RJ Hamster
Elon’s Private AI Empire: The Backdoor Under $100

A message from NXT Wave Research
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.
Today’s Featured Content
Ollie’s Stock Won’t Stay a Bargain Much Longer
By Thomas Hughes. Originally Published: 3/15/2026.

Key Points
- Ollie’s Bargain Outlet posted strong revenue growth in Q4 despite slim misses on earnings and guidance, with both comp-store sales and store expansion outpacing expectations.
- The Big Lots bankruptcy is creating a customer conversion opportunity that analysts believe has years left to play out—and isn’t yet reflected in the stock price.
- Institutional investors own nearly all of the float and have been steady buyers, backing a company that funds its own growth and trades below every analyst’s target.
- Special Report: Last chance: Reserve your spot while you can because… (From Brownstone Research)
Ollie’s Bargain Outlet (NASDAQ: OLLI)appears to have ended its stock-price downtrend. Q4 2025 results reaffirmed a solid outlook. Although the report and guidance slightly missed consensus, the shortfalls were small, growth remains strong, and the weakness wasn’t as surprising as it initially appeared.
Analysts at RBC issued cautious pre-release comments while emphasizing the company’s position, aggressive expansion and potential to outperform. They view the Big Lots bankruptcy and customer conversion to Ollie’s as multi-year events that are not yet fully reflected in the stock.
Ollie’s Outperforms Peers as Expansion Takes Hold
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
Ollie’s delivered a strong quarter even though revenue growth fell short of consensus. Net revenue of $779.26 million was up 16.8% year-over-year—well ahead of competitors—driven by better-than-expected comparable-store sales and rapid store-count growth. Comparable-store sales (comps) rose 3.6%, slightly above RBC’s forecast, while store count increased 15.4%.
Margin trends were encouraging despite a slight miss, as spending control and revenue leverage offset store-opening expenses. Adjusted EPS missed consensus by two cents, but the shortfall was minor and earnings growth modestly outpaced revenue growth. Store-opening costs are expected to normalize, which should improve margin and earnings-quality visibility over the next two to three years.
Guidance was cautiously set and narrowly below MarketBeat’s consensus, though it still implies solid growth. The company expects revenue of $2.985 billion to $3.013 billion, with a midpoint just under the $3.0 billion consensus, and an EPS midpoint of $4.45 versus the $4.53 expected—implying roughly 10% top-line growth.
Ollie’s Cautious Guidance Sets Stage for a Bullish Revision Cycle
Cautious guidance can create upside for investors. Last year’s 15.4% store-count growth and plans for another 11.6% increase this year, combined with other tailwinds, could drive outperformance. Analysts also point to potential consumer tailwinds tied to tax season: the average transaction was more than 10% larger than last year, which adds liquidity to Ollie’s core customers. If the firm outperforms its guidance and raises it during the year, analysts are likely to follow with bullish revisions.
Ollie’s carries a Moderate Buy consensus rating with no Sell ratings among the 16 analysts tracked by MarketBeat. No immediate revisions followed the Q4 release, but several analysts noted growth potential and strength in loyalty members (up 12.1%) while flagging tougher comparisons ahead. Not all are convinced the Big Lots conversion will be a long-term boon, but the analyst group is broadly bullish on the stock, forecasting an average upside of roughly 30%. As of early March, Ollie’s trades below the low end of the analysts’ range, underscoring a deep-value opportunity and potential for a rebound.
Institutional ownership highlights the opportunity: institutions own nearly all of this stock and add on a quarterly basis. Their reasons include a strong balance sheet, self-funded growth, an attractive growth outlook and solid cash flow. The potential for capital returns adds another layer of appeal.
The company doesn’t pay a dividend, choosing instead to reinvest in the business, but it repurchases shares at a rate sufficient to offset dilution. Share count is declining gradually, providing a base for future per-share gains. Industry leaders such as TJX Companies (NYSE: TJX) are well-known for dividends and buybacks—a status Ollie’s appears to be growing into.
Ollie’s Stock Price Bounces From Rock Bottom
Ollie’s stock hit a low late in 2025, rebounded and retested that level in early 2026. After the guidance update, shares rose more than 5%, confirming support at this key level. That level was a resistance target set in 2019, broken in early 2025, and is now acting as strong support. The likely outcome is continued advancement through 2026, with the potential to accelerate as the year progresses.
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