List of Best ETF Newsletters: Number 1: ETF Junkie. Do I say this out of hubris? Perhaps. But if you look at other ETF trading newsletters, you’ll see that they love to boast just their winners and never give you the details of their trading history. If you look on their websites, it’s nothing but winners, yet they don’t show an annualized return. With the ETF Junkie, it’s easy to follow and the returns are tracked and published in each newsletter. The ETF Junkie is also fantastic in that we send out trading ideas in the evening so that you have plenty of time to put in the trades. This way you don’t have to be monitoring your email every minute in case there’s a last minute trade that you can’t execute because you have a life to live. All others are charlatans. I have looked at these jokers and they always bring up their good trades, but don’t keep track of how well their overall trade strategy would work. They also tell you to buy here, but in what size? Where do you get out? What kind of position sizing do you do? The others: Morpheus Trading Group: They seem to have good trades according to their free email they send out, but it’ll cost you more than $700 a year to get their trades in real time. Who knows if you’ll be free to trade their ideas when they send out their emails. ActiveTradingPartners.com: These guys say you can “trade like a pro” for $116 dollars a month. Whatever Bud. Why don’t you trade with a Pro at the ETF Junkie. I trade the positions alongside you. Morningstar ETFInvestor Newsletter: This is a Monthy Newsletter that costs $200 a year? Any information given once a month is going to be stale and not really actionable. Buying an index fund and sitting on it is better that wasting money on this not so “Newsletter”. Doug Fabian: Doug offers a more reasonably priced newsletter and gives you the entry and exit points which is nice, but he’s reckless with his stops. Let’s look at Fabian’s current open trades taken from the website at the end of 2016: First, all three are losing positions. Second, he gives you entry and exit prices, which is nice, but there’s no position sizing. But the coup d’grace are the stops are ridiculously far away from entry and leave you open to huge losses. Looking at his first trade of SILJ, if it gets stopped out you are going to lose over 27%? That’s serious money. You want to trade with a pro who keeps his losses much smaller than that. ETFSwingtrader.net: First, if you can’t get the .com on your name it’s suspect. Second, $79 a month is a ridiculous price to pay for something that doesn’t show their results. $10 less and it would be kinky. Clearly, the ETF Junkie is the best place to go for trading ETFs, not only because of the returns, but because I’m not afraid to talk about my competitors. They clearly don’t show the same confidence. Remember to subscribe to the ETF Junkie Newsletter over on the right side of the page.
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AuthorBrad Price, the founder of ETF Junkie, has more than 15 years experience trading the markets. Archives
May 2017
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