Most people assume stock price movements are rational.

Sometimes they are—but often, they aren’t. Prices can swing unreasonably high or low for reasons that defy fundamentals or logic.

Advisors will tell you it’s about earnings, technicals, or the latest news. In my experience, there’s no consistent correlation between any of these and price movement.

Even volume isn’t a reliable indicator. Prices can jump or fall overnight on very little trading activity. At the end of the day, fear and greed are probably the two strongest forces driving the market.

That’s why Stars takes a different approach. It doesn’t care about absolute price changes—it only measures relative ones. Stars uses two cap-weighted ETFs to determine what to buy and sell:
> TQQQ, representing the best relative performers among 100 stocks
> SPY, representing the best relative performers among 500 stocks

By focusing on relative performance rather than emotions or speculation, Stars cuts through the noise to make data-driven, rational decisions in an often irrational market.