Why Red Days Are Your Biggest Opportunities
When quality stocks drop, experienced investors start paying attention. Here's why.
A few months ago, investors were happily paying higher prices for Amazon, Nvidia, and Netflix.
Today? You can buy those same companies for significantly less.
In October 2025, Netflix traded at $123. Today it’s $96.
NVIDIA traded at $207. Today it’s $179.
Amazon rose to $244. Today, it’s trading at $206.
Nothing dramatic has changed about their underlying businesses. Amazon still dominates cloud computing and online retail—and is getting bigger.
NVIDIA remains at the center of Artificial Intelligence and reported record results in its last earnings report.
Netflix continues generating billions in subscription revenue worldwide.
But stock prices have never moved in straight lines.
Why Great Companies Drop (And Why That Matters)
Even the best companies in the world regularly drop 10–20%—and that’s when experienced investors start buying.
This is an idea that Wall Street likes to call “buying the dip.”
To do this successfully, recognize when strong companies fall below recent prices, then ask yourself whether their long-term business is still intact.
In January, I shared stories of investors who made hundreds of millions using this strategy. Here’s your opportunity to use it, too.
The Mindset Shift You Need to Make
Stop chasing the hype you hear about on Reddit and YouTube.
Start being disciplined about buying quality companies—especially at discount prices.
Until next time,
✍️ Isaiah from Earn Out Loud
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