Learn two beginner-friendly strategies, follow weekly alerts, and join a community that helps you see $100–$300/month potential without overwhelm.

You’re not lazy. You’re not irresponsible.
You’ve just been so focused on helping others that your own financial future got pushed to the side. Maybe…
You’ve contributed to a retirement account here and there, but it’s nowhere near enough.
You’ve looked at the stock market before and thought, “I don’t have time to figure this out.”
You’ve wondered if you’ll have to keep working long after you want to stop, just to make ends meet.
You’ve even considered a second job or side hustle... but the thought of it wears you out.
You're not alone.
Thousands of pastors are in the same boat and they're quietly anxious about what the future holds.

You don’t need a finance degree. You don’t need thousands of dollars.
All you need is a desire to take control of your future, and a guide who understands your world.
Clarity on exactly when to enter and exit trades
Two proven strategies that fit into your schedule
Monthly watchlist of high-probability stock setups
Weekly trade alerts so you can follow along with confidence
Supportive community to keep you motivated and learning
Direct answers when you have questions
Built by a pastor who understands the financial challenges ministry leaders face
Strategies tested and refined with years of real-world results
A step-by-step learning path that meets you where you are
A community that values wisdom, stewardship, and intentional growth

While nothing is guaranteed in trading and there is always a risk of losing, many members report seeing $100–$300/month potential within their first few months of joining. The real win is gaining the skills and confidence to make disciplined, repeatable trades.
$97/mo
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for SLM and MIS strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Up to 3 questions per month, responses within 48 hours
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective Course
Double Canopy Strategy Course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session

No contracts - cancel anytime
$197/mo
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for all four strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Unlimited questions, priority same-day response
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective course
Double Canopy Strategy course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session

No contracts - cancel anytime
$1,970/yr
Beginner-friendly video course that walks you through every step
Monthly seasonal watchlist of high-probability stocks
Real-time trade alerts for all four strategies
Access to member community
Downloadable checklists, templates, and guides
Unlimited questions, priority same-day response
Seasonal Leverage Method course
Monthly Income Strategy course
Cash Flow Collective course
Double Canopy Strategy course
Monthly live group coaching calls
2 free months
1:1 onboarding video chat and initial coaching session

No contracts - cancel anytime



Learn two simple strategies, follow weekly trade alerts, and join a supportive community that helps you grow with confidence.
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We woke up to a real shutdown on October 1, 2025. Congress failed to extend funding by the midnight deadline, so non-essential federal operations have paused. Headlines are loud, but traders need signal, not noise. Here is what matters for markets and how to adjust your plan this week.
The federal government shut down at 12:01 a.m. ET on October 1 after the Senate failed to advance competing funding bills. This is the first shutdown since 2018-2019.
The White House Council of Economic Advisers projects a hit of roughly 15 billion dollars to GDP for each week the shutdown lasts, with tens of thousands of potential job losses if it runs a month. Expect spillovers to consumer spending and travel delays if unpaid federal workers stay home.
Equity markets did not panic on Day 1. The S&P 500 and Dow finished higher, with fresh record closes even as the shutdown began. Gold rose and the dollar slipped.
A key market complication is data. With a shutdown, many government economic reports pause, including payrolls and weekly jobless claims, leaving the Fed and investors flying with fewer instruments on the dashboard.
The SEC has a contingency plan for a lapse in appropriations. Expect “extremely limited” operations and delays in reviews of registration statements, which can affect IPOs and certain corporate actions until normal staffing resumes.
Shutdowns are disruptive for workers and services, yet the market impact is usually modest if the closure is brief. Studies and strategist commentary show most shutdowns have had limited, short-lived effects on the S&P 500. Investors often look through the noise, especially when earnings and liquidity remain supportive.
Translation for your playbook: a shutdown is not a macro regime shift by itself. Duration is the driver. A few days to a couple of weeks tends to be a headline risk. A long standoff can nick growth and confidence at the margin.
Less data creates more uncertainty. If agencies like the Bureau of Labor Statistics stop putting out reports like jobs numbers or inflation data, traders lose some of their main guides. Private reports like ADP or PMI might move the market more, but they are not perfect substitutes. With less clear information, traders should use smaller trade sizes to manage risk.
Concerns about government stability. Credit rating agencies and analysts are already warning that a long shutdown makes the U.S. look less reliable. That usually doesn’t crash the market, but it can make investors more cautious and push risk a little higher.
Slowdown in new deals. With the SEC operating at limited capacity, things like IPOs or other filings that need staff review can get delayed. This means some companies may have to wait to raise money until the shutdown ends.
Sector effects. Industries that rely heavily on federal money—like defense contractors or healthcare groups—might see more pressure. Companies that depend on timely payments could face issues if money is delayed. On the other hand, big tech stocks often move more on their own earnings and trends, so they may stay strong even during a shutdown.
Safe-haven moves. On the first day, gold went up while the U.S. dollar went down. If the shutdown continues, this pattern may keep showing up. It is less about a trading signal and more a sign that investors are nervous.
Use this checklist to keep decisions clean and sized appropriately:
Filter harder. Only trade A-quality setups that already fit your rules. In uncertainty, quality control is your edge. Historical evidence supports staying selective.
Right-size risk. Cut position size 25 to 50 percent when the normal macro data backdrop goes dark. This is not fear, it is math under higher variance.
Expect bigger reactions to shutdown headlines. Be prepared for sharp moves when news drops about the shutdown. These swings could go in either direction, so manage your size and wait for confirmation before acting.
If the shutdown stretches and consumer or business confidence cracks, the growth path dents and markets start to price it. The White House baseline loss math is 15 billion dollars of GDP per week, which compounds if the impasse lingers. Should that scenario develop alongside a soft labor trend, expect volatility to widen and cyclicals to lag until a funding deal emerges.
Day 1 confirmed what history suggests. Markets can rally through a shutdown, especially when earnings leadership and liquidity are intact. A shutdown is the result of idyological standoffs... aka government disfunction. And truthfully, the market is used to government disfunction so it takes the current political landscape with a grain of salt.
The risk is not the headline itself, it is the duration and the collateral damage from missing data and delayed agency functions. Trade your plan, shrink size in the fog, and let quality do the lifting. When Congress funds the government again, the data calendar resumes and risk can be re-scaled.