Sunday, June 7, 2026

Party Like It’s 1999: 5 Stocks to Buy Without Getting Bubble-Burned

Plus, 3 stocks to sell

Action to take: 7 Buys

Should you put your money into SpaceX when it starts trading on Friday?
 

Dear Reader,

Today, I want to address the big question everyone seems to be asking themselves this week.

Should you put your money into SpaceX when it starts trading on Friday?

Well, there's only one man I turn to with a question like that... Dave Lashmet, the man behind the most profitable research in Stansberry history.

Dave's track record in the space sector is insane. His average pick goes up 155%. He actually worked with NASA's comms team. And over the past five years, he's beaten all of the world's top 10 hedge-fund managers.

And he just revealed his ultimate space stock Buy List.

Is SpaceX on it? Find out here.

See, Dave says there's a big twist coming to the SpaceX story, which could see 1,000% returns for some people... while bringing a world of pain to many Elon Musk fans.

It involves a Pentagon-funded operation called Project Blackjack...

And it has massive implications for SpaceX itself... but also for the entire space sector.

It's shaping up to be THE story of the summer – and yet most investors are totally in the dark about it.

I want to change that today.

Please understand... There are hundreds of analysts out there right now who've become "overnight experts" on the space sector.

None of them can hold a candle to Dave, who has quietly built one of the most extraordinary track records our industry has ever seen.

As one reader wrote in to tell us, "Lashmet has made me millions."

His full space stock Buy List is right here.

Regards,

Matt Weinschenk
Publisher and Director of Research, Stansberry Research

P.S. Dave was the first analyst our founder, Porter Stansberry, ever hired. He's uncovered nearly 50 opportunities for our readers to double, triple, or 10x their money.

In fact, his work is so good... I'm putting it behind a $34,000 paywall next week. If you want to avoid that price hike, it's now or never...

Get the full details here.


 Standard Disclaimer: The investment results described in these testimonials may not be typical; investing in securities carries a high degree of risk; you may lose some or all of the investment.)

 

Skip the Oura Ring IPO. Buy These 10 Stocks Instead.

The wellness boom is real. The IPO price may not be.

Elon Now Pays 15X More Than Your Bank

How to Invest in Tech With the End Goal in Mind

In today's Masters Series, last published in the May 30 issue of the free DailyWealth e-letter, Dave Lashmet explains how ignoring the noise and focusing on the value companies provide can aid you in investing successfully in technology...
 
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Delivering World-Class Financial Research Since 1999

Editor's note: Finding the developing companies that will shape and contribute to society is one way to be a successful investor...

But there's more to it than just discovering them. You have to look ahead and understand the end goal of what the company is doing and the road map that will lead it there. That's according to Stansberry Venture Technology editor Dave Lashmet.

In today's Masters Series, last published in the May 30 issue of the free DailyWealth e-letter, Dave explains how ignoring the noise and focusing on the value companies provide can aid you in investing successfully in technology...


How to Invest in Tech With the End Goal in Mind

By Dave Lashmet, editor, Stansberry Venture Technology

Today, I want to introduce you to the concept of "proactive investing."

Don't bother Googling it – it's not a long-standing school of investing. I made it up. But I believe it's a useful mindset for all new technology investors...

You see, there's a clear difference between trading and investing. Trading means buying a trend – or better yet, getting ahead of a trend. It's tied to money flow in a broader market, sector, fund, or stock.

But even high-flying momentum stocks can fall back to earth. Of course, with the right plan and execution, you can be a successful trader... You just have to understand how it's different from long-term investing. And you need to know which of the two you're doing.

So, how do you invest for the future? Rather than worry about what other investors are up to, I try to consider what the equity is up to. This is especially important in tech investing.

Here's an example to show you what I mean...

In the summer of 2020, my family found a 5-acre plot of trees in Washington state. It's 100 feet above sea level and only five minutes from the fast ferry to Seattle. It's flat land at the top of a hill, with no creek or swamp in sight. It's the perfect place to build a country home.

We set out to put in a road... then a writer's cabin, a well, and a septic field. We planned to eventually turn the cabin into a small home. And we estimated the whole project would take about four years and $400,000.

Of course, when you begin a project like this, you can't know the exact resale value four years from now... or the precise day you'll finish... or even how much it'll actually cost. But every step brings you closer to a tangible goal. One day, there's a foundation. The next, there's a roof.

In our case, our market research suggested that, eventually, this would be an elite residence... And we'd be able to sell it for a pretty penny to some tech executive who only needed to go into Seattle once a week.

We wouldn't even have to finish the building project to see a return on our investment. There'd be added value at every stopping point in the process. Even with the house unfinished, each of the other fixed assets – the land, road, cabin, well house, and septic field – would be valuable and could help someone else finish the job we'd started.

Similarly, when you're a proactive investor, you have to see the end goal and all the steps it takes to get there. That's because the process itself has value – even if the wisdom of many investment advisers is that "the future is risky, so just live in the moment."


Recommended Links:

'Don't Buy a Single SPCX Share Until You See This'

Wall Street is fixated on a single number: SpaceX's $1.75 trillion IPO valuation. But Stansberry Research analyst Dave Lashmet (who has shown his subscribers nearly 50 separate chances to double, triple, or 10x their money) says most investors are about to make a serious mistake with this IPO. The replay of his urgent June 4 briefing is still available, but only for a short time. Watch the full broadcast here.


A Melt Down Could Be Right Around the Corner

Marc Chaikin, the Wall Street legend who called every major market turn since the COVID-19 crash, has identified a single point of failure that could bring the AI market crashing down. This situation has already taken trillions from investors in AI giants like Salesforce, Oracle, and even blue-chip Microsoft. So, BEFORE you buy a single share of SpaceX, make sure you see Marc's newest market forecast and warning.


When you think of evaluating how companies use their cash to invest in future growth, maybe your first thought is to look at research and development (R&D) costs. The problem is, U.S. accounting rules treat R&D costs as current losses.

A better approach might be to follow Sweden's example... and treat R&D costs like investments.

For the best tech companies, putting $100,000 a year into R&D for four years is a lot like my real estate investment... It's building something that will unlock value in the years to come.

A company might use this cash to invest in unique technologies that its peers can't match. Or it could make itself independent by developing its own manufacturing capacity, while its rivals are forced to pay higher and higher prices to compete with each other in the manufacturing chain.

Tech investors would do well to understand Sweden's approach to R&D. The value of a company isn't based on last quarter's sales – because those sales can't tell you much about what the business will look like next year... or four years from now.

Instead, look at what a company is building right now. From there, you can weigh future demand, do a competitive analysis, then predict the value of a forthcoming product and how that adds to cash flow.

We like to look at free cash flow ("FCF") because it's the number that doesn't lie...

FCF is what a company has left over for dividends and buybacks after everything else is paid. That's how the company pays you, the firm's part-owner.

Note, all of this is unaffected by the trends in the market. Rather, it's about what the asset can be worth to you – measured against both what it costs to acquire it and the cost of holding on to it.

We can use this "proactive investing" logic with companies of any size... whether we're looking at small firms or larger, more established technology companies with a long history of profits, as well as proven marketing skills, demand, and an ability to hold off competitors.

In short, if you want to invest in tech, look for companies that are building things of value in the present... for a lasting competitive advantage. That's the best way to successfully invest for the future.

Good investing,

Dave Lashmet


Editor's note: Dave has found some of our firm's most profitable research, with subscribers having nearly 50 different chances to double, triple, or 10X their money. Now he has found another opportunity for investors to take advantage of. While everyone is focused on the SpaceX IPO, there's a smaller, lesser-known company that's poised to make those who get in early rich.

This is all part of Dave's final public presentation, where he's sharing what he believes is the best company to put your money to work during the SpaceX craze. Click here for the full details.

 

San Francisco’s renaissance has hit some roadblocks

AI animosity and housing woes threaten the city's progress.
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This is Bloomberg Opinion Today, the most productive talent pipeline of Bloomberg Opinion’s opinions. On Sundays, we look at the major themes of the week past and how they will define the week ahead. Sign up for the daily newsletter here.

Apartment Story

I have the sort of living situation most New Yorkers would kill for: an affordable three-bedroom apartment near Chelsea’s art-gallery scene — on a high floor, with terrace and a vast panorama of the Hudson River. Or at least I have that view for now. 

The New York City Housing Authority has plans to demolish the crumbling low-income housing project across the street and build a 31-story tower — luxury apartments up top and subsidized units below — that will block out that view to New Jersey and leave us in a Mordor-like shadow at sunset. You’d expect me to be angry. And I am, but not for the reason you probably think: NYCHA claims it will relocate the current residents temporarily and move many of them back into “new, permanently affordable homes.” If you believe that, I have a Lincoln Tunnel to sell you. [1]

As a strong supporter of housing density, I’ve decided not to go all NIMBY over the new tower. After all, nobody guaranteed my view in perpetuity, cities change and grow, and apartments will only become affordable in Manhattan if we build up and up. [2]  But many of the residents of my building complex, a hotbed of progressivism built by the Ladies Garment Workers Union in the early 1960s, are dead set against it, and I have to question their motives.

Still, when it comes to liberal NIMBY hypocrisy, New Yorkers are rank amateurs compared to the pros in America’s most famously liberal city, San Francisco. Our Justin Fox has been on this for years, and has highlighted a Bay Area paradox: “While per capita (that is, average, or mean) income rose, median household income in the San Francisco-Oakland metro area actually fell from $121,551 in 2019 (in 2021 dollars) to $116,005 in 2021, a 4.6% real decline that was the worst among the country’s 25 biggest metro areas.” In other words, the rich techies got richer, and everybody else fell further behind in the place with the highest average rents in America.

Has anybody been doing it right? Yep, the development-friendly place I can see (for now) across the Hudson: Jersey City.

The Covid epidemic no doubt derailed efforts by the tech behemoths — Salesforce in particular — to make San Francisco more livable. But now, according to guest columnist Jonathan Weber, things may be turning back around (emphasis on may), thanks to the two scariest letters in contemporary society: AI.

“San Francisco’s AI-driven comeback from its pandemic-era crisis has continued, and even accelerated. OpenAI joined forces with [former Apple design guru] Jony Ive and Anthropic has soared to the top of the industry; both are planning to go public, which will rain enormous riches on their thousands of San Francisco employees,” Jonathan writes. “Daniel Lurie, after winning the 2024 mayoral race, has done well by being pragmatic and accessible; he’s made a visible dent in downtown street conditions. Still, it’s far from clear that San Francisco has its arms around the problems that have dragged it down, especially housing and homelessness.” [3]

Also dragging the city down: The Trump administration’s threats to stop processing international air travel in sanctuary cities. This would be a huge problem for the Bay Area, a major hub for international travel. (Los Angeles also makes the blacklist.) “Withdrawing Customs and Border Protection agents from some or all of those cities would massively disrupt travel, particularly as the US awaits throngs of international visitors for the World Cup soccer tournament starting this month,” writes Ronald Brownstein. But Ronald thinks this effort by Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin “looks like weakness masquerading as strength” because it “underscores how few options the administration has left, after repeated legal and political setbacks, to coerce reluctant cities into joining its mass deportation agenda.”

While the tech bros are making some headway in the San Francisco renaissance, they aren’t doing so well electorally. Consider last week’s “horrible, no good, very bad” primary results for the candidates backed by Big Tech, writes Erika D. Smith: “None of this should really come as a surprise. Polls show that Americans — and Californians are no exception — are increasingly wary of both Big Tech’s signature product, artificial intelligence, and of the billionaires who run the companies developing it.”

While enough ballots were tallied quickly to see things were terrible for tech, other races remained unclear for days thanks to the way California processes mail-in votes. “Heading into the weekend, only 14% of voters had returned their ballots, which all registered voters in the state receive by mail weeks before Election Day,” Erika writes in a separate piece. “This unfortunate series of political and electoral events seems to be leading California back to an unenviable situation: with millions of ballots that will take days or even weeks to be tabulated, potentially leaving some high-profile races undecided.”   

While much of the Golden State seems to be turning into lead, one heretofore obscure Bay Area company, Marvel Technology Inc., has hit the motherlode. All it took was for the company’s CEO to appear alongside Nvidia’s chief, Jensen Huang, at a trade show in Taiwan. “Huang declared the chipmaker, worth about $192 billion on Monday, was destined to be a $1 trillion company,” reports Mark Gongloff. “Marvell’s stock skyrocketed more than 25%, its biggest single-day gain in three years, pushing the Santa Clara, California, company’s market cap to more than $245 billion. What’s possibly even more remarkable is that this 25% of froth was added to a 158% gain in the months preceding it.” 

One assumes that many of Marvel’s 7,500 employees made a killing. Perhaps they will join San Francisco’s renaissance by snapping up homes in Russian Hill and Pacific Heights. But they should bear in mind that, just like me and the Hudson River, nobody will promise them that view of the Golden Gate Bridge forever. 

Bonus California Love Reading:

  • Fast E-Scooters Are a Menace. Don’t Lump E-Bikes With Them — Justin Fox
  • Want a Friend in the AI Age? Get a Dog — Adrian Wooldridge
  • Companies’ AI Bills Are Bigger Than Ever — and Coming Due — Parmy Olson

What’s the World Got in Store ?

  • World Cup starts, June 11: World Cup Cities Were Wrong to Ever Expect a Big Payoff — Justin Fox
  • ECB rate decision, June 11: Europe Is Stockpiling Enough Gas to Avoid Another Energy Crisis — Javier Blas
  • SpaceX IPO, June 12: Get Your SpaceX Bets in Now — Matt Levine

Horror Story

A couple of weeks ago I made the embarrassing admission that I have an irrational fear of the dark and a rational dislike of horror movies. So I am certainly not going to see A24’s  Backrooms, which killed it with an $81 million domestic opening weekend. What gives me the creeps apparently gives Hollywood a warm feeling all over: Horror flicks are one of its surest bets.

“Backrooms achieved another milestone when Kane Parsons became the youngest filmmaker to direct a movie for the studio,” writes guest columnist Miles Surrey. “But Parsons isn’t an anomaly. He’s the latest proof of an emerging trend in Hollywood driven by a younger generation of filmmakers: YouTube has become one of the industry’s most productive talent pipelines.”

“There could be limitations to how far the YouTube-to-Hollywood pipeline extends,” adds Miles. “For now, the trend remains largely concentrated within the horror genre, which has a history of low-budget films as wide-ranging as The Blair Witch Project, Paranormal Activity, and Get Out becoming breakout hits. If more filmmakers can follow in the footsteps of David F. Sandberg, who went from YouTube to directing horror movies before directing the superhero blockbuster Shazam!, then the model has room to grow beyond the genre.”

I didn’t realize that Shazam! grossed more than $350 million worldwide, which I find scary. Its sequel (also directed by Sandberg) was apparently the biggest box-office bomb in DC Comics history. For Hollywood, that’s a true horror flick.

Note: Please send World Cup tickets and feedback to Tobin Harshaw at tharshaw@bloomberg.net

[1] A handful of elderly residents have the same fear, and are holding up the whole massive project by refusing to move out. A judge has backed them for now, but we all know that in the end they will get the boot.

[2] What we don’t want is more rent control and government-dictated freezes on increases. I say this not only because my wife used to have a few rental apartments, thus I know all about the hassles, regulations, constant city inspections, taxes, repair costs and tiny profit margins small-time building owners face. But I simply don't understand why young New Yorkers are supporting Mayor Zohran Mamdani's housing agenda, which will simply allow older New Yorkers to keep their sweetheart housing deals, further squeeze landlords, stop development and keep rents astronomically high on the sort of apartments young people would hope to move up to.

[3] Jonathan’s essay is excerpted from his new book, City on the Edge: Technology, Politics and the Fight for the Soul of San Francisco, which goes on sale July 9. I can't recommend the whole book highly enough.

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Party Like It’s 1999: 5 Stocks to Buy Without Getting Bubble-Burned

Plus, 3 stocks to sell ...