📈 Missed the Rally? Watch This Video. 📽️

Good morning, traders…

It’s remarkable how much the stock market can change in a short amount of time.

Since April 7, when sentiment was at multi-year lows and everyone was worried about a historic market crash, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA: SPY) has gained a staggering 22%…

SPY chart: April 1-present, 15-minute candles — courtesy of TC2000

Don’t say I didn’t warn you. On April 24, once the bottoming signals became impossible to ignore, I wrote about how the market’s tone had shifted (and was likely to reverse to the upside).

Now, here we are: headed back towards all-time highs. Meanwhile, some traders have just been watching everything rip higher, frozen in fear, unwilling to act.

But I understand their hesitancy. When the price action is this continually bullish, it makes traders nervous…

They start to worry that they’re “chasing the move” rather than sticking to a sound process.

The feeling that the train is leaving the station without you can mess with your head. It can make you question your strategy, abandon your edge, and force trades from subpar setups. 

It’s frustrating. It’s emotionally taxing. And it can be very expensive.

So, let’s break down how to avoid that trap. How to stay patient, methodical, and confident, even when it feels like the market is running away from you.

This is one of the most important skills a trader can develop — knowing when you’re chasing vs. riding the momentum with discipline.

If you’ve been second-guessing your entries lately, this video is for you. 

Hit the play button below. It just might save you from your next bad trade…

Happy trading,

Ben Sturgill

P.S. If you want access to the system that has achieved an 89% win-rate with a 72% average gain…*

Then NOW is the time to start using my OMEN System.

TOMORROW, May 14, you have two opportunities to join LIVE OMEN TRAINING SESSIONS:

  • Aaron Hunziker at 10:00 a.m.
  • Danny Phee at 7:00 p.m.

Space is running out — Click here to reserve your seat for either session (or both).

*Past performance does not indicate future results

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