Limited Time OpportunityâÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ âÍ Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Hello investor Once upon a time, the world woke up to learn that the âbig and badâ Soviet Union had successfully launched a satellite into orbit. It was the first nation to do so. At that time, it was a remarkable achievement. Many sci-fi authors imagined the world with satellites. Author Arthur Clarke wrote a story of humans using geosynchronous satellites for communications back in 1945. It was an âout-of-the-worldâ idea, but the Soviet Unionâs Sputnik 1 made the historic breakthrough on October 4, 1957. Then all hell broke loose. Edward Teller, father of the hydrogen bomb, called it âthe greatest defeat for America since Pearl Harbor.â Our politicians had a lot to say, as well. Senator Mike Mansfield sounded the alarm, saying âWhat is at stake is nothing less than our survival.â Then the Soviet Union landed the second fatal punch to Americaâs chin. Just four years later, Russian Yuri Gagarin became the first person to orbit the Earth. So, how did America respond? There was only one way: Flood cash into the space program. Lots of âem. President Kennedy announced the Apollo program and poured 2.2% of the US GDP into the aerospace industry. Cash turbocharged the innovation that took just eight years for Neil Armstrong to land on the Moon. Nothing accelerates technological progress like money. A massive influx of money will attract the worldâs best minds working together to unleash breakthroughs. Or look at the example of World War 2. Prior to 1940, the USA played a passive role in the war, despite Nazi Germany dominating the Allies. In fact, the USA spent just the 6th most money on the military and just 8 percent of Germanyâs total spending. But as soon as Pearl Harbor happened, it was like the world woke up the beast. The USA had two strengths â money and manufacturing. Almost like pressing a button, the U.S. went âall inâ by pouring money into war and retooling big factories. For example, General Motors didnât make a single passenger car for more than three years between Feb. 10, 1942 to Sept. 9, 1945. The mission was simple: Manufacture war machines as fast as possible. The government spent nearly 45% of its GDP on building the war machine to wipe Nazi Germany off Earth. Sure enough, the USA went from spending $988 million to $86 billion in just three years, doubling the amount of Nazi Germanyâs spending in 1943. That kind of money simply overwhelmed Nazi Germany. The same thing is happening in the AI Age. Movers and shakers around the world recognize the enormous potential of artificial intelligence. Stanley Druckenmiller called it âas transformative as the Internet.â As a result, money is flooding into the sector. AI chipmaker Nvidia projects a 170% sales growth in the next quarter. Netlfix posts a job offering $900,000 for an AI product manager. But hereâs the unfortunate thing: Hedge funds are also flooding money into creating algorithm-driven trading. Meaning? They attract world-class minds to out-trade the âlittle guysâ like you. For example, Citadel Securities CEO Peng Zhao began attending college at age 14. He earned his PhD in statistics at the University of California at Berkeley and rose to lead Citadel Securities after his work on creating predictive analytics behind Citadelâs trading engine â rather than human intervention. Thatâs an example of a talent that Citadel attracts â and the kind of people that retail traders face off every day. Or take a look at this headline from Bloomberg to reveal how much hedge funds are willing to pay for top talents: The article revealed that: - One trader was able to secure a million-dollar sabbatical BEFORE he began working at the firm.
- Last year, a senior portfolio manager was recruited by a big NY hedge fund with more than $120 million in guaranteed payouts. Once again, thatâs the kind of war chest that retail investors face every day. They simply stand no chance. This is the reason why TradeAlgo is working on its most important project ever â developing an automated trading platform of the future. Listen, we recognize that most retail traders donât have any background in statistics, engineering, and computer science that is required to develop AI-driven trading systems. And even if they do⦠â¦they are no match for a hedge fund with thousands of brilliant minds. In baseball, you cannot run into the field and start playing against the pros. But in trading? You can open an account and begin playing against billion-dollar hedge funds on the same day. Thereâs NO âMinor Leagueâ where retail traders can play against their own levels. So, we want to democratize AI-driven trading by making the platform available to the âlittle guys.â Itâs almost like putting Citadelâs technology into their pockets. Indeed, we believe that it would create a new revolution in the way retail investors trade. Today, you have an opportunity to become an investor in the AI platform that we are building. For a limited time, we are making private shares available. In short, you can own a percentage of TradeAlgo just before we launch the next-gen AI platform. But act quickly because we expect the round to get oversubscribed soon. Hereâs the button to reserve a time with our team to learn more about this private opportunity: Jon Stone CEO [TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS EXCLUSIVE OFFER]( No longer want to receive these emails? [Unsubscribe](.
Trader Algo 401 Park Ave S New York, NY 10016, NY 10016