This week I want to share why the Stars model makes such a compelling case for portfolio performance.

When it comes to investing, it’s not about one stock or one asset—it’s about how the whole portfolio performs. Diversification often dilutes returns, while buy-and-hold strategies tend to strengthen them. Stars was built with that in mind.

📊 The numbers are striking:
> With just 20% TQQQ, the Stars model outperformed the S&P 500 by 8x over 26 years.
> With 40% TQQQ, it outperformed the S&P 500 by 17x over the same period.

How? Stars doesn’t fear corrections—it thrives on them. About half of its performance comes from volatility, buying additional shares at 10–20 cents on the dollar during rebalancing. Even Warren Buffett can’t get deals like that.

And then there’s the Bitcoin variation of Stars. Over the past 5 years, combining 40% Bitcoin with 40% TQQQ delivered an average return of 60% per year—a portfolio 10x larger in just five years.

Of course, Bitcoin brings volatility. That’s why Stars only purchases Bitcoin with profits from TQQQ—always at highs, never at lows—making it a much safer approach than buying outright.

➡️ Stars isn’t for everyone, but for those serious about long-term portfolio performance, the numbers speak for themselves.