Dear Reader,
Elon Musk’s “AI Everywhere” project isn’t inside Tesla—it’s a private venture with a global network of 150+ facilities embedding autonomous AI into devices everywhere.
Musk believes this could propel Tesla to become the most valuable company ever, worth more than Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, and Google combined.
Private ventures like this are usually locked for elites, but I’ve found a legitimate brokerage backdoor—under $100, no special requirements, just a regular account.
Musk’s history proves he turns underdogs into giants:
- PayPal → Peter Thiel turned $1,700 into $55 million.
- SpaceX → valuation up 349,900% ($1,000 now worth over $3.4 million).
- Tesla → 22,000%+ since IPO ($1,000 to over $220,000).
- xAI → $0 to $230 billion in under two years.
This private play follows the same playbook—using Tesla’s proven autonomous AI “copy-pasted” across the world.
Watch my full video—I explain the story and give you 3 steps to profit, including how to claim that backdoor stake before the summer regulatory shift.
Here’s to the future,
Matt McCall
P.S. Ignore this and you could miss the biggest Musk-driven opportunity since Tesla’s early days.
Special Report
Warm Winter Hit Vail’s Earnings. What Does It Mean for the Stock?
Written by Jennifer Ryan Woods. First Published: 3/11/2026.
Key Points
- An unusually warm winter and historically low snowfall in the Rockies led Vail Resorts to miss fiscal second-quarter earnings expectations and cut its full-year guidance, with skier visits falling 12% as limited snowpack reduced available terrain at key resorts.
- Although Vail’s stock has struggled in recent years, falling more than 60% from its 2021 peak, analysts still see significant upside, with the average 12-month price target of about $171 implying more than 25% potential gains from current levels.
- Investor sentiment remains divided, as short interest has climbed to nearly 12% of the public float even while the company’s 6.6% dividend yield may help support the stock.
- Special Report: Elon Musk: This Could Turn $100 into $100,000
A historically warm winter weighed on ski resort operator Vail Resorts Inc. (NYSE: MTN), producing disappointing fiscal second-quarter 2026 results and forcing the company to cut full-year guidance. Shares initially fell after the report, which was released following the market close on March 9, though they later recovered. The day after the release, the stock traded marginally higher around $135 on above-average volume as investors digested the earnings miss and the revised outlook.
Investor sentiment remains mixed. Despite the weather-driven setback, many analysts still see meaningful upside, while rising short interest suggests some investors are skeptical about the company’s near-term prospects.
Warm Winter Hits Earnings and Skier Visits
Elon’s Private AI Empire: The Backdoor Under $100 (Ad)
Elon Musk’s AI Everywhere project isn’t inside Tesla—it’s a private venture with a global network of 150+ facilities embedding autonomous AI into devices everywhere, and Musk believes this could propel Tesla to become the most valuable company ever, worth more than Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, and Google combined. Private ventures like this are usually locked for elites, but I’ve found a legitimate brokerage backdoor under $100 with no special requirements, just a regular account, and this private play follows the same playbook as PayPal, SpaceX, Tesla, and xAI using Tesla’s proven autonomous AI copy-pasted across the world.See the 3 steps to profit before the summer regulatory shift
On the company’s earnings call, Chief Executive Robert Katz said the disappointing quarter and reduced guidance reflect “the most difficult weather environment in the Rockies we have ever seen.”
Snowfall and snowpack were at or near historic lows, he said, exceeding the poor conditions of fiscal 2012 that had been considered the worst in the region. The poor ski conditions led to a 12% decline in visits.
The Colorado-based company, which operates more than 40 mountain resorts including Vail Mountain, Beaver Creek and Breckenridge, reported earnings of $5.87 per share. That compared with $6.56 per share a year earlier and missed estimates by $0.18.
Revenue for the quarter totaled $1.08 billion, down 4.7% year over year and about $27 million below estimates. Because the Rockies generate the lion’s share of Vail’s resort EBITDA, historically low snowfall in that region had an outsized impact on results.
Epic Pass and Diversified Resorts Help Cushion the Blow
In the earnings release, Katz said the decline in lift revenue was relatively modest given the “worst-case weather scenario,” highlighting the resilience of Vail’s operating model. Strong growth in the Epic Pass program — which lets skiers pay upfront for access to multiple resorts — provided stability. Pass holders account for roughly 75% of visits annually, helping smooth revenue even in tough seasons. The company’s expansion into more geographically diverse locations also helped blunt the impact of regional weather.
Because weather continues to limit available terrain at some resorts, Vail lowered its fiscal 2026 net income outlook to $144 million–$190 million, down from the prior $201 million–$276 million forecast. The company maintained its quarterly dividend of $2.22 per share, saying this year’s cash-flow decline does not change the business’s long-term cash-generation ability. The dividend, which yields roughly 6.6%, may help attract income-focused investors and provide some support to the share price.
Shares Have Struggled Despite Analysts’ Expected Upside
Vail’s stock has fallen substantially since its all-time high of about $372 in November 2021. In early February this year the shares dropped to roughly $126 — a decline of more than 66% from the peak. Over the past 12 months, shares are down more than 11%, while the leisure and recreational services industry rose over 10% and the Invesco Leisure and Entertainment ETF (NYSEARCA: PEJ) gained more than 18%. Vail trades at a price-to-earnings ratio just under 20, above the industry and broader consumer discretionary averages near 17.
Analysts are mixed. Of 13 covering the stock, four rate it Buy, eight Hold and one Sell. After the results, three analysts lowered their price targets: Barclays to $138 from $140, Truist Financial to $217 from $234, and Stifel Nicolaus to $172 from $175. Even with those cuts, the consensus 12-month target of $171 implies roughly 25% upside from the current share price of about $133.
Short interest has risen, reflecting growing skepticism among some investors. As of Feb. 13, roughly 4.19 million shares were sold short, representing nearly 12% of the public float — about double the level a year earlier.
For investors, Vail’s outlook will likely hinge on whether the weather-driven weakness is temporary. If visitation normalizes and the pass-based model continues to provide steady revenue, analysts’ upside could materialize. In the near term, the company’s high dividend yield may help support the shares during what has been a difficult season.
Special Report
The New War Portfolio: 3 Stocks Built for a High-Tech War
Written by Jeffrey Neal Johnson. First Published: 3/8/2026.
Key Points
- Palantir’s artificial intelligence platform is becoming the essential command-and-control engine for modern intelligence operations.
- AeroVironment’s combat-proven unmanned systems deliver unparalleled precision and tactical agility on the modern battlefield.
- Northrop Grumman’s extensive backlog and advanced platforms offer investors stable exposure to long-term, strategic defense programs.
- Special Report: Elon Musk: This Could Turn $100 into $100,000
Increasing geopolitical instability worldwide is acting as a powerful catalyst for the defense industry. This is more than a cyclical increase in spending; it marks a structural inflection point. A new defense doctrine is emerging—one where success depends less on mass and more on information superiority, precision, and autonomous action. For investors, that implies a durable, long-term trend: the most compelling growth stories will be companies enabling a smarter, data-centric approach to national security.
Why This Time Is Different for Defense Spending
Defense budgets are being reshaped to reflect 21st-century conflict. Funding is shifting toward technologies that deliver a decisive intelligence and operational edge: artificial intelligence (AI) to process data at machine speed, unmanned systems that can be deployed with agility, and resilient networks that connect platforms and sensors. This is not merely a short-term spike in procurement; it is a structural reallocation of capital toward the technology of modern warfare, creating a sustained tailwind for companies at the forefront of this transition.
Palantir: Turning Battlefield Chaos Into Clarity
The rise of the “Useless Class” (Ad)
Famed historian Yuval Noah Harari recently issued a warning that should send a shiver down the spine of every American. He predicts the emergence of a massive new useless class. These aren’t just people who are temporarily unemployed. These are people who have become economically irrelevant. As Luke Lango and I just exposed in our recent interview, we have reached the singularity. For the first time in 250 years, intelligence has been decoupled from labor. During America’s first 1776 moment, the steam engine replaced muscle. In this new 1776 moment, AI is replacing the human mind.
This is why you see the Magnificent 7 tech giants adding trillions in value while the real economy feels like it’s in a death spiral. The divide is widening. On one side: the useless class who cling to old-world skills. On the other: the new aristocracy who own the assets of the technological republic. Luke and I have identified the three specific money moves our research indicates you must make to ensure you stay on the winning side of this divide.See the three moves to stay on the winning side of AI
In modern military operations, data is the most valuable ammunition, and Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) supplies the system to aim it. The company has positioned itself as the central nervous system for intelligence, converting vast streams of battlefield information into actionable insight.
Palantir’s Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP) functions as a command-and-control engine, fusing data from satellites, drones, and soldiers into a single, real-time operational picture that gives commanders a decisive edge. In this environment, anticipating an adversary’s move seconds before it happens is a critical advantage.
Demand for this capability is surging. Palantir’s recent financial results showed a roughly 70% year-over-year revenue increase in its last reported quarter, underscoring rapid growth.
While Palantir’s deep relationships with the U.S. Department of Defense provide a stable foundation of government revenue, an expanding commercial business is equally important for investors. Growth in the private sector demonstrates the broader applicability of its technology and helps diversify revenue streams, reducing reliance on government spending cycles. That dual approach supports a more resilient business model capable of capturing growth across the economy.
- Key Investment Takeaway: Palantir offers direct exposure to the high-growth AI-in-defense theme, reflecting a premium valuation tied to its critical role and accelerating adoption.
AeroVironment: The Unmanned Tip of the Spear
AeroVironment (NASDAQ: AVAV) has emerged as a leading provider of small unmanned systems that are proving indispensable in modern conflicts.
Its platforms deliver precision and agility that larger, costlier systems cannot match. Flagship products like the Switchblade loitering munition—often described as a “kamikaze” drone—provide a see-and-strike capability that allows operators to identify and engage targets with exceptional accuracy.
That capability is complemented by a portfolio of reconnaissance drones, including the Puma and Raven systems, which deliver critical intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) without exposing pilots to risk.
This strategic importance is reflected in the company’s financial performance. In its second-quarter 2026 earnings report, AeroVironment reported revenue growth of more than 150% year over year, signaling strong demand. The company has already announced plans for domestic manufacturing expansion, indicating management’s expectation of sustained, high-volume orders from the U.S. military and allies. Close attention to major contract negotiations—such as the Space Force SCAR program—underscores the Pentagon’s interest in the company’s next-generation technologies.
- Key Investment Takeaway: As a go-to provider of combat-proven tactical drones, AeroVironment stands to benefit directly from rising demand for unmanned systems, positioning it as a primary beneficiary of this doctrinal shift.
Northrop Grumman: The Backbone of Modern Warfare
While Palantir delivers intelligence and AeroVironment provides tactical effects, Northrop Grumman (NYSE: NOC) builds the advanced, resilient platforms that undergird the ecosystem.
The company leads strategic programs designed for the information age, most notably the B-21 Raider. That platform is more than a stealth bomber: it’s a data-fusing, networked asset built to operate and connect the battlespace in contested environments. Its role is to ensure the data streams systems like Palantir’s rely on remain available.
For investors, Northrop Grumman’s financial strength provides a stable anchor. The company maintains a large, growing backlog of about $95.7 billion, offering long-term revenue visibility and insulating it from short-term market swings.
Its leadership in the space domain, illustrated by programs like DARC for deep-space surveillance, is critical to maintaining information superiority. That technological edge is paired with a 22-year history of consecutive dividend increases, yielding roughly 1.22%. Trading at a P/E of approximately 26, Northrop Grumman presents a more traditional valuation than many high-growth tech plays, signaling financial stability and a commitment to shareholder returns.
- Key Investment Takeaway: Northrop Grumman is a stable, blue-chip way to access this theme, offering exposure to advanced defense programs along with the security of a large backlog and a reliable dividend.
A Modern Portfolio for a New Reality
Technology has rewritten the rules of conflict, and investment strategies must adapt. The complementary strengths of Palantir’s AI-driven analysis, AeroVironment’s tactical execution, and Northrop Grumman’s foundational platforms create a powerful combined effect. These companies are not only responding to current events; they are building the future of defense.
As nations prioritize technological superiority, the triad of data, drones, and advanced defense systems presents a compelling, forward-looking investment thesis. The shift to a technology-first defense posture is not a fleeting trend but a multi-decade transformation, placing these three companies at the forefront of a new and persuasive investment cycle.
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