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Grinders

60 members • Free

6 contributions to Grinders
Oil Is Back, the Magnificent Seven Are Not
Oil Is Back, the Magnificent Seven Are Not: The World's Strongest Stocks Right Now Based on The Market's momentum analysis of around 1,300 stocks across the S&P 500, Stoxx Europe 600, and Swiss Performance Index · April 2026 For much of the past three years, a conversation about the world's best-performing stocks was really a conversation about a handful of American technology giants. The Magnificent Seven — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla — dominated momentum rankings and investor portfolios alike, their valuations swelling on the promise of artificial intelligence and an apparently unshakeable belief in their capacity to compound returns indefinitely. That era is over, at least for now. The group that has seized the top of the global momentum rankings in 2026 could hardly be more different: oil companies, many of which spent years in a prolonged and unloved consolidation before breaking out to fresh highs. The Market's momentum analysis, which ranks around 1,300 stocks from the S&P 500, the Stoxx Europe 600, and the Swiss Performance Index by their price performance over six and twelve months, shows that energy stocks have recorded the largest increase in winners of any sector since the last survey. The methodology is grounded in a body of academic research showing that stocks which outperform over those medium-term horizons tend to continue doing so in the months that follow. By that measure, energy is now the most compelling segment of the global equity market. The technical picture for many of these stocks is particularly striking. In market analysis, the principle known informally as "the longer the base, the higher the space" holds that a prolonged period of sideways consolidation, once broken convincingly to the upside, typically gives way to a sustained and powerful new uptrend. That is precisely what has occurred across a wide range of oil and gas names. Years of range-bound trading — during which the sector was written off by many growth-oriented investors — have been followed by clean breakouts to new highs, often accompanied by narrowing Bollinger Bands snapping open as a large bullish candle confirms the move. Analysts who track momentum closely read this pattern as the early signature of a multi-year bull market in energy equities, not merely a war-driven spike.
Oil Is Back, the Magnificent Seven Are Not
0 likes • 3d
In Russia prices are normal, but what I have heard from family in Europe, prices increased by half.
Intro Deivids Kasinskis
What's up people, My name is Deivids Kasinskis from Russia. I am currently a university student in Moscow. My goals are to build muscle and make money to be independent from economics of one country.
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Intro Tom Rieber
Hello guys, my name is Tom Rieber. I am 20 years old and from Germany. Currently I am serving the Military, but my long term goal is financial freedom. I want to drive the nicest cars and earn my money from my laptop. Although it's hard to work beside the duty, but with the help of the Grinders, we are going to make that happen.
0 likes • 3d
Nice to meet you Tom, thrilled to here more from you in the community.
0 likes • 3d
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Here are some ideas for your Agency
- Social media management - Paid advertising (Facebook, Google, TikTok ads) - Search engine optimization (SEO) - Email marketing - Content creation (posts, blogs, newsletters) - Copywriting (sales pages, ads, emails) - Graphic design - Branding & brand identity - Video editing - Website design - Web development - App development - Marketing strategy & consulting - Sales funnel building - Lead generation - Automation & workflow setup - CRM management - Data analytics & reporting - Virtual assistance - Customer support services - Influencer marketing management - E-commerce management (Shopify, product pages) - Local business marketing (Google Maps, reviews) - Appointment setting / outreach - Online reputation management
Here are some ideas for your Agency
0 likes • 3d
damn I never thought about the viarity of possibilities
What Nobody Tells You About Starting E-Commerce
You Almost Always Need Capital E-commerce is often marketed as one of the easiest ways to make money online. Scroll through social media and you’ll see claims of “starting with $0,” “no risk,” and “instant success.” The reality, however, looks very different. What most people don’t tell you is this: in 99% of cases, you need starting capital to build a real e-commerce business. The idea of launching a store with no money sounds appealing, but it ignores the basic mechanics of how e-commerce works. Unlike service-based businesses, where you sell skills or time, e-commerce revolves around products—and products come with costs. First, there is inventory or product sourcing. Whether you’re buying in bulk, working with suppliers, or even dropshipping, there are always expenses involved. Samples need to be ordered, suppliers need to be tested, and quality needs to be verified. Skipping this step to save money often leads to poor products and unhappy customers. Then comes marketing, which is where most beginners underestimate the true cost. Getting traffic to your store is not free. While organic methods like social media can work, they are slow, unpredictable, and highly competitive. Paid advertising—on platforms like Facebook, TikTok, or Google—is what drives consistent growth. And ads require upfront investment, often with no guarantee of immediate return. There are also tools and infrastructure costs. Building a functional store typically involves platforms, apps, domains, and payment systems. Individually, these may seem small, but together they add up quickly—especially when you are testing and optimizing. Perhaps the biggest hidden cost is testing. In e-commerce, your first product is rarely a winner. Success usually comes after trying multiple products, creatives, and audiences. Each test costs money. This trial-and-error process is not optional—it’s part of the business model. This is why the “start with nothing” narrative is misleading. While it’s technically possible in rare cases, it is not the norm. Most successful e-commerce businesses are built by people who had enough capital to test, fail, adjust, and try again without quitting after the first setback.
What Nobody Tells You About Starting E-Commerce
1 like • 3d
Thats how I failed my first business. All these gurus telling me about I don't need money to start drop shipping. Absolute bull shit.
1-6 of 6
Deivids Kašinskis
4
26points to level up
@deivids-kasinskis-2439
Focus on yourself🧘‍♂️📈🔥

Active 3d ago
Joined Jul 5, 2024
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