Strategies are separate from signals

The same signal can mean add, hold, rotate, scale out, or exit.

WealthVelocity identifies market evidence from global flow down to stock-level markers. The action depends on the strategy bucket: favorites, Quick Growth trades, sector rotation, Q-Signal, or country and exchange allocation.

Important:

WealthVelocity provides informational research, model signals, and key price levels. It does not provide personalized investment advice, place trades, route orders, manage accounts, or guarantee returns.

Start with the strategy

Signals are evidence. Strategy defines the response.

Some investors want to accumulate favorite stocks through favorable regimes. Others want tactical trades for weeks or months. Others rotate between countries, exchanges, and sectors. They can use the same signal environment, but they should not interpret the same alert the same way.

The top layer shows where global money and value appear to be moving. The lower layers turn that into exchange-level sectors, stocks, favorites, and Friday trade updates. Each bucket needs its own rules before the alert arrives.

Lowest activity Q-Signal

A separate static algorithm silo with simple active or cash behavior.

Moderate activity Favorite Stock Accumulation

Hold selected names while watching regimes, pivots, exhaustion, add zones, and structural exits.

Higher activity Quick Growth and Rotation

Move between stronger countries, exchanges, sectors, or weekly stock trades when leadership changes.

Portfolio buckets

One investor can run several plans, but each plan needs its own money.

WealthVelocity assumes the investor has a pool of capital available, whether it is already invested or sitting in cash. That capital can be divided into buckets, with each bucket having its own purpose, timeframe, effort level, and signal response.

The Q-Signal model, a country or exchange rotation plan, a favorite-stock portfolio, and Quick Growth trades should not be mixed casually. Each bucket should have its own rules before alerts arrive.

Links explaining each strategy appear to the right on this page. The Q-Signal page is available now, and the other strategy detail pages can be built from this same framework.

Low effort Q-Signal Strategy

A separate static algorithm for investors who want a simpler model and can tolerate periods of cash.

Read the Q-Signal strategy detail
Personal holdings Favorite Stock Watch

For investors who love specific stocks and want intelligence on weakness, support, add zones, or structural exits.

Active capital Country / Sector Rotation

For money that can move between stronger countries, exchanges, sectors, or stock opportunities.

Read the rotation strategy detail
Tactical capital Quick Growth Trades

For Friday trade signals held for weeks or months, then updated until price levels weaken enough to exit.

Signal markers

The marker is neutral. The strategy defines the action.

Exhaustion, pivot support, two-pivot breaks, and safe-bottom markers do not mean the same thing for every investor. One person may scale out. Another may stop adding. Another may rotate. Another may prepare to buy.

That is why WealthVelocity separates the signal from the strategy. The system identifies what the market is showing. The investor's bucket defines what to do with that information.

Exhaustion

The move may be stretched or losing upside energy. Useful for scaling out, pausing new buys, or watching for rotation.

Recent Pivot Support

A nearby level where price recently found support. Useful for judging whether the current move is holding together.

Two-Pivot Break

A move below the prior two pivot supports. Usually an exit trigger for common stock and tactical strategies; sector rotation may already be in cash after a down-regime arrow.

Safe Bottom

A bottom area where trajectory is considered to be turning upward with better footing, though not guaranteed to be the final low.

How alerts change by style

Start with the row that sounds like you.

This grid is not meant to be studied all at once. If you have favorite stocks you already like to hold, read the Favorite Stock Holder row first and see how each signal would help you think about Google, Tesla, Apple, or another stock you already care about. If another style feels more natural, use that row as your starting point and ignore the rest until it becomes relevant.

Strategy Bucket Exhaustion Two-Pivot Break Safe Bottom
Q-Signal Usually wait for the static model. Automatic exit under the model's two-pivot break rule. Usually context only.
Favorite Stock Holder Consider scaling out or stop adding. Usually review or exit depending on the risk plan. Possible scale-in area.
Quick Growth Trade Scale out profits or tighten the exit plan. Usually exit the trade. Possible add only if the trade is still strong.
Sector Rotation Scale out, stop adding, or prepare for a down-regime arrow. Exit or remain in cash until the next qualified up arrow. Add to watchlist or prepare entry only when the regime turns constructive again.
Country / Exchange Flow Watch for weakening capital flow. Warning that the bottom attempt may be failing. Possible early evidence that value is returning.

Investor scenarios

Different account sizes can use the same intelligence differently.

Self-directed edge scenario

The managed-portfolio investor

An investor may already have most of a portfolio with a hedge fund, advisor, or similar management company, but still want a separate self-directed bucket where they can pursue better results with clearer signal intelligence.

For this investor, the cleanest fit may be a low-activity signal-guided core strategy or a limited weekly signal plan. The goal is to improve the edge on a defined portion of capital without disturbing the larger managed portfolio or turning the process into a high-stress project.

Highest-end customer scenario

The family office

A family office with a large public-market allocation may use several strategies at once: country and exchange flow, global sector leadership, long-term favorite stocks, Q-Signal, Quick Growth trades, sector rotation, and cash reserved for safer bottom areas.

In this setting, WealthVelocity helps organize signal meaning across multiple silos, so an alert can be read as scale out, rotate, add, wait, or review risk depending on the assigned strategy.

This sits beside the broader WealthVelocity read of the market: where money is moving globally, which exchanges and sectors are strengthening, and which individual stocks or trades deserve attention inside the strategy where that capital belongs.

Return goals

Ambitious targets require the right bucket and the right amount of work.

WealthVelocity's weekly stock signal research is built for investors who want more than ordinary passive participation and who are willing to review changing evidence. Internal model work aims for ambitious annualized outcomes, with a project target above 20% per year for selected Quick Growth and weekly signal strategies.

That target is not a promise. Actual results depend on market conditions, execution, position sizing, taxes, timing, and whether the investor follows the chosen plan. The Q-Signal Strategy has been followed with real market signals for years, including active signals posted as conditions changed. Public model examples should be understood as evidence for review, not a guarantee of future performance.

Simple rule Match the signal to the silo.

Before acting on an alert, the investor should know which bucket owns the position and whether that bucket calls for scale in, scale out, exit, rotate, or wait.