Apple, Tesla and the Nasdaq Are Tanking. Should You Buy This Dip?

 
March 5, 2021
 
Big Debt + 83% Crash +
Dividend Cuts = 157% Return?
What does an 83% stock price dip, dividend cuts and swimming in debt have in common?

They were all the news about Apache Corp. last April.

But with those headlines, how did ex-hedge fund manager Lance Ippolito know to buy in at that time…

And walk away with a 157% return just over a month later?

He just waited for this.
Learn How He Did It Here
 
Apple, Tesla and the Nasdaq Are Tanking. Should You Buy This Dip?
It's finally happening, guys. We're seeing what we've been talking about since late last year, and it's starting with the Nasdaq pullback in 2021.

Since COVID-19 broke out in March 2020, everything has gone bananas. The Nasdaq made a 103% move from March to February, and we're finally coming off of it.

There are a lot of questions that come along with what the Nasdaq and the stock market are showing. Will it mean a bear market? That remains to be seen. Are we entering an inflationary period? Definitely. But, most importantly

Should you buy the dip? That depends on your timeline and strategy. Are you looking to make a quick move? Or are you a long-term investor looking for some growth stocks in the Nasdaq?
See if the Dip Is Right for You
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My Second Major Takeaway
From Buffett's Annual Letter
Earlier this week, we discussed Warren Buffett's annual letter… and today we're back with Part II of the two most important takeaways from his 2021 edition.

In my first video, we discussed Buffett's "always bet on America" philosophy, what he also calls "the great American tailwind."

In a nutshell, Buffett believes the American economy will always continue to grow. Sure, there will be pullbacks, corrections, bear markets and full-blown recessions. But it always recovers and eventually heads higher.

So after every downturn thus far, higher prices soon followed — the great American tailwind.
Should You Bet on Buffett?
 
"Hi Roger, Really enjoy the classes and learned so much, and appreciate very much."

Kelvin L.




Swing Low is a term used in technical analysis that refers to the troughs reached by a security's price or an indicator. A swing low is created when a low is lower than any other surrounding prices. Successively lower swing lows indicate that the underlying security is in a downtrend, while higher lows signal an uptrend. A swing low's opposite counterpart is a swing high.
 
 
 
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