





April 03, 2026
If Someone Called Nvidia at $0.11, Would You Listen to Their Next Pick?
Alexander Green doesn’t make predictions lightly. As Chief Investment Strategist of The Oxford Club, the former Wall Street analyst who called Nvidia at 11 cents—and retired at 43 after 16 years on the Street—has built his reputation on spotting market shifts before they happen.
Now he’s issued his boldest call yet: “The Second Wave is already here.”
The Law of the Second Wave
Markets never move in straight lines. Every bull run has its pioneers—the first-wave giants who prove the case. And every bull run eventually shifts to its successors: the second-wave innovators who take the baton and outrun the originals.
We’ve seen this story before. Netscape made headlines. Google built an empire. MySpace had the buzz. Facebook transformed culture. Amazon wasn’t the first online retailer, but it scaled fastest.
That’s the law of the second wave. The first companies break ground. The second companies build skyscrapers.
Why the Magnificent Seven’s Run Is Ending
For more than a decade, the “Magnificent Seven”—Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, Tesla, and Nvidia—carried the S&P. They defined earnings seasons. They minted fortunes.
But Green sees the mathematical reality: “Once you’re a trillion-dollar company, explosive growth becomes nearly impossible.”
The question investors should ask is simple: Can Nvidia really deliver another 1,000% move from here? Can Apple double its market cap again, the way it did with the iPhone’s launch?
The answer, Green argues, is physics. Big Tech’s future returns will look more like bonds than rockets. And the smart money knows it.
The $500 Billion Tell
The biggest clue isn’t in price charts. It’s in deal flow.
Over the past 18 months, Apple has locked long-term agreements with AI hardware suppliers most investors have never heard of. Google has poured hundreds of millions into startups building tools far outside its core search business. Nvidia itself has quietly taken stakes in next-generation firms just to secure chip capacity.
“When giants start writing checks to outsiders,” Green says, “it’s because they see the ground shifting. They can’t build everything in-house anymore. They’re betting on the very firms poised to become the second wave.”
This is the dealmakers’ gold rush. And it’s happening right now.
The Power Shift
What makes this moment different is geography. Not every player in the second wave hails from Silicon Valley.
- Austin is rapidly becoming the chip corridor of America.
- Toronto and Montreal have turned into machine-learning hotbeds.
- Boston’s biotech-AI labs are pushing boundaries that could create entirely new trillion-dollar industries.
- International hubs like Seoul, Tel Aviv, and Berlin are producing startups the Magnificent Seven can’t afford to ignore.
Innovation is dispersing. Capital is following. The second wave is rising in places most traders don’t even have on their screens.
The Generational Handoff
There’s another signpost: demographics.
Look at Robinhood accounts. Ask a 25-year-old what they own. It isn’t Buffett’s banks or industrial stalwarts. It’s AI chips, gaming platforms, and early-stage tech tied directly to artificial intelligence.
This “under-30 portfolio” isn’t just a cultural curiosity. It’s a signal of capital rotation. Younger traders don’t need convincing that AI is the next megatrend—they’re already positioned.
For older investors, that’s both a warning and an opportunity. The wealth transfer happens during the handoff—when a new generation locks onto the assets the old guard is still doubting.
The Seven Companies Positioned to Win
Green has identified exactly seven firms he believes will lead this transition. They’re in the right industries, backed by the right partnerships, and still small enough to move fast.
Like Google, Amazon, and Nvidia once were, these companies trade for dollars—not hundreds of dollars. But they’re already signing deals, scaling capacity, and building technology that could define the next decade.
Green calls them “The Next Magnificent Seven.”
Why Timing Matters
History proves that second waves don’t wait around. Facebook’s leapfrog of MySpace happened in months, not years. Investors who bought Nvidia at $1.10 in 2004 didn’t have a decade to mull it over—they had weeks before the move began.
The same dynamic is accelerating now. Deals are being signed. Capital is rotating. Younger investors are already in.
“The question isn’t whether the second wave will happen,” Green says. “It’s whether you’ll catch it before the institutions wake up.”
See Green’s Complete Analysis
The man who spotted Nvidia at 11 cents has just released his full research on The Next Magnificent Seven—including company names, ticker symbols, and specific price targets.
History doesn’t reward hesitation. It rewards those who spot the handoff and position before the crowd.
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