There's an assumption baked into most people's idea of "active investing" that nobody ever really questions…

That doing well properly means becoming a slave to your screen…

Constantly checking prices… 15 different tabs open… CNBC in your ear 24/7…

As if the only way to benefit from the market's movements is to be permanently switched on.

That's exhausting…

It's also, completely unnecessary.

Go back to that S&P 500 data we walked through earlier this week...

Across 40 years, there was one specific 67-day window, from late October through to the start of January, where the index rose 32 times out of 40.

That's one window, once a year.

Or the Apple example from before that…

One 65-day window, every summer, where the stock rose 17 times out of 20.

Neither of those required daily decisions… they required showing up once a year, at roughly the same time, for a stretch of about two months.

People picture something that demands constant attention, the way day trading does.

But it's closer to the opposite.

The entire premise is that you don't need to be watching the market all the time to benefit from it…

You just need to know when the handful of historically strongest windows tend to open, and be positioned for those specific stretches.

One or two of these a year, executed properly can make you more money than a portfolio's worth of smaller decisions made the rest of the time.

So when done right, using Money Windows asks less of you, not more.

A handful of specific datesbacked by decades of data, rather than a draining effort to read every move in the market.

This is exactly what I'll show you how to build on June 25th.

Not a system that demands your attention all year round, but a short list of the windows worth actually paying attention to…

Oliver

P.S. If you've ever felt burnt out trying to "keep up" with the market, this might be the most useful adjustment to your approach all year. Doing less, more precisely, beats doing more, less precisely.

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