Last Chance! The S&P Low Volatility Breakout Trading Strategy
Breakouts are a widely taught scenario that are for the most part understood and recognized by a large majority of active traders. While many people like to believe they know how to pinpoint a potential breakout and successfully trade it, few are applying a true quantified approach to their methodology. The S&P Low Volatility Breakout Trading Strategy is grounded in almost 12 full years of back-tested data from simulated historical results, and is wholly designed to minimize your overall risk while maximizing your gains.
Click here to learn more about the unpublished trading strategies from Connors Research with high-probabilities for generating alpha like the S&P Low Volatility Breakout Trading Method.
This new strategy has special emphasis placed on safety, focusing specifically on trading blue chip stocks with low volatility. This strategy helps you highlight long positions in stocks with low share turnover for medium-term hold periods of several months – and when the market turns bearish gets you out and moves to cash.
The S&P Low Volatility Breakout Trading Strategy will only be offered to a very limited number of traders until November 14th. Larry Connors will personally walk you through this strategy in a live presentation on the release date, and then will remove the strategy from the market for a minimum of 1 year. To reiterate – after the time window has closed this strategy will not be available anywhere in any form for at least 12 months.
We focus all of our trading strategies around quantified trading – and this exclusive new strategy is no different. We provide you with the exact filters to identify setups, quantified rules for entering positions, and explicit exit rules in order for you to secure the full and complete potential of every single trade you make.
No interpretations based on guesswork or rooted in emotion. The S&P Low Volatility Breakout Trading Strategy will keep you on course and help prevent any confusion over ‘temporary corrections’ that might otherwise prompt you to prematurely exit a trade.