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Stansberry Investor Hour

Unlock the Market's 'Cheat Code' to Trade Like a Pro

Stansberry Investor Hour

Stansberry Research

America, How, To, Crash, Money, Learn, Stansberry, Income, Research, Debt, Stocks, Porter, Business, Realestate, Banking, Investment, American, Investing, Invest, Howtosave, Sjuggerud, Ferris, Eifrig, Jubilee, Buck, Sexton, Market, Bonds, Churchouse, Savings, Options, Lashmet

4.4677 Ratings

🗓️ 18 August 2025

⏱️ 67 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this week's Stansberry Investor Hour, Dan and Corey welcome J.C. Parets to the show. J.C. is a Chartered Market Technician and editor of the Everybody's Wrong newsletter. He's also the founder of All Star Charts – a research platform for both professional and retail investors which tracks U.S. and international stocks, interest rates, commodities, and foreign exchange markets. 

J.C. kicks things off by discussing the difference between market technicians and "chartists," the fact that valuations and fundamentals no longer drive stock prices, and the "big bullies" that trickle down to the individual stock level and move markets. He delves into the topic of positioning and finding parts of the market where folks are too bullish or too bearish. For example, J.C. points out that small caps are currently vulnerable for a squeeze. After that, he gives listeners the "cheat code" for analyzing the market, including what to look for, how to cut through the "noise machine" of financial media, how to spot changes in trends, and how to distinguish reality from narrative. (0:35)

Next, J.C. walks through a hypothetical trade in the small-cap Russell 2000 Index to demonstrate his thought process and how exactly he finds opportunities. He highlights relative strength, waiting for a change in trend, weighing risk versus reward, not taking profits too early, and his unique position-sizing strategy. J.C. also emphasizes the importance of continually asking yourself how you could be wrong once you've formulated a thesis. As he says, if you can't answer the question and don't know how the market could prove your thesis wrong, "It's not an investment. It's a religion [based on belief alone]." This leads J.C. to talk about overcoming human emotion, having a plan before entering a trade, and taking advantage of all the emotional investors who don't have a plan. (19:48)

Finally, J.C. throws out a few areas of the market he likes today and is following closely for opportunities, explains how he decides the right time to enter and add to a trade, and gives listeners solid advice for risk management. "If you're in a trade that's losing, you're going to be distracted, and you're going to miss the giant elephant that's walking right past you," J.C. quips. And he closes the show out with a conversation about investing discipline, including not entering risky trades even if you know they'll go up. (37:21)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello and welcome to the Stansberry Investor Hour. I'm Dan Ferris. I'm the editor of Extreme Value and The Ferris Report, both published by Stansberry Research.

0:09.7

And I'm Corey McLaughlin, editor of the Stansberry Daily Digest. Today we talk with expert technical analyst, J.C. Peretz.

0:18.7

J.C. is a great guy. Lots of fun to talk to.

0:22.2

If you're into technical analysis, you will absolutely want to take some notes.

0:26.7

So get out your pens and pencils, and let's do it.

0:29.0

Let's talk with J.C. Peretz.

0:30.5

Let's do it right now.

0:35.3

J.C., welcome to the show.

0:36.7

Good to have you.

1:01.1

Good to be here. Yeah, I'm glad that we have you on the show because you know stuff that I have never spent any time of my life looking deeply into. Like, I'm not a chartist, simply put put and you are that and more I guess the first thing I want to know is from the top down you know just being a chart is describes you know

1:08.9

a million different ways of looking at the market.

1:11.9

From the top down, if you had to give me like, you know, a few bullet points or if I just asked you casually, what kind of an investor are you or what kind of a trader are you, you know, how would you answer that?

1:25.3

Well, I think a lot of it, and I appreciate you being here, it's a great question,

1:29.3

it's a great place to start, because I think there's a lot of misconceptions as to what

1:32.4

technical analysis even is, right?

1:34.1

So every chartist is a technician, but not every technician is a chartist, right?

1:39.9

And what we're doing as technicians is that we're analyzing the behavior of the market,

1:44.8

and therefore market participants.

1:47.4

You know, it just so happens that the best way to visualize the changes in equilibrium

1:52.0

between supply and demand happens to be in chart form.

1:55.7

So technicians are often seen looking at charts and things of that nature, but the truth

1:59.5

of the matter is we're looking at a lot of data. And this data can be visualized on spreadsheets. And there's all kinds of different

...

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