Dear Reader, My name is Nilus Mattive. I represent a firm called Weiss Ratings. And for the last 100 years, we've actively warned Americans about every major financial crisis — BEFORE it happened. Our founder's father, Irving Weiss, used a series of mathematical formulas to predict the Great Depression. While the rest of the stock market was drunk on profits, Irving tried to warn everyone he knew that a crash was inevitable — and coming soon. His bosses on Wall Street scoffed at him. They thought he was trying to ruin their business. But Irving had the last laugh … On Oct. 29, 1929, the market dropped 12% — before eventually falling 90% in the next three years. Irving Weiss — and his small group of followers — not only avoided the crash but were able to profit during the Depression — even while most Americans were in the poorhouse. Irving's son, Martin Weiss, took those well-established formulas and put loads of computer power behind them, creating algorithms to rate stocks, banks and insurance companies. Today, our team of analysts, mathematicians and data scientists use his original formulas … Combined with new formulas and advanced computer models to cut through the financial fog and detect early warning signals. These so-called Weiss Ratings predicted the bank failures of the Savings and Loan crisis of the 1980s ahead of time, helping followers avoid chaos. At the height of the Dot-Com Bubble in 1999 … Analysts at big firms like Morgan Stanley … Bloomberg … or JPMorgan … Kept issuing optimistic reports with hugely inflated valuations … And Zacks — a famed stock ratings company — couldn't find a single stock on the Nasdaq to rank a "Sell." But Weiss Ratings signaled something completely different. It said 90% of all those stocks were putting investors in great danger … Sure enough, the Dot-Com Bubble soon followed, wiping out 77% of stock market wealth and ruining the retirements of millions of Americans who failed to heed our warnings. In 2008, as overleveraged banks loaded up on below-grade mortgage bonds, Weiss Ratings warned of the crisis to come. In fact, we accurately predicted 98% of the banks who would eventually fail in the Financial Crisis — missing just one. Consider the big Bear Stearns failure, for example … On Dec. 3, 2007, we published an alert warning that Bear Stearns … "[had] sunk its balance sheet even deeper into the hole, with $20.2 billion in dead assets, or 155 percent of its equity, and is threatened with insolvency." Bear Stearns collapsed 33 days later. We also published an article warning that "Lehman Brothers [was] in similar shape because of an even larger $34.7 billion pile-up of dead assets, or 160 percent of its equity." Lehman collapsed 182 days later. And that single collapse is what ignited the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression. We also warned well ahead of time about Washington Mutual, Bank of America, Citigroup and all the major banks that failed or required a bailout. Weiss Ratings pounded the table for investors, telling them "DO NOT TOUCH THESE COMPANIES WITH A TEN-FOOT POLE" … While all along, officials on Wall Street and in Washington swore on a stack of bibles that no such failures could EVER be possible. We know how that played out. Those who listened to us could have minimized or avoided catastrophic losses … and the personal pain that comes with it, while … Those who owned the shares in those same big banks saw them plunge 96%, 98%, even 100% from their peak value. Our Weiss Ratings also signaled danger in 2020, during the early days of the Covid outbreak. Sure enough, stocks plunged 30% in a handful of days after our warning. That's why a study in the Wall Street Journal reported that Weiss Ratings was the #1 stock rating system for profit performance. When the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and others commissioned a study to determine which financial ratings company had the best profit track record for stocks … Weiss Ratings was number one overall. That's why hundreds of thousands of investors access our free ratings every day. While we have a history of spotting danger well ahead of time, I have to say: All those previous crises pale in comparison to what could be coming, thanks to overblown AI hype. I believe it's like the Great Depression, the Dot-Com Bubble and the 2008 Financial Crisis — combined. And it could change our country for the worse — for years to come. Click here to find out why I believe AI stocks are about to crash … and what you can do to protect yourself. Sincerely, | | Nilus Mattive Safe Investing Analyst, Weiss Ratings | |
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