And right that you can grow your own money yourself. Systematic Flows is a rules-based service: one email every Thursday tells you exactly which stocks to hold. You place a few trades in your own account — about ten minutes a week. No advisor, no fund, no charts to stare at.
| # | Ticker | Action | Weight | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | XXXX | LONG | 7% | 25.921 |
| 9 | XXXX | LONG | 7% | 3.258 |
| 10 | XXXX | LONG | 7% | 3.130 |
| 13 | XXX | LONG | 7% | 2.245 |
| 14 | XXX | BUY | 7% | 2.217 |
| 17 | XXXX | LONG | 7% | 1.950 |
| 18 | XXXX | BUY | 7% | 1.929 |
| 19 | XXX | LONG | 7% | 1.700 |
| 20 | XXXX | BUY | 7% | 1.600 |
| 22 | XXX | BUY | 7% | 1.548 |
| 7 | XXXX | SELL | — | 3.957 |
| 11 | XXX | SELL | — | 2.645 |
| 12 | XXX | SELL | — | 2.364 |
| — | XXXX | SELL | — | — |
| — | XXXX | LONG | 30% | — |
Results discussed on this page include both live and hypothetical (backtested) performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You place your own trades in your own account; Systematic Flows is a publisher, not an investment adviser, and never has custody of or access to your funds.
The advisor who takes a percentage every year, win or lose, and always has a reason it underperformed. The fund that quietly matches the market and calls it a strategy. The confident voices on TV who were wrong last year and are sure again this year. And underneath all of it, the nagging sense that the whole game is built so the people on the inside make their money off the people on the outside — a feeling more than half of investors say out loud when asked.
You're not paranoid for feeling that. You're paying attention.
But here's where most people in your position get stuck. They decide that since they can't trust the institutions, and they're not about to become some hunched-over day-trader, the only safe move is to stay out, or leave it all in a fund and hope. And that's its own quiet loss — not a dramatic one, just the slow ache of being a passenger in your own financial life. Watching. Never deciding. Never really in control.
There's a third option. Not blind trust in an institution. Not gambling on your gut. A set of plain, visible rules you run yourself — so the decisions are yours, nobody else ever holds your money, and there's no one in the middle to skim, spin, or let you down.
What makes the market feel un-winnable for a regular person is that it seems to need either inside information or a crystal ball. You have neither. So you're told to just index and take whatever the market gives.
But there's a third thing, and it's the most boring, best-documented finding in the field: momentum — the stubborn tendency of stocks that have been winning to keep winning a while longer. It was published in the Journal of Finance in 1993, confirmed across decades and markets worldwide, and quietly run by the biggest funds the entire time. It doesn't ask you to predict anything. It doesn't ask you to trust a guru's hunch. It asks you to follow a rule.
That's the part that should matter to you: it asks you to follow a process, not a personality. The institutions ran this edge for thirty years behind the glass — this is simply that edge, in plain English, so you can run it yourself.
Yes — this is "trust the process." The difference is the process has thirty years of proof behind it.The whole idea, in one line
But you should understand what it does — because a thing you understand is a thing you control, and control is the reason you're here. Each week, the same four steps — no discretion, no guessing. Following it is an act of faith, yes — but faith in a system proven for more than thirty years, not in anyone's hunch. This is slow and boring on purpose. Calculated and simple.
It scores roughly 900 of the largest U.S. companies — the names you already know.
It keeps only the ones whose momentum is speeding up and that are trending up long-term. Never the falling ones.
It holds about ten of them — concentrated in what's actually working, not a diluted basket.
Once a week it drops the names that have stalled and rotates into the new leaders. Then you wait.
And if you're wondering why not just buy an index fund — fair, and here's the honest answer. A fund hands you the whole market: the leaders and the dead weight together, forever, rebalanced a couple of times a year. It's the "accept average" option. This is the focused, active version — concentrated, rotated weekly, aimed at the strongest names. And here's the surprise: because the trend filter steps aside before the worst declines, it has historically been less volatile than owning the index outright (see the record below). The fund is fine if you want to be a passenger. This is for taking the wheel.
So here is the whole picture: every year since 2019, Systematic Flows against the S&P 500. It beat the index every single year — including the 2022 downturn — and even its worst drawdown stayed milder than the market's.
Green = the points Systematic Flows beat the S&P 500 by that year. Bar height is each one's total return.
Growth of $1 since 2019 — out-of-sample
2026 — year to date
These results are out-of-sample: the system's rules were fixed in advance, then run against historical data they were not built or optimized on — not curve-fit after the fact. They are still simulated results rather than a record of live trading, so they don't reflect every real-world cost (commissions, slippage, taxes) or the discipline of holding through losses. Past performance does not guarantee future results; your own results will differ and could include losses.
You place every trade yourself, in your own brokerage. We never touch a dollar. Nothing to embezzle, no fund to gate, no "we'll handle it." You are always in control.
The principle is simple and we don't hide it: things going up tend to keep going up, and the system rides the strongest names until they stall. We don't hand over the exact recipe — that's the edge — but the full record is here, every year of it, the 2022 loss included.
Every signal, the same trades at the same time as you, with his own money. No detached manager taking a fee on your losses.
One flat membership, everything included. We earn nothing more whether your account is large or small — so we have no incentive except to keep being worth it.
| A financial advisor | An index fund | Most newsletters | Systematic Flows | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who controls your money | They do | You (passively) | You | You — always |
| What it costs | ~1%/yr of everything, forever | Low fee | $300–$450/yr | $260/yr flat |
| Can you see how it works | No — trust their judgment | Sort of | Usually a black box | The idea, in plain terms |
| Are losses shown honestly | Buried in statements | It's the market | Winners only | Every month posted |
| Effort from you | None (that's the trade) | None | Varies | ~10 min / week |
| Aimed at beating the market | Rarely does | No — matches it | Claims to | Yes — historically |
Comparison reflects typical category structures; individual products vary. Not a statement that this strategy will outperform any alternative in the future.
Individual member experience. Not a guarantee of future results and may not reflect the typical experience of all members.
[ Add the founder's note here — first person, plain and honest. ]
— [ Founder name ]
Join, and use it for 30 days. If the emails don't arrive like clockwork, or if you simply decide it's not for you — ask, and get your money back. No hoops, no guilt.
We can only offer that because of how this is built. A real, no-friction refund would be suicide for a scam — too many people would take it. It isn't, because the record is real and you can walk away any time.
Renews monthly until you cancel. Cancel anytime in a couple of clicks.
Best price. Renews yearly — we email you before it does, and you can cancel anytime.
Compare either plan to a typical advisor: roughly 1% of everything you have, every year, win or lose — on a $200,000 account that's about $2,000 a year, forever, often just to track the market. Here, every dollar stays in your own account, and even the monthly plan is a rounding error next to that fee. Whichever you choose, we email you before it renews, in plain English, and you can cancel in a couple of clicks, anytime. A renewal you can see coming and stop at will isn't a trap.
Yes. If you can read an email and place a buy or sell order, you can run this. There are no charts to read, no timing to nail, no judgment calls. The system does the deciding; you do the clicking.
It's concentrated, so it can move more than a single index fund in a given week — but because the trend filter steps aside before the deepest declines, its drawdowns have historically stayed milder than the index's. The worst was still around 30%, though. If that frightens you, this isn't for you, and that's an honest answer.
No, and that's the point. You place every trade in your own account. We never have access to your money, never act on your behalf, and charge no fee on your balance. We're a publisher, not a manager or adviser.
An advisor takes a percentage of everything you have, every year, and asks you to trust their judgment. This is a flat $260, keeps your money in your hands, and asks you to trust a process you can watch in the open — not a person.
Weekly rotation means most gains are short-term, which is taxed at a higher rate. Many members run it inside a tax-advantaged account for that reason. We're not tax advisers — talk to yours.
You can see the full history — every year and every month, losing periods included — and the part that's backtested is labeled as backtested. Check all of it before you pay a dollar.
Sitting on the sidelines has a cost too — it just doesn't send you a statement. There's no countdown on this page and there never will be. The only real cost of waiting is the weeks the rules run without you. The refund means trying it costs you nothing but the decision.
Take the wheel — $260 / yearBacked by a 30-day money-back guarantee · Cancel anytime