Maria’s Note: Maria Bonaventura here, senior managing editor of Inside Wall Street with Nomi Prins.

Today, we’re featuring a guest essay from Nomi’s colleague and master trader Jeff Clark.

After the dot-com crash, Jeff found an opportunity to book gains of 1,391% in 78 days… 1,263% in 68 days… 1,007% gain in 42 days… and 1,285% in 48 hours.

He did the same thing after 2008, for 10 gains of 100+%.

That’s because anyone can make good money during a bull market.

But it’s what you do immediately after a bear market – those “reset” moments like we’re seeing now – that could truly make a killing.

Best of all, Jeff believes we’re headed towards a historic market move we haven’t seen since March 9, 2009. If you’re willing to put your cash into a rare vehicle outside of banks and conventional markets, you could double your money dozens of times over the next 12 months.

And in an online market briefing on April 5 at 8 p.m. ET, Jeff will share all the details on the very same technique from 2008. He’ll also give away a free trade recommendation.

Reserve your spot with one click here.

Here’s Jeff…


It seems like everybody is looking for a stock market bottom.

Some folks think it happened last October when the S&P 500 dipped as low as 3500. Other experts think we might be headed for a “lost decade” for stocks, where the ultimate bottom is still years away.

Who knows?

My best guess is that we haven’t seen the bottom of the market yet. And when it finally does happen, most folks are going to miss it – because they’re looking for the wrong thing.

Let me explain…

We’ve seen two major stock market bottoms in the past two decades.

There was the bottom of the bear market in March of 2003, following the bursting of the dot-com bubble. And there was the bear market bottom in March of 2009, which marked the end of the Great Financial Crisis.

Both of those bottoms unfolded in a similar manner.

In both of those cases, the stock market bottomed during a final act of investor capitulation. Investors finally grew tired of the day-after-day, water torture-type of decline.

They couldn’t take it anymore. And they collectively threw in the towel – selling entire portfolios of stocks, all at the same time.

In hindsight, it’s easy to spot on the charts.

Here’s how the S&P 500 looked at the moment of capitulation (blue arrow) in March 2003…

Chart

And here’s the bottom (blue arrow) in March 2009…

Chart

Like I said, in hindsight, it’s easy to spot the bottom. Those moments of capitulation seem obvious.

The bear markets ended. New bull markets began.

And investors who got in near the bottom saw enormous gains within just a few months – not to mention the big gains as the bull markets matured.

Not surprisingly, most folks are now looking for similar capitulation action to mark the bottom of the current bear market. But they’re looking for the wrong thing.

Just as stock market crashes don’t happen when everybody is looking for them, the next stock market bottom is going to look different than what most folks are expecting.

Rather than ending with a final act of capitulation – with investors selling their entire portfolios all at once – the current bear market is likely to roll to its final bottom.

Different stocks and different sectors will reach their bottoms at different times. And that action will create a kind of “rolling bottom” for the broad stock market.

To explain this concept in more detail, I’m putting together a special presentation which will air on Wednesday, April 5 at 8 p.m. ET.

I’ll explain how this current bear market will come to an end, and how it will look different than any bear market bottom we’ve seen before.

I’ll share my prediction of what sectors look like they are closest to a bottom, and which sectors still have a long way to fall.

And I’ll share the strategy that is most likely to generate triple-digit gains from this type of action.

To register for this free presentation, simply click on this link

Best regards and good trading,

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Jeff Clark
Editor, Market Minute