

Live Streaming Apr. 27 - 29, 2026
Wall Street's analyst armies are disappearing. The research desk that took a team and a 7-figure budget now takes a framework and a conversation.
This workshop shows you:
MIT Physicist Reveals How to Finally Spot Asymmetric Trades Weeks In Advance — Using Just Your Voice...
Even If You Can’t Read a Chart ;-)
Let’s be real here...
You’re probably not going to be the next Warren Buffett. Neither am I.
But what if I told you that this weekend, people just like you will find asymmetric trades weeks before they happen.
No hedge fund experience required. Just your voice, the right frameworks, and some smart questions.
Sounds impossible?
I've been on both sides, let me show you how it works…
The Dirty Little Secret Big Finance Doesn't Want You To Know...

If you’ve been stuck feeling information overload or analysis paralysis...
chances are, you’re doing too much — trying to analyze every bit of information about a stock instead of looking for specific situations that lead to asymmetric results.
Here’s the thing:
Every asymmetric trade is a story about: situation, change, and reaction.
Make this one tiny shift and the noise falls away — because for asymmetric trades, only a handful of things actually matter.
Don’t just believe me. Check this out:

In 1964, American Express dropped more than 50% after the infamous salad oil scandal.
Warren Buffett staked 25% of his fortune on this one trade.
Most people chalk it up to his genius. But the truth is simpler:
AXP was in The Penalty Box.
Buffett saw that the courts would soon cap the financial liability and when they did, investors would change their tune. Buyers would rush back.
Within months, the stock recovered — one of his most legendary Asymmetric trades.

In July 2002, shares of Capital One plunged 50% after insider selling by the CFO spooked the market.
Cornwall Capital invested $26,000 in early 2003 when everyone else was running scared.
When the CFO resigned, investors assumed the worst was behind the company.
Eight months after their investment, Cornwall’s stake exploded to $526,000.
Their trade was so legendary — it landed them in a Michael Lewis book.

In October 2020, we told investors to pile into Playa Hotels and Resorts.
The stock had been crushed by Covid lockdowns — but vaccines were on the way, and we knew the stock would rally starting in November.
By March 2021, Playa had gained 86%.
And it wasn’t just Playa — dozens of other Penalty Box stocks jumped 50% to 150% over the same stretch, for the same reason.
We Have to say it: Our past performance may not be indicative of your future results.
But notice the pattern:
Different decades.
Different industries.
Different stocks.
Same recurring plotline.
And the penalty box is just one of nine.
These plotlines surface again and again in the markets.
This is how legendary investors actually stay ahead — by recognizing situations that drive asymmetric results.
Asymmetry is always about the situation
As an MIT physicist turned fund manager,
I know just how hard finding asymmetric situations used to be.
When I launched my investment firm, Red Acre Investments, and was writing my newsletter, the Red Acre Biotech Binary Event Watch,
we found asymmetric trades by doing what legendary investors have always done: predicting situations.
We had a framework and a systematic workflow we followed month after month.
I would review potential situations, talk to my junior analysts, and
they would spend up to 20 hours per stock
doing the grunt work — poring through financials, SEC filings, and company presentations to uncover the hidden clues that showed how the situation would play out.
©2026 Red Acre Media
Disclaimer: This is NOT an offer for Securities. By accessing this information you acknowledge that it does NOT constitute Individual Investment Advice. Investing in securities involves the risk of loss. Historical examples and past performance may not be indicative of future results. You should consult your financial advisor about the suitability of investment styles and products for your portfolio, level of experience and financial goals. Red Acre Investments is not an investment adviser or broker-dealer.
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