Joined September 2022
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.@KynaKosling is the creator of "The Trading Resource Hub" (TTRH) — a publication that recently surpassed 1 million views — and "A Trading Writer's Diary." In this second interview, we go deeper on the problems that hold writers back. If any of these sound familiar, this one's for you: (0:49) Not Building Trust With Readers (10:54) People Trust People, Not Companies (16:42) Building Trust With Personal Stories (26:18) You Need to Differentiate Your Content (34:06) Differentiation Levers to Pull (39:50) Editing Is Not Spelling and Grammar (47:55) Writing Without a Clear Purpose and How to Find It (53:53) You Don't Have a Clear Audience Without Knowing Your Writing Goals (57:20) Confusing Great Writing With Great Ideas (1:02:33) An Easy Way to Start Writing Online Is by Taking Notes (1:04:31) Ghostwriting (1:11:22) The Writing Process Is a "Clash of Ideas" (1:14:30) Where Writers Are Over-reliant on AI (1:23:31) How Kyna Uses AI (1:30:35) AI Won't Give You Real Insight (1:42:23) Kyna's Parting Words and Encouragement for Writers Note: There were some internet issues, so I made a few cuts to keep things smooth, enjoy!
17 Apr 2025
Kyna Kosling (@KayKlingson) is the creator of The Trading Resource Hub, a one-stop show for swing traders, which has received praise from @FranVezz, @jfsrevg, @stockbasereport, @drmansipd, @alphatrends, and any many others. In her first public video appearance, we discuss everything from her writing process to actionable tips. If you want to improve as a writer, watch this. (1:14) Why Did You Start TTRH? (8:19) What Frequency Is Recommended for Newsletters? (11:38) Reviewing an Early Post and What She Would've Done Differently (14:56) Making a Post Look Better, Live Editing (23:30) Putting Together Your Outline (34:56) Common Writing Mistakes (41:33) Parallels Between Trading and Writing (45:01) How Do You Decide What Topics To Write About? (56:12) The Plateau in Traffic Data (1:12:07) Writing Is a Numbers Game (1:22:36) What Are Some of Your Current Challenges? (1:28:35) Advice for Aspiring Writers Who "Don't Feel Ready"
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I’m at the age where half my friends are getting married—crazy stuff
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Small-caps cooking $IWM
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$SPCX - SPACEX SHARES BEGIN TRADING AFTER $75 BILLION IPO SPACEX SHARES OPEN AT $150 AFTER IPO PRICED AT $135/SHARE
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Two things about IPOs: 1/ There's usually a rally on the first day. This is known as the "first day pop" effect and it's largely caused by IPO mispricing and investor hype. Barron's noted that the average 1D gain for IPOs this year was something like 15%. 2/ IPOs typically underperform in their first 1-3 years. Ritter (1991), "The Long-Run Performance of Initial Public Offerings." So very often you'll see a nice pop then some prolonged consolidation. They don't have to last 3 yrs especially in a hot market. This creates a nice "base breakout" setup for IPOs, and I've personally found that to be the best way to trade them.
Our IPO Base Breakout setup is one of our highest performing setups. A name IPOs, digests retail traders misery over a couple weeks or months, and then explosively breaks out into new highs. My goal is to own the price discovery phase where p1 is unknown. Oftentimes see massive runs. $CRWV $ARM both come to mind. But dozens out there we’ve traded this bull market cycle. I doubt today’s SpaceX IPO will be any different. Those who can be patient will likely have the chance to make a lot of money.
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Multiple areas of confluence here for bitcoin:native
bitcoin:native retesting the Feb low feels scary. The data says it is a coin flip. 38 retests of a major low since 2018. 18 bounced, 20 broke down. But the coin is loaded. When BTC never closed below the wick, it bounced 14 for 14. Close 4% or more beneath it? 0 for 20. No survivors in nine years. RIP. The level does not matter. The close does. Right now BTC is testing the Feb wick at 60k. Swept it intraday. Every close has held above. So far, this is the 14 for 14 pattern. Lose $60k on a close, and the odds flip fast. Hold it and history says the bounce is coming.
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Semiconductors are currently 48% above their 40-week moving average -- the farthest in over two decades. The last time the $SOXX index crossed that threshold was in the 2000s before topping out at 105%.
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Randy Dunham retweeted
Idk who she is but I know Paul Tudor Jones when I see him!
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Elevated oil prices are now starting to trickle down to earnings calls Source: FactSet
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10pt week-over-week increase in bearish sentiment
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Leisure and Entertainment ETF ( $PEJ ) at all-time highs today. Top 10 largest holdings include: > travel services ( $VIK $TRIP $EXPE $ABNB ) > restaurants, resorts & casinos ( $SBUX $LVS ) > lodging ( $MAR $HLT ) > food distribution ( $SYY ) > entertainment ( $CNK )
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Sorry guys, I’d rather have semi’s fall 20% than workout legs
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Randy Dunham retweeted
Too far, too fast? Valuations stretched? SpaceX is going to mark the top of this bull cycle? Let’s talk about it at 2PM ET today. Join me and Randy as we talk through secular cycles.. and how bubbles form and implode. x.com/i/spaces/1jGXggXjnRdKZ
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Randy Dunham retweeted
There's a million things you can look at to evaluate the market. But I've found the simpler your analysis is, the better. A super duper simple way to form a market bias is to use the RSI indicator -- not as an oversold/overbought gauge but more as a momentum reading. I also apply this to longer timeframes (weekly in this instance). --> when RSI > 50, pullbacks are usually safe --> when RSI < 50, further analysis is warranted It hasn't been perfect, but it's been good enough.
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iShares Korea ETF seeing it's largest rolling monthly ETF outflows ever $EWY
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Bullish monthly divergence on equal-weight healthcare vs. equal-weight S&P 500 ratio 👀
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Well well well
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Last week's sector performance was interesting: -> the highest performing sector (tech) went down the most -> risk-off sectors caught a bid (healthcare and staples) -> some cyclical sectors (financials and industrials) actually closed higher So would you count this as a "rotation to defensive stocks?" I don't know. But here's what's more important: there isn't broad selling across the board. That tells you something... .... money is not leaving, it's just rotating. If all 11 sectors were down, that'd be more concerning. What did we see last week? Well the majority of sectors actually closed green! just something to think about
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Nothing better than gaming on a cloudy Sunday
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nvm
the market yearns for a pullback but retail won’t let it
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How bad is the economy doing if trucking companies are making all-time highs?
Charles Dow would be screaming at the top of his lungs to buy dips in strong stocks every opportunity you get as long as the Industrial (supply) and the Transportation (demand) areas are booming higher. And they are!
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