I am a grains and bond options floor trader from back in the day when there was a real edge from just being on the floor. I'm looking and testing for methods and systems (to operate off the floor) everywhere and all I see is from dubious to complete nonsense. Then I get these emails from the above and I remember the name. He was selling futures systems when I was busy making coin and the floor edge was disappearing. He shows statements, competition prizes, and tax returns for most of the years I have been inactive/ retired. The small part of what he shows of his systems is very simple, but there is hardly an edge there in my opinion. He shows amazing returns for the last 16 years, with the statements and tax filings to back them up. I'm looking for informed opinions about Chuck's methods, performance, perils, etc. In other words, since there is no free lunches to be had, where is the catch?.
Yeah. Thanks. I read all that already. Chuck's statements and tax filings are true though. I think there's a catch there somewhere. Gut feeling. Do you have hard proof one way or the other?. I have to go with his tax filings, for now.
Are the tax filings consistent? If he is such a great options trader, why is he peddling his stuff aggressively and using salespeople. Real-life results from subscribers seem to be awful, his sales pitch doesn't matter much. But go ahead and let us know of the results.
Thanks guys. You reflect my concerns exactly. At this point I want to see Chuck's satisfied customers' statements and tax filings. Someone with a workable method like that, does not need to sell anything, and certainly does not need the hassle of an investigation for hard sales tactics/spam/etc. Now, if he is making $2,000-$5,000 per sale, the amount can be worth it. Most people can't follow other person's trading anyway, so I guess this is a waste of time.