[RiskHedge Report] How to Execute My #1 Trading Strategy Yourself [Justin Spittler] By Justin Spittler - RiskHedge   [Last month](, I pulled back the curtain on my #1 trading strategy. As I showed you, it takes advantage of a rare market phenomenon⦠Something I call âforced buying.â Itâs one of the most lucrative strategies Iâve ever put to work. And today, Iâll share the exact setup I look for so you can put on your own trades today. But first, let me recap why this strategy is so lucrative⦠- Normally, investors buy and sell stocks at will⦠But thereâs select groups of stocks Wall Street is forced to buy. Itâs required by law. And the ones doing the buying are rarely small fish. Instead, theyâre big banks, hedge funds, and other powerful financial institutions with deep pockets. Together, these institutions control trillions of dollars. No one on earth can move stocks like them. - Consider what happened when Wall Street was forced to buy pot stocks recently⦠Aurora Cannabis (ACB) spiked 250% in a month. Tilray (TLRY) rallied 115% in 2 weeks. And Canopy Growth (CGC)âthe worldâs biggest pot stockâhas more than doubled since the start of October. A casual observer would tell you pro-cannabis legislation was behind these moves. And itâs true. A number of states have legalized cannabis in one form or another in recent weeks. Congress also passed a historic bill to decriminalize cannabis on Friday. But these moves wouldnât have been nearly as explosive were it not for this special market phenomenon. - Regular RiskHedge readers know Iâm talking about âshort squeezesâ⦠Short selling a stock is betting that it will fall in value. But the short sellers donât actually own a stock they short. They borrow it from someone else and sell it into the market. To close out the trade, they must always buy the stock back. As I mentioned, itâs required by law. This forced buying can put intense pressure on a stock to rise. If the buying pressure is strong enough, it ignites whatâs known as a âshort squeezeâ... which can lead to 40%, 50%, or bigger gains in as little as a few hours. Thatâs a huge reason why pot stocks have exploded recently. Many of these stocks had sky-high short interests. They were among the marketâs most hated stocks! Still, profiting off short squeezes isnât as simple as buying any stock with a high short interest. You have to know what to look for. And thereâs one particular setup that routinely leads to big gains. It works best on my favorite group of stocks: initial public offerings (IPOs). - IPOs are prime short squeeze candidates⦠Thatâs a bit of a shocker to some people. After all, IPOs are some of the marketâs fastest-growing and most disruptive stocks. Nonetheless, many IPOs are downright hated... which often leads to short sellers piling on bets against them. There are a few reasons why investors often hate IPOs. For one, recently IPOâed companies are brand-new stocks. That means they have no track record, zero price history... not even a single quarterly earnings report under their belt. In short, IPOs havenât yet demonstrated they can succeed as a public company... so they tend to attract lots of doubters. Most IPOs arenât household names yet either. And many investors avoid companies they donât âknow.â This is why we see many top-tier IPOs stumble out of the gates. But forced buying kicks in big time when IPOs rebound and short sellers are forced to buy back shares. But remember⦠- Profiting off hated IPOs isnât as simple as buying a heavily shorted stock⦠Your timing also needs to be spot on. And one pattern routinely ignites explosive short squeezes in IPOs. Look at this chart of social commerce giant Pinterest (PINS) since its April 2019 IPO. Notice the bottoming pattern it put in. This pattern appears all the time in recent IPOs. Often, itâs a textbook âbuy signalâ⦠like it was here. Source: Stockcharts Pinterest has already rallied 84% since I added it to the IPO Insider portfolio less than 3 months ago. - When this pattern is paired with a high level of short interest, the gains can be life-changingâ¦Â  Look at this chart of Chinese electric vehicle company NIO (NIO). Notice how it had almost the exact same setup as Pinterest. This is called an âinverse head and shouldersâ pattern. (You can see that it looks like someoneâs head and shoulders flipped upside down.) Unlike a normal head and shoulders pattern, this pattern doesnât signal potential tops. It signals bottoms. Take a look: Source: Stockcharts NIO was also an extremely hated stock. At one point, it was one of the most heavily shorted stocks on the market. Even today, it has a short interest of more than 30%. Anything over 10% is considered high. When NIO started climbing, there was a mad rush by short sellers to buy back shares. This explosion in forced buying propelled the stock more than 2,000% higher since March. By now, you can see just how lucrative this pattern is when combined with a high short interest. If youâre ready to put this strategy to work today, look for these 2 things: - Find a world-class IPO putting in a âreverse head and shouldersâ pattern. You can identify this using simple stock-charting software, or a free site like stockcharts. - Make sure the stock has a high short interest. As I mentioned, anything over 10% is a good place to start. On FinViz, you can easily view a stockâs short interest percentage by simply searching its ticker. Hereâs an example using Rackspace Technology (RKT). Source: Finviz - I recently added two stocks that check these two boxes in my IPO Insider advisory⦠One has surged 71% in just over two months. The other looks like it could break out any day now. I wouldnât be surprised if both of these stocks surge another 50%+ over the next three months or so. That may sound like a bold call. But as Iâve demonstrated, those are exactly the kind of returns you can expect when youâve found a [hated IPO]( setting up for a big short squeeze. I explain more here⦠including [how you can use this strategy to make an extra $30,000 next year](. Justin Spittler
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