There's a pattern most investors never see.
Phase 1: Institutions quietly buy a stock. No media coverage. No hype. Just accumulation.
Phase 2: The stock moves. Price starts climbing. Nobody knows why.
Phase 3: Media covers it. Analysts upgrade it. CNBC interviews the CEO.
Phase 4: Retail investors pile in. "I can't miss this!" FOMO kicks in.
Phase 5: Institutions exit. Selling to retail investors at the peak.
This pattern repeats constantly.
And the only difference between winners and losers is: TIMING.
Get in during Phase 1 (institutional accumulation) = massive potential gains
Get in during Phase 4 (retail FOMO) = you're buying at the top
Louis Navellier's grading system could help you identify Phase 1.
When his system upgrades a stock from C to B, or B to A, it's showing you: "Institutions are buying this."
That's Phase 1. That's when you want in.
But here's the problem:
You can't see the grades. You don't know when a stock upgrades from C to B. You don't know when institutions start accumulating.
Until now.
Louis is giving you 3 FREE STOCK SEARCHES using his grading system.
[GET YOUR 3 FREE STOCK SEARCHES NOW →]
Clicking the link above will opt you into communication from InvestorPlace, including Market360 & InvestorPlace Digest daily E-Letters. (Privacy Policy)
No credit card required. No catch. Just click to sign up.
You can grade ANY stocks you want:
Your current holdings (see if you're in Phase 1 or Phase 4)
Stocks your broker recommended (verify before you buy)
Stocks you heard about on CNBC (are institutions buying or selling?)
See the grades BEFORE retail discovers them. BEFORE the media covers them. BEFORE it's obvious.
[Get your 3 free stock searches here →]
Clicking the links in this email you are opting in to communication from InvestorPlace, including Market360 & InvestorPlace Digest daily E-Letters. (Privacy Policy)
—InvestorPlace Research Team
P.S. - Louis's system helped him call Nvidia at $1 (split-adjusted), Palantir at $13, Applovin at $38—all before institutional buying waves began. His track record speaks for itself. [See how YOUR stocks grade →]