Autopilot and Investing Soldiers: Sit Down and Listen Up, GI
This play compiles promotional and disclosure-oriented content from a creator who publishes model portfolios on the Autopilot copy-trading platform. The sources are marketing, membership pitches, platform disclosures, and general risk commentary rather than stock-specific research or trade catalysts.
Linked assets
Three tickers are linked to the play: GI (channel/creator reference), SEC (listed as an equity security in the source metadata), and QQQ (used as a benchmark reference in the creator's commentary). None of the sources include company-specific financials, actionable catalysts, or position-level trade rationales.
Autopilot and Investing Soldiers: Sit Down and Listen Up, GI 🚀 Copy My Portfolios Automatically → https://marketplace.joinautopilot.com/landing/1218/542069 🔒 My premium members see every trade I make across my $30M+ portfolio — live alerts, AI research tools, and monthly TradingView Premium giveaways. Try it free → https://www.https://whop.com/inthemoney-premium-c290/ 📊 Chart Like a Pro with TradingView → https://www.tradingview.com/u/InTheMoneyAdam/?aff_id=114660&aff_sub=YouTube 🐦 Follow Me on X (Twitter) → https://www.x.com/inthemoneyadam 💬 Join My Discord Server → https://discord.gg/EcJJVc83RB Disclaimer: Autopilot pays me to publish my portfolios on their platform and I am not a client of Autopilot. Investment advice is provided by Autopilot Advisers, an SEC-registered investment adviser. Investing carries risk, including the risk of the loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. See Autopilot’s disclosures at www.joinautopilot.com for more information. -------------------------------------------------- You should not treat any opinion expressed on this YouTube channel as a specific inducement to make a particular investment or follow a particular strategy, but only as an expression of opinion. Opinions expressed are based upon information considered reliable, but this YouTube channel does not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. This YouTube channel is not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in these videos or their descriptions. Statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. This YouTube channel does not guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware of the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed on this YouTube channel. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value. Investors may get back less than invested or lose more than their original investment. Investments or strategies mentioned on this YouTube channel may not be suitable for you. This material does not consider your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You must make an independent decision regarding investments or strategies mentioned on this YouTube channel. Before acting on information on this YouTube channel, you should consider whether it is suitable for your particular circumstances and strongly consider seeking advice from your own financial or investment advisor. It's good night, story time with Adam. There seems to be a lot of concern from some people about hopping on autopilot and seeing their portfolio go down. A few things I want to address, and this is going to be the video I point to from here on out. One, my portfolio is always going to have a beta that is higher than one. That means if QQQ, which is my benchmark, has a beta of one, every time it goes up by a dollar, it goes up by a dollar. It goes down by a dollar, it goes down by a dollar. Mine might have a beta of, I haven't checked, but maybe 2.5 or 3. So if it goes down by a dollar, you're going to lose $3. So what that means is when you have times of high volatility, which is another way of saying things go down, you're going to experience larger drawdowns than if you were to hold something like QQQ. And I do that on purpose because if you were to hold QQQ long-term, yes, you'd make fine returns with less volatility. And if that's your thing, go for it. But in order to make higher returns over the long-term, obviously never guaranteed, is to have a higher beta, which means you have to have a relative tolerance to that level of volatility. Okay, so that's the first thing. The second thing is, you guys have entrusted your care of your money under my portfolio on autopilot. I offer multiple portfolios. Actively managed is my baby. I changed the name of the other one to Actively Defensive, so it's more, it builds around a defensive stance around what's currently happening in the economy and the stock market. So in this case, stagflation, particularly, and the conflict with Iran. And then there's a panic button, which I modulate off and on, but really the two actively ones are my babies right now. So you can mix those up. You can put 500 in each, or you could put 501 and do 500 with whatever else you want with your own money, right? You don't have to go all in. So it's up to you how much you want to do, how much you're willing to tolerate. But I do want to say you have to have a time horizon that extends a little bit further than your nose. Because there are people that are, I'm in between Michael Burry who cuts off the people's ability to withdraw their funds and whatever the other example I had in my head a second ago. I can't and wouldn't cut off your funds, but I have to spank you a little bit here and say, you have to have a time horizon that is further than your nose. If you are hoping to pay rent next week with whatever you put anywhere, that's not going to happen. You can go put it all on black, still probably won't happen, but if you're lucky, maybe. You have to have a time horizon that's at least as far as you can spit. I've been doing this since I was 19, like very actively doing this since I was 19. I was there during 2020. I made a video on why I didn't buy put options. And the reason I didn't buy put options is because as the market goes down, whenever it was going to bounce, and I didn't know when, when the Fed injected liquidity, which maybe nobody remembers. I don't know if you guys remember that. Fed injected a ton of liquidity into the economy. It bounced and it kept bouncing until 2022. And if I had bought put options, I knew that when that bounce happened, it would kick me in the teeth, not only because the underlying went up, but because with the bounces, all of a sudden implied volatility decreases. And if you're not an options person, it just basically means the price decreases because the underlying stock or ETF went up and a extrinsic value decreases, which is a portion of the options value. So I didn't do it. I bought the dip instead. What did I do by the time 2022 rolled around? I bought the dip. My portfolio was down huge. I've made, and maybe I'll link it tomorrow in the comments. I'm not gonna do it now. I've made probably at least three or four videos reminding people that it's going to be okay. I've made probably at least 10 X posts and launches to people on autopilot to hold on to my sweaty hand. It's going to be okay. This is how the stock market functions. And maybe part of the reason people like join autopilot is to offload some of the burden. But then some people just are like, I don't, I don't really know how to do this. I don't want to put it within like my girlfriend, her, her, um, her portfolio manager had her uh sitting in a mutual fund that was not beating inflation and that her fees were out, were basically higher than the performance of the mutual fund and was bleeding it out year after year. It had a negative return. So you could do that, um, or some people who are just like, I don't, I don't really know how to do this. So I'm going to entrust it with this YouTube guy who's uh he must know what he's doing. He has 450 subs or whatever. The fact is I do know what I'm doing to some extent. I can never legally guarantee returns, but I can say that the reason you entrust money with somebody that has a sense of fiduciary responsibility and experience for a reason. And
SEC is an equity security listed under ticker SEC; company name and sector/industry classifications are unavailable.
Autopilot and Investing Soldiers: Sit Down and Listen Up, GI 🚀 Copy My Portfolios Automatically → https://marketplace.joinautopilot.com/landing/1218/542069 🔒 My premium members see every trade I make across my $30M+ portfolio — live alerts, AI research tools, and monthly TradingView Premium giveaways. Try it free → https://www.https://whop.com/inthemoney-premium-c290/ 📊 Chart Like a Pro with TradingView → https://www.tradingview.com/u/InTheMoneyAdam/?aff_id=114660&aff_sub=YouTube 🐦 Follow Me on X (Twitter) → https://www.x.com/inthemoneyadam 💬 Join My Discord Server → https://discord.gg/EcJJVc83RB Disclaimer: Autopilot pays me to publish my portfolios on their platform and I am not a client of Autopilot. Investment advice is provided by Autopilot Advisers, an SEC-registered investment adviser. Investing carries risk, including the risk of the loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. See Autopilot’s disclosures at www.joinautopilot.com for more information. -------------------------------------------------- You should not treat any opinion expressed on this YouTube channel as a specific inducement to make a particular investment or follow a particular strategy, but only as an expression of opinion. Opinions expressed are based upon information considered reliable, but this YouTube channel does not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. This YouTube channel is not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in these videos or their descriptions. Statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. This YouTube channel does not guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware of the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed on this YouTube channel. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value. Investors may get back less than invested or lose more than their original investment. Investments or strategies mentioned on this YouTube channel may not be suitable for you. This material does not consider your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You must make an independent decision regarding investments or strategies mentioned on this YouTube channel. Before acting on information on this YouTube channel, you should consider whether it is suitable for your particular circumstances and strongly consider seeking advice from your own financial or investment advisor. It's good night, story time with Adam. There seems to be a lot of concern from some people about hopping on autopilot and seeing their portfolio go down. A few things I want to address, and this is going to be the video I point to from here on out. One, my portfolio is always going to have a beta that is higher than one. That means if QQQ, which is my benchmark, has a beta of one, every time it goes up by a dollar, it goes up by a dollar. It goes down by a dollar, it goes down by a dollar. Mine might have a beta of, I haven't checked, but maybe 2.5 or 3. So if it goes down by a dollar, you're going to lose $3. So what that means is when you have times of high volatility, which is another way of saying things go down, you're going to experience larger drawdowns than if you were to hold something like QQQ. And I do that on purpose because if you were to hold QQQ long-term, yes, you'd make fine returns with less volatility. And if that's your thing, go for it. But in order to make higher returns over the long-term, obviously never guaranteed, is to have a higher beta, which means you have to have a relative tolerance to that level of volatility. Okay, so that's the first thing. The second thing is, you guys have entrusted your care of your money under my portfolio on autopilot. I offer multiple portfolios. Actively managed is my baby. I changed the name of the other one to Actively Defensive, so it's more, it builds around a defensive stance around what's currently happening in the economy and the stock market. So in this case, stagflation, particularly, and the conflict with Iran. And then there's a panic button, which I modulate off and on, but really the two actively ones are my babies right now. So you can mix those up. You can put 500 in each, or you could put 501 and do 500 with whatever else you want with your own money, right? You don't have to go all in. So it's up to you how much you want to do, how much you're willing to tolerate. But I do want to say you have to have a time horizon that extends a little bit further than your nose. Because there are people that are, I'm in between Michael Burry who cuts off the people's ability to withdraw their funds and whatever the other example I had in my head a second ago. I can't and wouldn't cut off your funds, but I have to spank you a little bit here and say, you have to have a time horizon that is further than your nose. If you are hoping to pay rent next week with whatever you put anywhere, that's not going to happen. You can go put it all on black, still probably won't happen, but if you're lucky, maybe. You have to have a time horizon that's at least as far as you can spit. I've been doing this since I was 19, like very actively doing this since I was 19. I was there during 2020. I made a video on why I didn't buy put options. And the reason I didn't buy put options is because as the market goes down, whenever it was going to bounce, and I didn't know when, when the Fed injected liquidity, which maybe nobody remembers. I don't know if you guys remember that. Fed injected a ton of liquidity into the economy. It bounced and it kept bouncing until 2022. And if I had bought put options, I knew that when that bounce happened, it would kick me in the teeth, not only because the underlying went up, but because with the bounces, all of a sudden implied volatility decreases. And if you're not an options person, it just basically means the price decreases because the underlying stock or ETF went up and a extrinsic value decreases, which is a portion of the options value. So I didn't do it. I bought the dip instead. What did I do by the time 2022 rolled around? I bought the dip. My portfolio was down huge. I've made, and maybe I'll link it tomorrow in the comments. I'm not gonna do it now. I've made probably at least three or four videos reminding people that it's going to be okay. I've made probably at least 10 X posts and launches to people on autopilot to hold on to my sweaty hand. It's going to be okay. This is how the stock market functions. And maybe part of the reason people like join autopilot is to offload some of the burden. But then some people just are like, I don't, I don't really know how to do this. I don't want to put it within like my girlfriend, her, her, um, her portfolio manager had her uh sitting in a mutual fund that was not beating inflation and that her fees were out, were basically higher than the performance of the mutual fund and was bleeding it out year after year. It had a negative return. So you could do that, um, or some people who are just like, I don't, I don't really know how to do this. So I'm going to entrust it with this YouTube guy who's uh he must know what he's doing. He has 450 subs or whatever. The fact is I do know what I'm doing to some extent. I can never legally guarantee returns, but I can say that the reason you entrust money with somebody that has a sense of fiduciary responsibility and experience for a reason. And
The composition and weighting of the securities portion of a portfolio deposit are also adjusted to conform to changes in the index.
Autopilot and Investing Soldiers: Sit Down and Listen Up, GI 🚀 Copy My Portfolios Automatically → https://marketplace.joinautopilot.com/landing/1218/542069 🔒 My premium members see every trade I make across my $30M+ portfolio — live alerts, AI research tools, and monthly TradingView Premium giveaways. Try it free → https://www.https://whop.com/inthemoney-premium-c290/ 📊 Chart Like a Pro with TradingView → https://www.tradingview.com/u/InTheMoneyAdam/?aff_id=114660&aff_sub=YouTube 🐦 Follow Me on X (Twitter) → https://www.x.com/inthemoneyadam 💬 Join My Discord Server → https://discord.gg/EcJJVc83RB Disclaimer: Autopilot pays me to publish my portfolios on their platform and I am not a client of Autopilot. Investment advice is provided by Autopilot Advisers, an SEC-registered investment adviser. Investing carries risk, including the risk of the loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. See Autopilot’s disclosures at www.joinautopilot.com for more information. -------------------------------------------------- You should not treat any opinion expressed on this YouTube channel as a specific inducement to make a particular investment or follow a particular strategy, but only as an expression of opinion. Opinions expressed are based upon information considered reliable, but this YouTube channel does not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. This YouTube channel is not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in these videos or their descriptions. Statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. This YouTube channel does not guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware of the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed on this YouTube channel. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value. Investors may get back less than invested or lose more than their original investment. Investments or strategies mentioned on this YouTube channel may not be suitable for you. This material does not consider your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You must make an independent decision regarding investments or strategies mentioned on this YouTube channel. Before acting on information on this YouTube channel, you should consider whether it is suitable for your particular circumstances and strongly consider seeking advice from your own financial or investment advisor. It's good night, story time with Adam. There seems to be a lot of concern from some people about hopping on autopilot and seeing their portfolio go down. A few things I want to address, and this is going to be the video I point to from here on out. One, my portfolio is always going to have a beta that is higher than one. That means if QQQ, which is my benchmark, has a beta of one, every time it goes up by a dollar, it goes up by a dollar. It goes down by a dollar, it goes down by a dollar. Mine might have a beta of, I haven't checked, but maybe 2.5 or 3. So if it goes down by a dollar, you're going to lose $3. So what that means is when you have times of high volatility, which is another way of saying things go down, you're going to experience larger drawdowns than if you were to hold something like QQQ. And I do that on purpose because if you were to hold QQQ long-term, yes, you'd make fine returns with less volatility. And if that's your thing, go for it. But in order to make higher returns over the long-term, obviously never guaranteed, is to have a higher beta, which means you have to have a relative tolerance to that level of volatility. Okay, so that's the first thing. The second thing is, you guys have entrusted your care of your money under my portfolio on autopilot. I offer multiple portfolios. Actively managed is my baby. I changed the name of the other one to Actively Defensive, so it's more, it builds around a defensive stance around what's currently happening in the economy and the stock market. So in this case, stagflation, particularly, and the conflict with Iran. And then there's a panic button, which I modulate off and on, but really the two actively ones are my babies right now. So you can mix those up. You can put 500 in each, or you could put 501 and do 500 with whatever else you want with your own money, right? You don't have to go all in. So it's up to you how much you want to do, how much you're willing to tolerate. But I do want to say you have to have a time horizon that extends a little bit further than your nose. Because there are people that are, I'm in between Michael Burry who cuts off the people's ability to withdraw their funds and whatever the other example I had in my head a second ago. I can't and wouldn't cut off your funds, but I have to spank you a little bit here and say, you have to have a time horizon that is further than your nose. If you are hoping to pay rent next week with whatever you put anywhere, that's not going to happen. You can go put it all on black, still probably won't happen, but if you're lucky, maybe. You have to have a time horizon that's at least as far as you can spit. I've been doing this since I was 19, like very actively doing this since I was 19. I was there during 2020. I made a video on why I didn't buy put options. And the reason I didn't buy put options is because as the market goes down, whenever it was going to bounce, and I didn't know when, when the Fed injected liquidity, which maybe nobody remembers. I don't know if you guys remember that. Fed injected a ton of liquidity into the economy. It bounced and it kept bouncing until 2022. And if I had bought put options, I knew that when that bounce happened, it would kick me in the teeth, not only because the underlying went up, but because with the bounces, all of a sudden implied volatility decreases. And if you're not an options person, it just basically means the price decreases because the underlying stock or ETF went up and a extrinsic value decreases, which is a portion of the options value. So I didn't do it. I bought the dip instead. What did I do by the time 2022 rolled around? I bought the dip. My portfolio was down huge. I've made, and maybe I'll link it tomorrow in the comments. I'm not gonna do it now. I've made probably at least three or four videos reminding people that it's going to be okay. I've made probably at least 10 X posts and launches to people on autopilot to hold on to my sweaty hand. It's going to be okay. This is how the stock market functions. And maybe part of the reason people like join autopilot is to offload some of the burden. But then some people just are like, I don't, I don't really know how to do this. I don't want to put it within like my girlfriend, her, her, um, her portfolio manager had her uh sitting in a mutual fund that was not beating inflation and that her fees were out, were basically higher than the performance of the mutual fund and was bleeding it out year after year. It had a negative return. So you could do that, um, or some people who are just like, I don't, I don't really know how to do this. So I'm going to entrust it with this YouTube guy who's uh he must know what he's doing. He has 450 subs or whatever. The fact is I do know what I'm doing to some extent. I can never legally guarantee returns, but I can say that the reason you entrust money with somebody that has a sense of fiduciary responsibility and experience for a reason. And
Source proof
Source proof: Strong source proof | 3 directional assets | 1 supporting author | headline-like title review
Source material consists mainly of promotional copy, affiliate links, platform disclosures, and personal commentary (including risk disclaimers and portfolio construction philosophy). The posts do not provide verifiable company-level information, earnings, filings, or specific trade instructions tied to publicly traded securities.
The provided body contains promotional links and general investing disclaimers, with no substantive analysis or concrete, tradable information about a SpaceX IPO beyond the sensational title (“T-1 to Rugpull”). As a result, actionable signals, catalysts, timing, and tickers are largely absent.
The provided source contains only a title and repeats it in the body, with no additional details, data, timing, or claims. It mentions SpaceX and an IPO but provides no actionable information for trading or thesis construction.
The source is a largely incoherent rant centered on a bearish view of SoFi (SOFI), referencing short interest/shorting, and mentions buying puts and briefly buying the Vanguard Growth ETF (VUG). It lacks concrete catalysts, numbers, timing, or a clear repeatable setup beyond a general “short/puts” posture on SOFI.
Why SoFi Ain’t It subscriptions revenue top's going up earnings comes around and um we won't shorts and so they're going to you know find companies to short but if you look at the short interest it's like 15% cost you're buying into a stock where we legitimate and then the the stock moons then everyone drops a stock like it's getting [ __ ] like 10 calls in a row than get spam calls from somebody from a bubbles. SL AI on the banking. What who to short, but we don't know whether it's even looked, but you know, you get a CSV on my PC which literally just the other a power line and scorched my PSU which access to the CSV files of a closed know buying some puts this morning like you can make that yield by buying VG for calls from people trying to give me
The entry is almost entirely promotional text and legal disclaimers for a YouTube/X/Discord investing-related channel and Autopilot relationship disclosure. It contains no substantive market view, company-specific information, portfolio positions, industry intelligence, or trade rationale.
Promotional post for a paid service/video about managing LEAPS (long-dated options), with links to try a product and copy portfolios. No specific market news, catalysts, positions, or tickers disclosed.
Skipped non-finance YouTube video. The content does not contain a clear market or investable-stock discussion.
Promotional/disclaimer post advertising an “Autopilot” copy-trading/portfolio mirroring platform and a paid membership/alerts service. Contains affiliate links and general investing-risk disclaimers, but no company-specific news, financial results, macro data, or actionable trading catalyst tied to any publicly traded ticker.
Supporting authors
Single author/creator behind the collected posts; content focuses on promoting Autopilot portfolios, premium membership benefits, and general investing philosophy rather than empirical research or fiduciary-grade analysis.
Unlock full thesis monitoring
This is a sell-recommended play based on the nature of the content (promotional/disclosure-driven, not research). Users should treat the sources as marketing and platform disclosure; do not rely on them as substitute for independent due diligence or professional advice.