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2026/01/13

This income glitch is flashing another opportunity as we speak

Get the details here
 
   
     
Back in the 70s and 80s, dividends actually carried weight.

You could put your money in, sit back, and watch it yield a hefty 8% year after year.

 
 
Today, you’ll be lucky to see even 1%.
 
 
So where did all that money go?

Turns out,

Companies quietly redirected it into buying back their own shares.

And it makes perfect sense.

Paying a dividend can add downward pressure on a stock price.

 
 
Buybacks do the opposite.

That’s why companies like Alphabet barely bother with dividends at all.

 
 
Instead, buybacks reduce share count and quietly push prices higher.

It’s no surprise that research from Cambridge University Press found share repurchases tend to deliver outsized stock performance.

Now here is the part that matters for you and me…

When a company keeps buying back shares, it artificially inflates the stock price, sometimes almost overnight.

That distortion creates an income glitch.

With the right specific trade setup, that glitch can target 50 to 100% more income than traditional payouts.

Look at NVIDIA 

The stock spent months stuck in a sideways grind.

 
 
Even the big short guy who made $700m on the housing market collapse in ‘08, Michael Burry, publicly bet against it.

Then NVIDIA announced a $60 billion share buyback.

That is when the income glitch kicked in.

Using the same setup, traders could have targeted payouts again and again as the stock responded to that artificial pressure.

 
 
AVGO announced a buyback plan, which in turn sent the stock to the moon…
 
 
And sure enough, this move created an “Income Glitch” on AVGO.

Specific trades would have delivered payouts.

 
 
Sure, there were smaller wins and trades that didn’t work at all.

But buybacks are showing no signs of slowing.

And if you ignore the income glitch they leave behind, you are leaving a lot on the table.

If you’re curious, you can catch the full breakdown here, including the latest income glitch I’m tracking right now.

—Jack Carter

We develop tools and strategies to the best of our ability, but no one can guarantee the future. There is always a risk of loss when trading. Past performance is not indicative of future results. From 1/1/21 through 12/12/25, the average return per options trade alert published in real time (winners and losers) is 2.81% in 3 days, with a 95.9% win rate.
   
 

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