Saturday, May 30, 2026

76% win rate since launch. Average hold time 7 days. Here is how.



Since launching mid-April BURN SIGNAL Alerts has been winning over 76% of trades.

Average hold time just 7 days.

Long and short. Stocks and options. Different sectors. Different market conditions. The signal fires wherever the setup appears.

That is not a streak. That is a framework.

The Smoke Pattern. The Heat Gauge. The Fuel Line. The Draft. Four criteria Jeff Bierman has spent 38 years developing. When two or more align on the same stock at the same time — something is about to move. He sends the alert. A specific ticker. A stock trade and an options play. Both. Before the move begins.

ETSY: +151.75% in 3 days. NEE: +72.78% in 3 days. HIG: +51.85% in 13 days. FAST: +38.18% in 12 days.

All before the move was obvious. All before the crowd got there.

Friday Jeff went live and walked through exactly how it works. The replay is up right now.

And Monday at 1PM ET Jeff is hosting the Monthly Burn Session. Live. Members only. Jeff zooms out from the week-to-week signal, reviews what the market has been showing, and takes your questions directly. Not a recording. Jeff. Live. In the room.

If you want to be on that call — get inside before Monday.

Watch the Replay and Lock In Your Spot

Don Kaufman

Chief Strategist, TheoTRADE

P.S. 76% win rate since launch. Average hold time 7 days. Monday at 1PM ET Jeff goes live for members only. Watch the replay and get inside before that session starts. Get Inside Before Monday


Disclaimer: Neither TheoTrade or any of its officers, directors, employees, other personnel, representatives, agents or independent contractors is, in such capacities, a licensed financial adviser, registered investment adviser, registered broker-dealer or FINRA|SIPC|NFA-member firm. TheoTrade does not provide investment or financial advice or make investment recommendations. TheoTrade is not in the business of transacting trades, nor does TheoTrade agree to direct your brokerage accounts or give trading advice tailored to your particular situation. Nothing contained in our content constitutes a solicitation, recommendation, promotion, or endorsement of any particular security, other investment product, transaction or investment.Trading Futures, Options on Futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. You should carefully consider whether trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time. Past Performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.





Must Read: Don’t Buy the SpaceX IPO. Do This Instead...

I’ll tell you why I’m steering clear of it

Look to the Sky for the Next Investing Opportunity

In today's Masters Series, Dave Lashmet explains how "near space" offers the next wave of investing opportunities...
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Delivering World-Class Financial Research Since 1999

Editor's note: The battle of "near space" has begun...

When China sent a surveillance balloon over the U.S. a few years ago, it sparked the realization that the war in space has begun.

Today's Masters Series is adapted from the February 23, 2023 issue of the Stansberry Digest and the January 2025 issue of Stansberry Venture Technology. In it, editor Dave Lashmet explains how "near space" offers the next wave of investing opportunities...


Look to the Sky for the Next Investing Opportunity

By Dave Lashmet, editor, Stansberry Venture Technology

Chase Doak wasn't sure what he was seeing...

There was a white circle in the sky above his Billings, Montana office. "It looked like a big white orb," Doak said.

At first, Doak thought it was a star or planet. But this was happening in broad daylight. Then he thought it might be a moon. But the object was too small.

His next thought was an extraterrestrial craft. "I'm a skeptic, but I had to sort of consider the possibility that that's exactly what this was," Doak said. "I couldn't identify it. It looked like nothing I had ever seen before."

Doak's photos of the object went viral... and the U.S. government soon issued a statement: It was a high-altitude Chinese spy balloon.

The balloon had entered U.S. airspace over Alaska on January 28, 2023. Then it floated across Canada and into the lower 48 states – down to Billings.


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Over the next few days, Americans watched the balloon float across the U.S. to the coast of South Carolina – where the U.S. Air Force shot it down. The Navy was there to recover it at the end of a long "kill chain." The 200-foot-tall balloon was filled with surveillance gear – including cameras, antennas, and a huge solar panel.

After the balloon was shot down, the government was able to track its path all the way back to its launch site in China using satellite images. The map below was created based on those images...

So China couldn't deny that the balloon was its surveillance gear. And finding the launch site meant the U.S. could move its "kill chain" into the Pacific Ocean. That's why you haven't seen more Chinese balloons over the U.S.

Hot-air balloons are a simple piece of technology. Hot air makes them go up. And when the air is colder, they come back down.

At the time the spy balloon was likely making its way across Canada to the United States, based on NASA's stratospheric wind tracker, the region was facing an incredible cold streak. In Winnipeg, Canada, temperatures on the ground had fallen to minus 26 degrees Fahrenheit on January 27. Even farther south, Great Falls, Montana hit minus 12 degrees the next day.

With such cold temperatures, the balloon evidently descended to about 60,000 feet. (Balloons like this one typically float out of sight at 80,000 to 120,000 feet, or even higher.) Once it dropped, passengers on a commercial airline flight made the first reported sighting. Soon afterward, the U.S. began tracking the balloon.

From Montana, the spy balloon moved across the U.S. at the speed of the wind, passing over Missouri on February 3. That's when a U.S. Air Force pilot took this photograph...

This picture is from a U-2 spy plane, which has a maximum altitude of 80,000 feet. And rumor has it, we shot down this balloon at 80,000 feet the next day over the South Carolina coast, using a missile fired from an F-22 Raptor fighter jet.

It was a perfect shot, really – it clipped the bottom of the tear-dropped helium envelope, all the gas escaped, but the payload of solar panels and electronic eavesdropping equipment remained intact as it fell into the Atlantic Ocean.

Here is another cool picture that is relevant to this story... You can see these layers of sky way above Earth here (and a silhouette of the Endeavor space shuttle)...

The red bit with the clouds is called the troposphere – it's where our weather is and where passenger jets fly. Above that in white is the stratosphere. The light blue is the mesosphere, and then we hit space.

Technically, both the Earth's stratosphere and the mesosphere above that are not yet in "space," as they are less than 100 kilometers (that's 62 miles and about 330,000 feet) above the Earth. It's "near space"...

But it's a careful balance. The U.S. has plenty of low-Earth orbiting ("LEO") satellites as close as 100 miles above the Earth, and small ones might come as close as 75 miles.

If we shoot down Chinese spy gear while it's in our stratosphere, China might claim the right to shoot down LEO satellites in space if they cross Chinese territory.

To most investors, these might seem like otherworldly concerns... But the truth is, this region of near space is a prime target for one of the biggest opportunities of 2026. And folks who pay attention could profit from the big winners.

Good investing,

Dave Lashmet


Editor's note: Investors are turning their attention to the upcoming SpaceX IPO. But Dave says that the biggest opportunities lie in the smaller companies supplying critical communications technology.

And we're only in the early stages of this breakthrough. Dave believes that space-based communication could be comparable with the Internet in its infancy. To learn more, click here.

Anthropic is walking a fine line

Can it be all things at once?
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This is the Weekend Edition of Bloomberg Opinion Today, a roundup of the most popular stories Bloomberg Opinion publishes each week based on web readership. New subscribers can sign up here; follow us on Bluesky, TikTok, Instagram, LinkedIn and Threads.

Anthropic’s Latest AIs Are Making Some Customers Uneasy — Parmy Olson

Catching a glimpse of Dario Amodei these days is like finding a rare butterfly. The chief executive officer of Anthropic PBC was scheduled to meet with 50 fellow bosses from some of Europe’s largest companies in Oxfordshire last week, an exclusive convocation by his firm at a Jacobean-style mansion that included former British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, now an Anthropic adviser. Amodei had been scheduled to travel to another part of Europe afterwards, but his trip was cut short to just one or two days in the UK.

Why is he so hard to pin down? Because of Mythos, the artificial intelligence model he teased last month as too dangerous to launch. Anthropic staff have access to the technology and say it is more human than its forerunners. But it could also be weaponized for cyberattacks, so the company has let a few dozen organizations test and preview it. The model’s power and potential will help Amodei’s efforts to repair relations with the Trump administration, and he’s eager too for Mythos to finally reach members of the public. That requires a juggling act that, for now, Amodei is managing to pull off.

Read the whole thing.

SpaceX Writes Tesla’s Future in the Stars — Liam Denning

The Iran War Is Coming for Your Diet Coke — David Fickling

Bankers’ Love of Claude AI Carries a Heavy Price — Lionel Laurent

Ferrari’s $640,000 EV Is Quite a Stretch — Chris Bryant

Apple Is Giving Intel’s Turnaround Some Momentum — Dave Lee

Index Funds Can’t Say No to SpaceX — Matt Levine

BP’s Latest Screwup Is Outweighed by Its Hedge Fund Backer — Javier Blas

Blanche Is Trump’s Latest Enabler-in-Chief — Timothy L. O’Brien

The Supreme Court Just Got a Race-Based Ruling Right — Stephen L. Carter

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76% win rate since launch. Average hold time 7 days. Here is how.

The replay is up. Get inside before Monday's live session. ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ͏  ...