June 12: $100 Turns Into $100,000?

Edward Lance Lorilla
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Editor’s Note: Former tech executive and angel investor Jeff Brown — picked Bitcoin before it jumped as high as 52,400%, Tesla before it jumped as high as 2,150%, and Nvidia before it jumped as high as 32,000%. Today, he’ll show you how to claim a stake in Elon Musk’s upcoming IPO — BEFORE the company goes public on June 12. Click here to see the details or read more below.


Dear Reader,

I’ll get straight to the point because there’s not much time left…

The SpaceX IPO is scheduled for June 12…

And Elon Musk is predicting anyone who gets in today will have a chance to turn…

$100 into $100,000…

$500 into $500,000…

And $1,000 into $1 million!

But you cannot wait until after the IPO.

Click here and I’ll show you how to claim your stake and get ahead of the masses.

After the IPO, it will be too late…

And you’ll likely never see an opportunity like this again.

This IPO will only happen one time.

That means this is your only shot. Click here now.

We have so much to look forward to,

Jeff Brown
Founder & CEO, Brownstone Research


 
 
 
 
 
 

Special Report

Keysight: The AI and Defense Stock Seeing Big Price Target Boosts

Submitted by Leo Miller. Publication Date: 5/27/2026.

Keysight Technologies logo featuring a red waveform graphic on a light blurred background.

Key Points

  • Keysight Technologies is putting up big-time gains, with shares more than doubling since the start of 2025.
  • The firm plays in two of the economy's top growth areas: artificial intelligence and defense.
  • After beating and raising during its latest quarter, analysts lifted their Keysight price targets substantially.
  • Special Report: The Biggest IPO Ever: Claim Your Stake Today

Keysight Technologies (NYSE: KEYS) sits at the center of two major economic trends: the artificial intelligence (AI) buildout and defense modernization.

Backed by those forces, Keysight shares have delivered strong gains over the past year. Since the start of 2025, the stock is up more than 100%, and in 2026, shares have added about 70%.

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The Wall Street Journal is already raising the alarm about a potential market crash, and Weiss Ratings research points to the first half of 2026 as a particularly rough stretch for certain holdings.

Some of America's most popular stocks could take serious damage as a radical market shift plays out. Analysts at Weiss Ratings have identified five names you may want to remove from your portfolio before this unfolds.

If any of these are in your portfolio, now is the time to review your positions.

See the 5 stocks to avoidtc pixel

Keysight spiked 23% following its February earnings report, pushing the stock to nearly $300 per share. Since then, Keysight has continued to climb and now trades closer to $350. The company recently released its fiscal second-quarter earnings, and the results were the best in its history. Although the stock did not get a major lift from the market, Wall Street price targets moved sharply higher. Following the report, analysts issued sizable target increases, signaling support for the continuation of Keysight’s impressive run.

Keysight Wallops Adjusted EPS Estimates, Issues Large Guidance Raise

In its report, Keysight posted revenue of $1.72 billion, an increase of just over 31% year over year (YOY). (Note that Keysight reports its fiscal results slightly ahead of the calendar year.) This marked the company’s fastest revenue growth in five years, since sales rose 36% YOY in early 2021. Revenue also narrowly beat estimates of $1.71 billion.

The bigger beat came on the bottom line. Keysight reported adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $2.87, a 69% YOY increase. Analysts had expected $2.32, which implied growth of only 36% YOY. Still, it is important to note that a $96 million tariff refund provided a meaningful boost to adjusted EPS. Without that benefit, the company still would have beaten estimates, but by a much smaller margin. The tariff refund still benefited Keysight, though it was a factor outside the firm’s control.

Orders grew even more impressively than sales, rising 56% YOY to more than $2 billion, a strong sign for the company’s growth outlook. In light of these results, Keysight raised its full-year fiscal 2026 guidance and now expects revenue growth in the high 20% range. That is a meaningful increase from prior expectations of “growth just above 20%.”

Strength was broad-based across Keysight’s end markets. Commercial Communications, which includes much of its data center and AI-related revenue, rose 40% YOY. That was a solid acceleration from 33% YOY growth in the prior quarter. Meanwhile, Aerospace, Defense & Government saw sales rise 24% YOY, up from 18% YOY last quarter. Electronic Industrial Solutions, which includes some semiconductor revenue, rose 24% YOY, a nice improvement from 15% growth last quarter.

Keysight Shares Didn’t Budge, But Price Targets Moved Way Up

Despite the very strong earnings report, Keysight shares were nearly unchanged afterward, slipping 0.6%. This likely reflects the fact that the tariff benefit contributed significantly to the adjusted EPS beat. In addition, shares had already risen 14% since the company’s last post-earnings spike, suggesting investors had already priced in much of Keysight’s record performance.

Even so, Wall Street analysts sharply raised their forecasts for the stock after the report. Among analysts for whom MarketBeat had previous price target data, the average price target increased by a hefty 15% to $391. That figure sits notably above the MarketBeat consensus price target of $372. Based on this updated average price target, the implied upside in Keysight stock is close to 10%.

A 10% upside isn’t especially exciting. However, the more important point is that Keysight is consistently beating analysts' expectations. The company has topped estimates for both sales and adjusted EPS in 11 of its last 12 reports.

As a result, Wall Street forecasters have had little choice but to move their targets higher as Keysight’s business continues to fire on all cylinders. When a stock performs this well, analysts often have to play catch-up, and implied upside figures do not necessarily tell the whole story.

Keysight: Strong Fundamental Improvement Versus Elevated Valuation

Keysight currently trades at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of nearly 43x. That is significantly higher than its average forward P/E of 23x over the past three years. While the valuation is clearly elevated relative to history, it is hard to argue with the results Keysight is delivering. The company is growing at a pace not seen in years, and profits are rising rapidly even without the tariff benefit. Given the strong underlying tailwinds in AI and defense supporting Keysight’s growth, it would not be surprising to see the stock continue to perform well.


Special Report

3 Stocks Under $40 with Indirect Exposure to SpaceX IPO

Submitted by Chris Markoch. Publication Date: 5/27/2026.

Lunar lander spacecraft on the moon.

Key Points

  • Momentus, Redwire, and Intuitive Machines offer indirect exposure to the fast-growing SpaceX ecosystem ahead of the historic IPO.
  • Redwire and Intuitive Machines are generating strong revenue growth through lunar missions, satellite systems, and government contracts.
  • These space stocks under $40 remain speculative investments, but momentum is building as investors position for the SpaceX IPO.
  • Special Report: The Biggest IPO Ever: Claim Your Stake Today

SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) filed its public S-1 on May 20. Now things are getting serious. The roadshow kicks off around June 4, and if all goes as planned, a Nasdaq listing under a reported valuation of $1.75 trillion could happen as early as June 12.

It’s shaping up to be the largest IPO in stock market history. But most retail investors won't get a share of it. And if they do, they’ll be paying a premium price.

ALERT: Drop these 5 stocks before the market opens tomorrow! (Ad)

The Wall Street Journal is already raising the alarm about a potential market crash, and Weiss Ratings research points to the first half of 2026 as a particularly rough stretch for certain holdings.

Some of America's most popular stocks could take serious damage as a radical market shift plays out. Analysts at Weiss Ratings have identified five names you may want to remove from your portfolio before this unfolds.

If any of these are in your portfolio, now is the time to review your positions.

See the 5 stocks to avoidtc pixel

There are, however, attractive ways to invest in SpaceX-adjacent companies. Specifically, the companies that are directly tied to the commercial space ecosystem SpaceX is building. Three of them: Momentus Inc. (NASDAQ: MNTS)Redwire (NYSE: RDW), and Intuitive Machines (NASDAQ: LUNR) are all under $50 as of this writing. Each company is forecasting strong year-over-year revenue growth in 2026. However, none of these companies is profitable, so investors should expect volatility.

These stocks are seeing strong momentum ahead of the SpaceX IPO, with many trading at 52-week highs but also reaching overbought levels. Here’s what investors should know ahead of the SpaceX IPO.

MNTS: The Highest-Risk Bet on In-Orbit Services

Momentus is the smallest and most speculative of these three stocks. The micro-cap space infrastructure company has a market cap of around $200 million and just $1.1 million in trailing revenue. The story is compelling: its Vigoride Orbital Service Vehicle acts as an in-orbit delivery layer on top of SpaceX's Transporter rideshare missions. Specifically, SpaceX puts the payload in orbit; Momentus shuttles it to the precise final destination.

This SpaceX connection is contractual. Vigoride 7 launched aboard SpaceX's Transporter-16 in late March 2026, hosting payloads for DARPA and commercial customers. 

Vigoride 8 is already fully subscribed with NASA contracts and scheduled for 2027. Better still, Momentus has very little direct competition in its niche market.

The financial story is a classic pre-revenue growth bet. Management is forecasting $10 million in 2026 revenue, a 9x increase over 2025, driven by milestone-based contracts with NASA and the Department of Defense.

That said, the bear case is real. As of late April, Momentus had $26.2 million in cash on hand after the company retired its remaining convertible debt. This gives the company an estimated 12-month runway. Plus, short interest has risen by more than 600% over the past year and now accounts for roughly 20% of the float. A reverse stock split in late 2025 signals the company has been under financial stress.

RDW: The Picks-and-Shovels Play With Real Revenue

Redwire manufactures space infrastructure hardware—Roll-Out Solar Arrays, optical imaging systems, sun sensors, spacecraft components—and has expanded into military drones through its Edge Autonomy acquisition. Its products are aboard NASA missions and Space Force programs. Its solar array technology is being positioned for lunar electrical grid systems connected to the Artemis program, which relies on SpaceX's Starship for lunar access.

In Q1 2026, Redwire posted revenue of $97 million, up 57.9% year-over-year, and ended the quarter with a record contracted backlog of $498.1 million—up 71% annually. A book-to-bill ratio of 1.92 means the company is booking nearly twice as much new business as it's recognizing in revenue.

Full-year 2026 guidance sits at $450–$500 million, roughly 42% growth at the midpoint. The gross margin trend (26.6% in Q1) and the deepening backlog suggest the fundamentals are real.

That said, RDW has already roughly doubled from its late-April lows. After that kind of run, the risk/reward is less favorable at current prices. The Redwire analyst forecasts on MarketBeat show a consensus Moderate Buy rating with an average price target of $14.22 as of this writing. A pullback toward the $13–$15 analyst consensus zone would represent a more balanced entry.

LUNR: The Flagship Space Play

Intuitive Machines is the most prominent name on this list for a reason: the company’s flagship product landed on the Moon. IM-1 in 2024, IM-2 in 2025. IM-4 and IM-5 are coming—both launching on SpaceX rockets.

However, the company has been transforming rapidly to move beyond a single revenue stream. 

Its $800 million acquisition of Lanteris Space Systems expanded the company’s satellite manufacturing capabilities. 

It also recently announced the acquisition of Goonhilly Earth Station and COMSAT, adding ground station and communications network assets.

Management issued full-year 2026 revenue guidance of $900 million to $1 billion, with positive adjusted EBITDA, underpinned by a $4.82 billion Near Space Network Services contract with NASA and a record $1.1 billion Q1 backlog.

The Intuitive Machines analyst forecasts on MarketBeat show 12 analysts covering LUNR, with a consensus Hold rating and a price target of $31.50, which is substantially below its price as of this writing. That’s because LUNR hit 52-week highs in May on SpaceX IPO momentum and reported record revenue, gross margin, and adjusted EBITDA in Q1.

Here’s where caution is warranted. LUNR trades at roughly 17x 2026 price-to-sales. That valuation prices in execution. Shareholders' equity is negative $333 million, and the company had significant cash burn in Q1 following the Lanteris deal. If the $900 million revenue guide slips, the multiple compression will be swift.

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