zero.

It’s simple: long-term investors need to hold great investments. Stars invests in SPY (the S&P 500) and TQQQ (the top 50 fastest-growing stocks, tripled). Both automatically increase positions in rising stocks and trim the laggards.
Most investors do the opposite.

That’s why the Stars model consistently outperforms—because it thinks and invests differently.

Let’s talk if you’re ready to look beyond traditional strategies.