As you know, I’m constantly surveying different opportunities as they shape up and present themselves.
Well, I’ve been tracking one such situation that could very soon be funneling thousands upon thousands of dollars into the bank accounts of the people who see it coming.
Ready to be one of these people?
One of my absolute favorite things about Wall Street is that things move in patterns. Some are short-term while others are long-term patterns, some are easier to spot than others, but most things DO follow a pattern of some sort.
And when you can identify a certain pattern on Wall Street AND time it all correctly, you basically have access to free money!
And that’s why I’m locked in on what’s happening with oil…
That’s right – the commodity you’ve probably heard nothing but bad things about for the past several months.
Yes, it’s true that oil has been falling and falling for well over a year now.
But that’s where patterns come back into play…
You see, we at Wall Street Informer like to think of most things in the stock market as rubber bands. You can stretch the rubber band up or down, but it always snaps back the other way. It’s a pattern that pertains to virtually everything on Wall Street.
And oil is stretched badly right now…
The United States Oil Fund (USO), which tracks oil, is now down to just over $8 per share.
One month ago, it was at $11. Two months ago, it was at $13. As recently as October, the price of USO was at $16 per share. And back in the summer of 2014, USO hit nearly $40 per share.
So while it’s been a terrifying fall for oil, the snapping back of the rubber band could net you thousands of dollars.
If it climbs back up to $11, it will net a 37.5% gain from $8 per share…
If it climbs back up to $13, it will net a 62.5% gain…
If it climbs back up to $16, it will net a 100% gain…
And if it climbs back up to $40, it will net a gain of 400% gain!
Those are numbers that are hard to find on Wall Street, but you can see how this is possible. Oil doesn’t need to reach a brand new high. It simply needs to return to levels it has just recently been at.
Of course, the hard part is knowing where the bottom is for oil…