RJ Hamster
47-yr expert: “The biggest money overhaul since 1971 is…

APRIL 30, 2026 | READ ONLINE
Dear Reader,
We may be getting closer and closer to the death of the dollar…
But it won’t look like what most people expect.
It won’t have anything to do with inflation or a government collapse…
What’s actually happening is much more dangerous for you than that.
Right now, the wealthiest people in America — Musk, Zuckerberg, Ellison — are systematically moving their money out of dollars and into a completely different type of currency. One that you’ve likely never been taught about.
It’s not bitcoin or any other crypto.
But after nearly five decades on Wall Street, I’ve never seen a new trend accelerate this quickly.
As I’ve been telling others: “The wealth transfer already underway will make the Gilded Age look like a warm-up act.”
What exactly is going on? And what does it mean for every dollar you’re currently holding?
I’ve put together an urgent briefing with everything you need to know.
Regards,
Louis Navellier
Senior Quantitative Investment Analyst, InvestorPlace
P.S. I’ve identified 7 companies already positioned at the center of this currency shift. The last time I spotted an opportunity like this, Nvidia soared as high as 10,000%… I’d like to send you their names when you watch my briefing today.
This Week’s Featured Content
The Space Race Just Hit a Bottleneck—Who Benefits?
Written by Ryan Hasson. Article Published: 4/23/2026.

KEY POINTS
- Blue Origin’s grounding of New Glenn after an April 19 mishap tightens an already-constrained launch market, potentially benefiting RKLB, FLY, and LUNR.
- Rocket Lab stands to benefit most from the grounding of New Glenn, backed by a 100% mission success rate in 2025, $602 million in 2025 revenue, and a $1.85 billion backlog.
- Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines also offer exposure to the space sector’s growth, with Firefly returning to successful flight in March 2026 and Intuitive Machines holding a $943 million backlog.
- Special Report: Nobody Understands Why Trump Is Invading Iran (here’s the answer) (From Banyan Hill Publishing)
One of the space industry’s fastest-growing constraints isn’t ambition, funding, or even technology—it’s access to orbit. Reliable launch capacity is the bottleneck shaping competitive dynamics across the sector, and a high-profile mishap this past weekend made that clearer than ever.
On April 19, Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocketlaunched an AST SpaceMobile (NASDAQ: ASTS)BlueBird 7 satellite but placed it into a lower-than-planned orbit after one of the upper stage engines failed to produce sufficient thrust. The satellite, which would have been AST’s eighth in orbit, was deemed unrecoverable and will be de-orbited. The FAA has classified the event as a mishap and grounded the New Glenn fleet pending investigation. For Blue Origin, this is its first major mission failure, and it comes at a particularly bad time as the company works to position New Glenn as a credible option for commercial, military and NASA missions, including lunar landers tied to the Artemis program.
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But one small infrastructure supplier – a critical piece Musk can’t scale the Colossus network without – is still trading well under institutional radar. A new briefing reveals the name and ticker at no cost.
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For the broader launch market, the grounding of New Glenn exacerbates an already acute bottleneck. Constellation operators, defense contractors and government agencies all need reliable, repeatable access to orbit. Every provider that stumbles creates an opening for those with a proven track record.
Here are three companies potentially positioned to benefit over the long run.
Rocket Lab: The Proven Operator
Rocket Lab (NASDAQ: RKLB) is one of the most compelling stories in the space launch market today, and the Blue Origin mishap underscores why. Electron, Rocket Lab’s small-lift orbital rocket, has become one of the most reliable vehicles in the industry.
The company executed a record 21 missions in 2025 and achieved a 100% mission success rate. Each competitor setback increases the value of Rocket Lab’s consistent execution for customers who cannot risk satellites ending up in the wrong orbit.
The fundamentals back that positioning. Q4 2025 revenue came in at $180 million, up 36% year over year, and full-year 2025 revenue reached $602 million, rising almost 40%. Backlog stands at $1.85 billion, up 73% year over year, including an $816 million contract with the Space Development Agency to build 18 satellites for the Tracking Layer program. That backlog growth reflects customers locking in launch and satellite manufacturing capacity with a provider they trust.
Looking ahead, Rocket Lab’s Neutron medium-lift rocket has filed for a launch permit and is targeting a debut window from July through December 2026. A successful Neutron debut would open a significantly larger addressable market for the company.
Firefly Aerospace: The Alpha Returns
Firefly Aerospace (NASDAQ: FLY) is a younger, more volatile company, but it appears to be gaining genuine momentum. After a difficult 2025 that included a mission anomaly, Firefly’s Alpha rocket returned to flight successfully in March 2026, delivering a Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) payload to orbit.
That return to flight was a critical confidence signal for a company still building its reliability track record. The stock is up nearly 80% year to date, and analysts collectively assign it a Moderate Buy rating.
Firefly’s acquisition of SciTec expands its capabilities into defense-focused space technology, and its partnership with Northrop Grumman on the Eclipse rocket program adds optionality in the small- and medium-lift segments.
NASA’s planned ramp-up in lunar cargo missions represents a long-term opportunity for companies building the kind of responsive launch infrastructure those missions will require.
Intuitive Machines: The Lunar Infrastructure Play
Intuitive Machines (NASDAQ: LUNR) is a different type of space company. It isn’t primarily a launch provider, but it’s deeply involved in the lunar infrastructure buildout that is driving the sector’s more durable long-term demand.
The company is trading near 52-week highs, reflecting growing conviction in its positioning. Its backlog stands at $943 million, anchored by a $180.4 million NASA lunar mission contract. The Lanteris Space Systems acquisition, completed in early 2026, positions Intuitive Machines as a more vertically integrated national security and civil space services provider.
That said, consensus analyst sentiment remains mixed. Based on 13 analyst ratings, the stock carries a Hold consensus rating, and the $21.45 price target implies meaningful downside risk. Some analysts see more upside: Roth boosted its target from $25 to $35 and maintained a Buy rating on April 17, implying roughly 28% upside at the time of the report..
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