Kerem

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Kerem

Kerem

@KRMmte

To know is to know that you know nothing

Katılım Temmuz 2023
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@KynaKosling Like you saying focus on the stocks that want to go higher helped a lot…
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Kyna Kosling
Kyna Kosling@KynaKosling·
Revisited Zanger’s 2005 interview — the one I published notes on in 2023. A similar thing struck me as when revisiting Qullamaggie’s CWT interview. In 2023, I did my best to capture every last detail (both interviews) in my notes. Just like how both interviewers tried to get a checklist of tangible items out of what Kristjan and Zanger look for. This is how creators make their content ‘feel’ more valuable (for better or worse). It’s also what inexperienced traders are instinctively drawn to. But I’ve become a better trader in the interim. Also better at going deeper when I research and write. And so, with Kristjan, I noticed how he kept bringing the conversation back to relative strength (not the interviewer’s focus). This is really what guided everything else — from making it easier to hold through corrections, to buying breakouts that work. Because stocks that show relative strength are screaming they want to go higher. People find it counterintuitive, but the stocks that have made the biggest moves usually carry on making the biggest moves. With Zanger, he kept focusing on the idea of power. Following the institutions. Powerful earnings, powerful sales, big volume, coming out of the bases before the market does. His words: “It’s price action, it’s volume, it’s chart patterns, it’s spectacular earnings, and that’s all there is.” This is classic among great discretionary traders. They consider their strategy incredibly simple. They can sum up in a few words what they look for. But then you dig deeper, you see how they fit all the different pieces of the puzzle together, all the nuances they notice, the sheer amount of information they process, and you’ll notice how much of this is actually — inevitably — complex. And that’s the wonderful thing about mastering a discretionary field. You start with the basics — say, chart patterns. You then realise there’s more to it, and add complexity, not knowing which complexity actually moves the needle, or how those pieces actually all fit together. You focus on the component parts, not how they all connect, never mind what lies at the core from which all these other things flow. But as a trader, you’re looking for stocks that want to move higher. That’s the nuanced simplicity. Having that in your head as you relisten to these interviews will make them hit different. Everything else flows from that one simple concept. Very different to trying to create a rigid checklist.
Kyna Kosling@KynaKosling

My first @DanZanger notes from 2023. The direction was right: • Only trade when the market is hot • Follow the institutions • Focus on the leaders • Passion is essential But lacking the nuance of my later notes. (We all start somewhere!) With time, more and more pieces ‘click’. Might need to do this again with my 2026 lens… Until then, the 2023 notes still offer value: *** Dan Zanger on Finding the Biggest Movers A 2005 interview tells us that nothing much changes 🔗 tinyurl.com/4xtx62a7

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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@KynaKosling What are the needle moving things for breakouts the way Qullamaggie trades them ? I’ve watched some of his videos, but have a feeling I’m not focusing on the right things..
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@JaceEngland1 and can you please explain what kind of reel you mean with open loop and cta
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Jace England
Jace England@JaceEngland1·
This is honestly one of the only content strategies to scale organic in info left
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@JaceEngland1 what is the first part with (full meal) and what is the link in the bio is it the yt video?
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@natenkgwn u and i are the only people that comment on his vids.. u growth operating a growth operator.... im also a growth operator and already have a client and making money , let my join his program and be ur free testimonial
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Nate
Nate@natenkgwn·
This Instagram Funnel Books 10,000 Calls Per Month (Steal It) video we cooked up for my guy Jeremy Moser we handled the entire content strategy and video editing
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@wil_da_beast630 ahhaah..love this tweet .. quick question, i know its quit random, but i was wondering if you offer consulting calls.. i really need some quick decision making advice on a life changing decision i need to make in the next couple days🙂
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@WScottCochrane love this tweet .. quick question, i know its quit random, but i was wondering if you offer consulting calls.. i really need some quick decision making advice on a life changing decision i need to make in the next couple days🙂
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Scott Cochrane
Scott Cochrane@WScottCochrane·
Leadership Intelligence is the ability to intuit the right leadership direction or decision, drawing on instinct and intuition, not just data. Your next step in leadership may be learning to lead beyond the spreadsheet and to developing #Leadership Intelligence.
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@CFCamerer Cross-party votes..more about oversight than partisanship? quick question, i know its quit random, but i was wondering if you offer consulting calls.. i really need some quick decision making advice on a life changing decision i need to make in the next couple days🙂
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Colin Camerer
Colin Camerer@CFCamerer·
“Rep.Mace (R-SC) introduced the motion to consider the subpoena. Every Dem voted in favor of subpoenaing the AG, as did GOP Reps Boebert (CO), Cloud (TX), Perry (PA) and Burchett (TN)” Depo is under oath. anti-Trump swing bloc is active wapo.st/4776NjR
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@StePalminteri 🥳Congrats Stefano !! quick question, i know its quit random, but i was wondering if you offer consulting calls.. i really need some quick decision making advice on a life changing decision i need to make in the next couple days🙂 i understand if you dont feel like it tho..
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Stefano Palminteri
Stefano Palminteri@StePalminteri·
After years in the making, I’m thrilled to share that our book is now available for pre-order! An introduction to how we make decisions blending psychology, neuroscience, and economics, with real-life examples and insights for today’s challenges shorturl.at/Dxbif
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Finding Compounders
Finding Compounders@F_Compounders·
“If You Spend 13 Minutes A Year On Economics, You’ve Wasted 10 Minutes.” - Peter Lynch
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Common Sense Investor (CSI)
Common Sense Investor (CSI)@commonsenseplay·
One of the strangest patterns in the stock market that you don't know about! $SPY $VTI $VOO I recently watched an interview with Samir Varma, a theoretical physicist turned trader hedge-fund manager- he earned his doctorate in particle physics from University of Texas at Austin, and was one of the first to execute profitably quantitative futures strategies. He noted - over 30 years, almost all of $SPY ’s gains happened while the market was CLOSED! I found this super interesting, so I did some digging to see if this was true and here's the data: According to a long-term analysis (1993–2025), the “overnight” strategy for SPY i.e. buy at close, sell at next open, yielded cumulative gains of 1,105%, while the “intraday” strategy, buy at open, sell at close, only delivered about 27% over the same period i.e. - If you bought at the close every day and sold at the next open, your return would be about +1,100% - If you bought at the open and sold at the close, your return is only around +27% Same index, same time period but insanely different returns. This doesn’t mean the market always drops during the day - it just means that the average intraday move has been very small over the long run, while the average overnight move has been much larger. Why might this happen? - News and earnings usually come out after hours - Futures markets react overnight - Big institutions hedge when markets are closed - Risk premium for holding exposure through uncertainty This pattern shows up again and again in the data. Why this is not a free trading strategy? because costs and spreads can wipe out the edge if you try to time it. But for long-term investors, it highlights something important: - A big part of the compounding has come from simply holding overnight. - The market often moves the most while you’re not watching, a lesson for intraday index traders ;)
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@commonsenseplay @grok how can i use this as a swing trader.and what does this actually mean,do i just buy the SPY blindly everyday when the markets are closed ?please explain like im a 5th grader. and also give me the prerequisites for this strategy to work, and the things that this tweet missed
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Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen@BGatesIsaPyscho·
Meanwhile in South Asia ⚠️ Warning - Trigger warning clip 🤬‼️ It should abundantly clear by now - that not all cultures are the same.
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Nick Theriot
Nick Theriot@nicktheriot_·
I'm going to delete this post in 48 hrs... Because I just dropped the complete MASTERCLASS guide on how to build creative iterations and variations to scale $1m months in 2026. This is the exact ELITE system I've used to take multiple brands to $10M+/year We charge $10,000/mo to do this for clients… But today, I'm giving it away 100% FREE. Like + Comment "NICK" and I'll send it to you.
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@AdsWithMarian crazy.. im about to launch my skincare brand in germany very soon aiming for high LTV... can i ask you some questions ?
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Edgar Investor
Edgar Investor@EdgarInvestor·
@SuperLuckeee @grok Oil and VIX are reactive. Watch when liquidity providers widen spreads that’s when volatility becomes self-reinforcing.
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Esther & Michael
Esther & Michael@SuperLuckeee·
IRAN is blowing up DUBAI. This means BUY THE DIP: For every major war since 1990 the market has bounced up hard! You need to understand what the data says. August 1990. Iraq invades Kuwait. The SPY drops −16.9% over 71 days. Every headline screams sell. Every pundit says it's over. The people who sold at the bottom locked in a 16.9% loss. The people who bought at the bottom made 24.2% in under 5 months. September 11, 2001. The worst attack in American history. Markets close for 4 days. SPY drops −11.6% in a single week. The world feels like it is ending. The market bottomed on September 21st. By December it had recovered +21.2% from that low. In 10 weeks. March 2003. The U.S. invades Iraq. The market had already sold off −14.7% in the lead-up. Fear had been priced in for months. The day the bombs dropped, the market rallied. +27% in the year that followed. January 2020. Soleimani strike. Markets barely move. Then COVID crashes everything. From that combined bottom, SPY exploded +67%. 67%. That is not a typo. The pattern is not subtle. It is not a coincidence. It has repeated across 10 conflicts spanning 35 years. War creates panic. Panic creates the dip. The dip creates the opportunity. The market has never not once failed to recover from a war dip. Average recovery across all 10 wars: +27% from the exact bottom. Every retail investor who sold during these moments made an emotional decision dressed up as a rational one. The chart does not lie.
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Bourbon Capital
Bourbon Capital@BourbonCap·
Stanley Druckenmiller: My advantage is not IQ. It's trigger pulling. I admit it's some kind of intelligence. I wasn't in the top 10% of my class. A lot people think i'm smarter than I am because i'm good at our business. But I have a very narrow form of intelligence that allows me to love and play this game
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Reda
Reda@redabtw·
Recent static ad concepts I've made for dtc brands.
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Kerem
Kerem@KRMmte·
@daviefogarty @grok give me your top 20 products that fulfill all these criteria mentioned and tell me the reason why u picked it
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Davie Fogarty
Davie Fogarty@daviefogarty·
Best product characteristics for scaling in ecom: - High margin (80% gross) - Clear unique selling proposition - Can run variations without confusing the brand - Works on Facebook without needing education - Not easily replicated - Has repeat purchase potential or natural gifting angle - Can do pre-orders to validate before ordering inventory - Trend timing is right (demand exists, supply doesn't) The niche matters less than the product economics. I've seen people scale pet products, blankets, skincare, fitness gear, home goods. The ones that win all share the same characteristics above.
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