Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Barrack back in the fold

Presented by NFIB: Delivered daily, Influence gives you a comprehensive rundown and analysis of all lobby hires and news on K Street.
Dec 11, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Caitlin Oprysko

Presented by NFIB

With Daniel Lippman, Dana Nickel

GUESS WHO’S BARRACK: President-elect Donald Trump last night announced plans to nominate private equity investor and longtime friend Tom Barrack as ambassador to Turkey. Barrack was a top fundraiser for Trump’s 2016 campaign, chaired his 2017 inaugural committee and was in the mix for a formal role in Trump’s first administration as either an ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, special envoy for the Middle East or similar roles in South America.

— But as PI readers no doubt recall, it was Barrack’s outside role advising Trump during the 2016 campaign and early days of the administration on Middle East affairs that got Barrack snagged in federal prosecutors’ crosshairs.

— The investor, who has extensive business and familial ties to the region, was charged in 2021 with acting as an unregistered foreign agent of the UAE, lying to investigators and obstruction of justice — but Barrack and a former aide were both acquitted of the charges at trial the next year.

— While Daniel reported in 2019 that Barrack and Trump had a falling out, the billionaire investor gave more than $460,000 to Trump’s first reelection campaign over the next year. FEC records show Barrack donated more than $68,000 to Trump’s campaign in October. In a social media post announcing the appointment, Trump called Barrack a “well respected and experienced voice of reason to a wide range of thought leaders in both political and business circles.”

— Interestingly, Barrack’s new posting would send him to a country that has previously been in the news for illicit influence campaigns. Turkish influence efforts most recently featured in the corruption case against New York Mayor Eric Adams.

— But at the beginning of Trump’s first term, his initial pick for national security adviser, Michael Flynn, admitted to failing to register as a foreign agent of Turkey before reneging on his guilty plea for separate charges and later being pardoned by Trump. The Justice Department last year dropped its long-running efforts to prosecute one of Flynn’s partners on the Turkey work for Foreign Agents Registration Act violations.

Happy Wednesday and welcome to PI. I’ll be off tomorrow, but Dana Nickel will be pinch-hitting for me in the meantime. Send her your K Street tips and gossip: dnickel@politico.com. And be sure to follow her on X: @delizanickel.

 

A message from NFIB:

Congress: Stop the massive tax hike on small businesses. Without Congressional action, 9 out of 10 small businesses will be hit with a massive tax hike next year. This will decimate small businesses' ability to grow, hire, invest in their employees, and give back to their community. Congress needs to make the 20% Small Business Deduction permanent. Learn more at SmallBusinessDeduction.com

 

A LAST-DITCH PUSH FOR PERMITTING: A conservative climate group and a coalition of oil and gas trade associations are making an eleventh-hour plea for congressional leaders to let permitting reforms ride along any year-end legislation, even as Trump yesterday pledged to fast-track the permitting process, bypassing environmental reviews for projects with more than $1 billion in investment.

— “While we certainly support additional Congressional action on the issue in the 119th Congress,” the oil and gas industry groups said in a letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson yesterday, passing bipartisan permitting legislation from Sens. Joe Manchin (I-W.Va.) and John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) this year would “expedite President Trump’s ability to execute on his promise to unleash American energy early in his first term,” they argued.

— The letter was signed by the Energy Workforce & Technology Council, the Gulf Energy Alliance, the International Association of Drilling Contractors, the Independent Petroleum Association of America, the National Ocean Industries Association, the Texas Alliance of Energy Producers, the U.S. Oil & Gas Association and the Western Energy Alliance.

— In a separate letter to leadership in both chambers, right-leaning climate group Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions reiterated its backing for Manchin and Barrasso’s bill while making the case for its urgency.

— “If we are to address high energy prices that are hurting American families and re-establish America as a global energy and manufacturing leader, we cannot wait any longer for meaningful permitting reforms and action,” the group’s president, Heather Reams, wrote. “The time to act is now.”

ISAKOWITZ HEADS BACK TO THE HILL: Mark Isakowitz, the head of Google’s D.C. office, is returning to the Hill to serve as chief of staff to incoming Sen. Dave McCormick (R-Pa.). Isakowitz joined the tech giant in 2019 as its vice president of government affairs and public policy for the U.S. and Canada after serving as former Sen. Rob Portman’s (R-Ohio) top aide for four years.

— Before that, he was a longtime partner and president at Fierce, Isakowitz and Blalock, the lobbying firm now known as Fierce Government Relations. Isakowitz is also an alum of the National Federation of Independent Business and the George W. Bush transition. Axios first reported Isakowitz’s departure.

— Isakowitz has steered Google through a tumultuous half-decade for the tech industry, which has managed to stave off several pieces of bipartisan antitrust legislation that would rein in online giants despite antagonism from both sides of the aisle.

— Google was less fortunate in the courtroom, where a judge earlier this year ruled the company’s search engine acted as an illegal monopoly. And Trump has vowed to keep his foot on the gas against the tech industry while in office with the help of key appointments at DOJ and the FTC.

Cris Turner, Google’s top lobbyist on the Knowledge and Information team, will lead the D.C. office while the company searches for Isakowitz’s successor along with Senior Director of Federal Affairs Anne Wall, spokesperson José Castaneda told PI, adding that the team is well-positioned for 2025.

— “Mark has been a terrific colleague and leader who's built a great team during his five years at Google,” global head of public policy Karan Bhatia said in a statement. “We’re sorry to see him leave, but are proud of him for once again serving the country, and wish him every success.”

SPEAKING OF SILICON VALLEY: Our colleagues are up with a great series of stories looking at the wave of tech billionaires coming to Washington next year and what they might do with that new power. Our Derek Robertson notes that unlike the tech titans of yore, the new crop of wealthy executives and investors like Elon Musk, David Sacks and Marc Andreessen don’t leave much to the imagination as to their motivations and policy preferences.

— “Whether on podcasts, lengthy posts on X and Substack, or through influential self-published manifestos, the tech characters now heavily involved in President-elect Donald Trump’s transition have a clear track record of demands, expectations and ideas, all delivered with the classic Silicon Valley confidence that they can run the government better than the government itself.”

— “The picture that emerges is one of a sweeping deregulatory agenda touching everything from crypto to artificial intelligence to fields like the defense industry and health technology.”

— Our colleagues Paul McLeary and Jack Detsch drilled down on what the looming Silicon Valley takeover portends for the Pentagon in particular — namely, a culture and ethics clash between “the long-frustrated kings of the Valley who bristle at the doddering pace of Pentagon decision-making” but “could force real change in the building — and benefit themselves while trying.”

— Some of the limits of that influence may already be beginning to show, however. Despite a weekend endorsement of kids online safety legislation by Musk and Donald Trump Jr. thanks to changes made by one of the bill’s key sponsors, Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), our Ruth Reader reports that the changes have yet to sway holdouts in the GOP House leadership in whose hands lie its fate.

ANNALS OF CAMPAIGN FINANCE: “Amid a floundering independent run for president this summer, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. quietly inked a fund-raising agreement that allowed him to ask supporters for bigger donations. The deal was lucrative — but not just for Kennedy’s campaign. It also ended up being a boon for some of his political opponents and even an obscure Massachusetts political group,” The Boston Globe’s Tal Kopan reports.

— The joint fundraising committee “was set up with the Libertarian National Committee, to bolster the Kennedy campaign. But Kennedy was never on the Libertarian ticket; he ran a rival independent campaign. In fact, after he dropped out of the race, most of the money went into supporting Donald Trump.”

— “Such agreements are meant to allow political allies to join forces in the money hunt. But this little-noticed, unusual agreement is between rivals and highlights the lengths to which Kennedy went to buoy his flagging political aspirations and then pay off his campaign debt, as well as the murky and rarely enforced rules of campaign finance law.”

SPOTTED at the Irish ambassador’s residence for a holiday party thrown by Ambassador Geraldine Byrne Nason, per a tipster: Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon (D-Pa.), former Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Dentons’ Joe Crowley, former Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, former Assistant Secretary of State Marie Royce, KAConsulting’s Kellyanne Conway, Georgetown University professors Cóilín Parsons and Darragh Gannon, Northeastern University’s Jack Cline, RB Crowe’s Bob Crowe, RN Peirce International’s Bob Peirce and FedNet’s Keith Carney.

 

A message from NFIB:

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Jobs report

Michelle Barlow Richardson is joining Elevate Government Affairs as executive vice president. She previously was chief of staff for Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.).

Aaron Weber is joining the office of North Dakota Gov.-elect Kelly Armstrong as policy director. He was previously a senior adviser for Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.).


Colin Coleman is joining Mercury Public Affairs as a member of its advisory board. He’s currently co-chair of the South African nonprofit Youth Employment Service and is a Goldman Sachs alum.

Lot Sixteen has promoted Helen Kalla and Jeremy Dillon to vice presidents, Ben Tegtmeyer to director and Joely Chinnici and Grant Napierski to senior associates.

LSG has added Britt Jordan as senior vice president. She was previously a managing director at FTI Consulting and is a Qorvis Communications alum.

— The American Dental Association has promoted Jennifer Fisher and Natalie Hales to senior congressional lobbyists and co-leads of ADA’s Hill lobbying team.

SAE International has appointed Jacqueline El-Sayed as its new CEO, effective Jan. 6. She most recently served as CEO of the American Society for Engineering Education.

Elizabeth Wilkins will be the next president and CEO of the Roosevelt Institute. She previously was director of policy planning and chief of staff to FTC Chair Lina Khan.

New Joint Fundraisers

Deluzio Ryan 2026 (Reps. Pat Ryan, Chris DeLuzio, Great Chain PAC, Yinzer PAC)

New PACs

Conservative Action Now PAC (PAC)

Northern Future (Super PAC)

Ponderosa PAC (PAC)

New Lobbying REGISTRATIONS

Blank Rome Government Relations: Bird Advocacy And Consulting

Capitol Core Group, Inc.: Helium Foundataion (Decentralized Wireless Foundation)

Continental Strategy, LLC: Recording Industry Assoc. Of America

Creighton Strategies Group: Strategic Technology Consulting

Ikon Public Affairs: Rapid Resist Action

J.A. Green And Company: Ouraring Inc.

J.P. Deese & Associates, LLC: The Edw Group

Natural Resource Results LLC: Airborne Snow Observatories, Inc.

Natural Resource Results LLC: Caltrout

Venture Government Strategies, LLC (Fka Hobart Hallaway & Quayle Ventures, LLC): Sbir Advisors Obo Netrise Inc

Venture Government Strategies, LLC (Fka Hobart Hallaway & Quayle Ventures, LLC): One Kappa Corporation (Formerly 3Ta Halo Inc.)

New Lobbying Terminations

Fierce Government Relations: Coalition For The American Dream

Fierce Government Relations: Fwd.US

 

A message from NFIB:

Congress: Stop the massive tax hike on small businesses.

Small businesses are the foundation of the U.S. economy. Without Congressional action, 9 out of 10 small businesses will be hit with a massive tax hike next year. This will decimate small businesses' ability to grow, hire, provide for their employees, and give back to their community.

As part of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Congress cut corporate taxes permanently but made the 20% Small Business Deduction temporary. Allowing the 20% Small Business Deduction to expire would hurt the kinds of small businesses we should be supporting. Congress has already given permanent tax relief to big companies. They must do the same for America’s 30 million small businesses.

Congress needs to make the Small Business Deduction permanent and help level the playing field between small businesses and their large, corporate competitors.

Learn more at SmallBusinessDeduction.com

 
 

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How Some Tiny Cryptos Could Lead to Massive Returns

The Market Likes Inflation (For Now)

Prices keep rising... Mr. Market likes it... We've seen this before... A big bitcoin bet... Some MicroStrategy insiders are selling... No one's buying... Beware a 'meme stock' revival... Apparently, most investors aren't all that concerned with high(er) inflation these days... That's what I (Corey McLaughlin) can take today from the market's reaction to the latest […]
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Prices keep rising... Mr. Market likes it... We've seen this before... A big bitcoin bet... Some MicroStrategy insiders are selling... No one's buying... Beware a 'meme stock' revival...


Apparently, most investors aren't all that concerned with high(er) inflation these days...

That's what I (Corey McLaughlin) can take today from the market's reaction to the latest inflation report from Uncle Sam this morning...

The consumer price index ("CPI") for November increased 0.3% for the month, its highest pace since April, and 2.7% year over year. That's well above pace for the Federal Reserve's supposed 2% goal for an annual inflation rate.

This data, combined with other stats from October that we've discussed in previous editions, shows inflation has most recently been on a pace closer to 4% than 2%. The mainstream view, though, is that this trend will somehow resolve itself. Here's CNBC today...

Much of the November increase in the CPI came from shelter costs, which rose 0.3% and have been one of the most stubborn components of inflation. Fed officials and many economists expect housing-related inflation to ease as new rental leases are negotiated, but the item has continued to increase each month.

We've heard this story before...

I will start back in 2020. That's when policymakers didn't seem to give a second thought about how "unprecedented" trillions of dollars in monetary and fiscal stimulus in response to the pandemic just might lead to higher prices in the economy...

In 2021, even as inflation numbers were rising, Fed Chair Jerome Powell declared the trend "transitory"...

In 2022, it was widely believed that a rapid pace of rate increases was going kill 40-year-high inflation relatively quickly and lead to a Fed "pivot" – which never came. All we got were several bear market rallies that went bust until that October...

Finally, the pace of inflation started slowing down. But then, by this summer, Powell was acknowledging that in the best-case scenario, inflation would likely settle "between 2% and 2.5%" by 2025.

We hope inflation doesn't get totally out of hand again. But hope isn't a strategy.

Rents and home prices have soared over the past four years. And, most recently, mortgage rates have increased since the Fed started cutting interest rates in September. Yet the central bank has remained steadfast in its rate-cutting plans to find a "neutral" policy stance. You could also describe that as juicing the economy.

After today's report, federal-funds futures traders boosted their odds of another 25-basis-point rate cut this year to around 95%.

And enough investors believe this is good...

We've got high(er) inflation again and the market expects more help from the Fed. Is this 2021 all over again – the days of a blistering pandemic bull run... before all the fun ended in 2022 once the central bank finally acknowledged inflation was a problem (and raised rates in an effort to cool it)?

Perhaps.

Fed-funds futures traders are pricing in fewer rate cuts in 2025 than they did previously, though they still expect multiple rounds of cuts next year.

As we wrote about last week, the Fed's stance might (or should) change from "easing" to at least something considered "neutral." And if or when it does, it could lead to a shift in market sentiment. Until then, though, Mr. Market says all's well – on the surface at least.

Today, the major U.S. indexes were mostly higher. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index led the way, up 1.8% to a new all-time high. The benchmark S&P 500 Index closed 0.8% higher, and the Russell 2000 Index was up 0.5%, though the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.2%.

Gold also rose... And bitcoin, after trading below $100,000 for the past few days, cracked above the psychological milestone once again as cryptocurrency sentiment remains at "greedy" historical values.

Speaking of that...

One company's big bitcoin bet is paying off (for insiders)...

We've mentioned MicroStrategy (MSTR) a couple times in the Digest this year... This is a software company that converted itself into a bitcoin play. Michael Saylor, the software company's chairman and co-founder, famously began adding bitcoin to its balance sheet in 2020.

By now, it owns more than 400,000 bitcoin. That puts it as the third-largest single owner, behind only bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto and crypto-trading platform Binance, according to Bloomberg.

As a result, the stock has turned into a proxy for bitcoin. And it's now a favorite among retail investors and traders. Saylor even went on a livestream with Barstool Sports founder Dave "Davey Day Trader" Portnoy to explain the bitcoin thesis.

Saylor talked about why MicroStrategy is such an important "bridge" between capital markets and the crypto economy. From the livestream...

So, there's a lot of investors in the world that aren't allowed to buy bitcoin. Like in the U.K., they won't let you buy bitcoin in your retirement account. So, you need to buy a company, a security... There's hundreds of trillions of dollars of money, some of it with professional money managers. They're not allowed to buy bitcoin. They're allowed to buy a bitcoin company.

So MicroStrategy, through its own purchase of bitcoin, opens itself up as an avenue for these investors to gain crypto exposure. And it's working...

The two assets have been tightly correlated over the past few years. But MicroStrategy has far outperformed bitcoin since it began buying bitcoin in July 2020. Just look at how the two have traded (noting that we've plotted the two assets on different scales)...

And now, the company's largest shareholders are taking profits off the table...

In November, insiders sold more than $61 million worth of MicroStrategy shares. That came at a time when the stock more than doubled from November 4 to its peak on November 20.

It's not the only time we've seen MicroStrategy insiders take advantage of retail interest in the company's stock. In the first four months of the year, with shares jumping nearly 70% through the end of April, insiders sold more than $480 million in stock (the red bars in the chart)...

Insiders can sell stock for a variety of reasons. That can be things like tax planning, pre-scheduled sales, and even personal expenses. So it's not always a perfect predictor of insider sentiment and the stock outlook, or the "top."

But it still shows that the folks who know MicroStrategy's business better than everyone are taking profits when the stock soars.

Insider sales, but no buys...

As our colleague Dan Ferris wrote in the October 18 Digest, insider buying can be a much better indicator of how insiders feel about the company...

[Government] filings about insider buying are a bullish sign. It means insiders believe the business is a great investment and that the stock price will rise. And they're not just saying it on a rosy conference call... but putting their own wealth on the line.

While MicroStrategy insiders have racked up $578 million in share sales this year, they have made zero purchases, according to data from FinViz. Zero. They're not even taking advantage of stock dips.

It's another sign that insiders are willing to pass on the risk to retail investors with many stocks running rampant... and a reminder to be careful about taking outsized short-term risks in today's market.

Checking in on another retail favorite...

Here's another example of the current atmosphere...

GameStop (GME) is back in the news.

Last week, meme-stock trader Roaring Kitty posted on his X social media account for the first time in months. Roaring Kitty, whose real name is Keith Gill, gained a following for his bullish case on the video-game retailer during the meme-stock bubble in 2021.

In this latest post, Gill didn't even mention GameStop. He simply shared a picture resembling a Time magazine cover from 2006 with a computer screen. But that was still enough to send GME shares shooting higher and get them halted on volatility last Thursday.

Last night, GameStop actually reported that it flipped to a profit in the third quarter, though its revenue dropped 20%. The stock was up almost 8% today.

But don't fall for another meme-stock rally...

As we've said, a lot of stocks are already trading at expensive valuations, and certain ones are showing signs of speculative froth that's disjoined from reality and their quality...

GameStop's revenue has been in a steep downtrend since peaking back in 2012. The underlying business is in decline.

There are a lot of better places you could put new money to work.

For example, yesterday, I talked more about the "Mar-a-Lago man" – Brad Thomas, the founder of our corporate affiliate Wide Moat Research... And I discussed that while he's an expert in real estate, he also uses the insights he has learned over the years (about which companies make good tenants) to pick the stocks of great businesses, too.

And just a few days ago, he told his readers to stay far away from a company like GameStop. In his free daily e-letter on Monday, Brad wrote that the company is "not worth your time or money."

If you're looking for a good one, for starters, our Stansberry's Investment Advisory team just published a comprehensive portfolio review of key positions in the model portfolio, including a number of recommendations that are still attractive buys today.

And stay tuned, as always, to your other favorite publications from our editors and analysts for more recommendations and insight.

As we've discussed here the past few days, Brad also recently went live with a new free presentation. He shared an opportunity in an overlooked group of stocks that he says represents "the most wildly asymmetrical market opportunity today."

Today is the last day you can view Brad's presentation with the full details and get access to a free bonus that he has been sharing. So if you haven't already, we urge you to check it out right here.

Charitable Giving, the Efficient Way

The holiday season inspires generosity, but are you giving in a way that aligns with your financial goals? Our friends at Stansberry Asset Management ("SAM") are hosting a webinar on Thursday about exactly that: how to charitably give in the most tax-efficient way.

Join Certified Financial Planner Chris Gilmor, senior wealth manager at SAM, as he shares practical strategies for giving, from appreciated assets to donor-advised funds... ways to maximize the impact of your contributions... and how to build a legacy while supporting the causes you care about.

The webinar begins at 1 p.m. Eastern time tomorrow, December 12. Don't miss this opportunity to turn giving into a meaningful part of your financial journey. Register here now. Even if you can't join live, SAM will send you the recording.

SAM is a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission-registered investment adviser that is completely separate from our Stansberry Research publishing business. But it uses our research, plus other sources, to help manage individual client's portfolios.


Recommended Links:

'The No. 1 Opportunity of My Life: 500% Upside as a Landlord to Billionaires'

He's an investor and former economic adviser to the president-elect who lost everything 17 years ago, then rebuilt an eight-figure fortune far faster than he ever imagined possible. Along the way, he developed a network of multimillionaires and billionaires like the late Sam Zell, Kyle Bass, and more. Today, he'll show you the strange places billionaires keep some of their most prized assets. Plus, he'll share the ONE move to make before 2025 that could set your wealth up to benefit as a new administration takes office. Click here to learn more (expires at midnight tonight).


What Are These Billionaire Investors Afraid Of?

Billionaires Warren Buffett, Stanley Druckenmiller, George Soros, and David Tepper have all sold off massive U.S. stock positions, including shares of Nvidia, Apple, and Bank of America. Billionaire Ray Dalio, who runs one of the world's most successful hedge funds, says, "Things are going to get worse for our economy." What are these billionaires so worried about? Click here to see why experts and insiders may be preparing for the biggest financial crisis of the last 200 years.


New 52-week highs (as of 12/10/24): AutoZone (AZO), Alpha Architect 1-3 Month Box Fund (BOXX), Costco Wholesale (COST), United States Commodity Index Fund (USCI), and Westlake Chemical Partners (WLKP).

A quiet mailbag today... As always, send your comments and questions to feedback@stansberryresearch.com.

All the best,

Corey McLaughlin and Nick Koziol
Baltimore, Maryland
December 11, 2024


Disclosure: Stansberry Asset Management ("SAM") is a Registered Investment Adviser with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. File number: 801-107061. Such registration does not imply any level of skill or training. Under no circumstances should this report or any information herein be construed as investment advice, or as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy any securities or other financial instruments. For more information on SAM, please visit here.

Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC ("Stansberry Research") is not a current client or investor of SAM. SAM provides cash compensation to Stansberry Research for Stansberry Research's advisory client solicitation services for the benefit of SAM. Material conflicts of interest may exist due to Stansberry Research's economic interest in soliciting clients for SAM. Certain Stansberry Research personnel may also have limited rights and interests relating to one or more parent entities of SAM.

For important information about Stansberry Research's relationship with SAM, click here.


Stansberry Research Top 10 Open Recommendations

Top 10 highest-returning open stock positions across all Stansberry Research portfolios. Returns represent the total return from the initial recommendation.

Investment Buy Date Return Publication Analyst
MSFT
Microsoft
11/11/10 1,419.6% Retirement Millionaire Doc
MSFT
Microsoft
02/10/12 1,417.8% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
ADP
Automatic Data Processing
10/09/08 1,086.1% Extreme Value Ferris
BRK.B
Berkshire Hathaway
04/01/09 720.0% Retirement Millionaire Doc
WRB
W.R. Berkley
03/15/12 544.3% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
TT
Trane Technologies
04/12/18 533.9% Retirement Millionaire Doc
AFG
American Financial
10/11/12 491.2% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
HSY
Hershey
12/07/07 469.5% Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
SFM
Sprouts Farmers Market
04/08/21 465.5% Extreme Value Ferris
TTD
The Trade Desk
10/17/19 461.4% Stansberry Innovations Report Engel

Please note: Securities appearing in the Top 10 are not necessarily recommended buys at current prices. The list reflects the best-performing positions currently in the model portfolio of any Stansberry Research publication. The buy date reflects when the editor recommended the investment in the listed publication, and the return shows its performance since that date. To learn if a security is still a recommended buy today, you must be a subscriber to that publication and refer to the most recent portfolio.


Top 10 Totals
4 Stansberry's Investment Advisory Porter
3 Retirement Millionaire Doc
2 Extreme Value Ferris
1 Stansberry Innovations Report Engel

Top 5 Crypto Capital Open Recommendations

Top 5 highest-returning open positions in the Crypto Capital model portfolio

Investment Buy Date Return Publication Analyst
BTC/USD
Bitcoin
11/27/18 2,471.6% Crypto Capital Wade
wstETH
Wrapped Staked Ethereum
12/07/18 2,291.8% Crypto Capital Wade
ONE/USD
Harmony
12/16/19 1,395.9% Crypto Capital Wade
POL/USD
Polygon
02/25/21 775.5% Crypto Capital Wade
VET/USD
VeChain
05/17/19 496.0% Crypto Capital Wade

Please note: Securities appearing in the Top 5 are not necessarily recommended buys at current prices. The list reflects the best-performing positions currently in the Crypto Capital model portfolio. The buy date reflects when the recommendation was made, and the return shows its performance since that date. To learn if it's still a recommended buy today, you must be a subscriber and refer to the most recent portfolio.

Stansberry Research Hall of Fame

Top 10 all-time, highest-returning closed positions across all Stansberry portfolios

Investment Symbol Duration Gain Publication Analyst
Nvidia^* NVDA 5.96 years 1,466% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Microsoft^ MSFT 12.74 years 1,185% Retirement Millionaire Doc
Inovio Pharma.^ INO 1.01 years 1,139% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Seabridge Gold^ SA 4.20 years 995% Sjug Conf. Sjuggerud
Nvidia^* NVDA 4.12 years 777% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Intellia Therapeutics NTLA 1.95 years 775% Amer. Moonshots Root
Rite Aid 8.5% bond 4.97 years 773% True Income Williams
PNC Warrants PNC-WS 6.16 years 706% True Wealth Systems Sjuggerud
Maxar Technologies^ MAXR 1.90 years 691% Venture Tech. Lashmet
Silvergate Capital SI 1.95 years 681% Amer. Moonshots Root

^ These gains occurred with a partial position in the respective stocks.
* The two partial positions in Nvidia were part of a single recommendation. Editor Dave Lashmet closed the first leg of the position in November 2016 for a gain of about 108%. Then, he closed the second leg in July 2020 for a 777% return. And finally, in May 2022, he booked a 1,466% return on the final leg. Subscribers who followed his advice on Nvidia could've recorded a total weighted average gain of more than 600%.


Stansberry Research Crypto Hall of Fame

Top 5 highest-returning closed positions in the Crypto Capital model portfolio

Investment Symbol Duration Gain Publication Analyst
Band Protocol BAND/USD 0.31 years 1,169% Crypto Capital Wade
Terra LUNA/USD 0.41 years 1,166% Crypto Capital Wade
Polymesh POLYX/USD 3.84 years 1,157% Crypto Capital Wade
Frontier FRONT/USD 0.09 years 979% Crypto Capital Wade
Binance Coin BNB/USD 1.78 years 963% Crypto Capital Wade

Barrack back in the fold

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