Editor’s Note: This might be the most important investing broadcast of the year. Legendary forecaster Porter Stansberry and Jeff Brown expose one of the most important and consequential financial stories in America today.
They say it’s a coordinated, government-backed mobilization that’s funneling trillions of dollars into a tiny handful of companies. For more details, click here. Or read on below to hear from Porter himself…
You won’t want to accept this.
You’ll reject it. Call me crazy for suggesting it.
I don’t care. I’m used to it. That’s what they called me when I predicted the fall of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the bankruptcy of General Motors, the loss of America’s triple-A credit rating… the list goes on and on.
But I don’t let my emotions blind me to reality. No matter how difficult the truth… no matter how uncomfortable the fact… I follow my research to its logical conclusion.
You should too.
But I know most of you won’t – or can’t.
However, if you have any money in the stock market, savings in the bank – and especially if you are responsible for your family’s wealth – you really need to hear me out.
What I’ve discovered took months of investigation… and years of watching this moment build in the background of everyday life.
A powerful force — one almost no one fully understands — is on the verge of tearing through American life and wealth with brutal efficiency.
It won’t be fair. It won’t be gradual. And it won’t spare the unprepared. Hundreds of millions will feel the impact. Some could be devastated. A few others will come out far richer.
Which side you end up on may come down to one thing: how fast you act.
My job is simple: to make sure you land on the right side of what’s coming.
This force, described by Elon Musk as “the most likely cause of World War 3, demands a response. And it’s getting one.
It’s the reason Trump has been raising trillions of dollars from the Middle East…
The reason he forced Zelensky to hand over rights to half of Ukraine’s enormous mineral deposits…
It’s the reason Apple is spending $500 billion to bring their factories back to U.S. soil.
It’s even behind the President’s strange obsession with Greenland.
The threat of this force looms so large that Trump has privately declared it a national emergency… mobilizing public and private capital on a scale we haven’t seen since the Second World War.
In fact, strange as this may sound, what’s unfolding eerily resembles America’s transition to a total war state, 85 years ago.
Back then, key industrial assets were “drafted” to support the war effort. Boeing, GM, Ford, and Caterpillar were called on to produce tanks, fighter planes, and radar.
Today, the President has recruited the likes of Apple’s Tim Cook, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and OpenAI’s Sam Altman… to tap their vast resources for his own, undeclared national emergency.
Why has he called upon the world’s largest companies and wealthiest men?
As you’ll see, trillions of dollars are rapidly being directed into a concentrated set of companies closely connected to this national emergency.
In this special broadcast, Jeff Brown and I will reveal what this national emergency is and how Trump and his team are reordering the entire economy to prepare for it.
More importantly, we’ll name the two companies most likely to profit.
This new emergency could determine who retires rich — and who gets wiped out, as it forces an epic rotation of capital from one side of the market to the other.
You still have time to prepare – but not much. In a matter of days, an expected announcement from Trump could send capital flooding into the companies we share in the broadcast.
That’s why we’re urging you to watch today.
Good investing,
Porter Stansberry
P.S. This is already underway. Money is rapidly moving. And we believe several popular stocks could be decimated by it. Don’t wait to be engulfed by it – prepare now. Go here.
Dow leaps 585 points as US stocks win back most of Friday's wipeout
Written by The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks rallied on Monday and won back most of their sharp loss from last week, when worries about how President Donald Trump's tariffs may be punishing the economy sent a shudder through Wall Street.
The S&P 500 jumped 1.5% to follow up its worst day since May with its best since May. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 585 points, or 1.3%, and the Nasdaq composite leaped 2%.
Idexx Laboratories helped lead the way and soared 27.5% after the seller of veterinary instruments and other health care products reported a stronger profit for the spring than analysts expected. It also raised its forecast for profit over the full year.
Tyson Foods likewise delivered a bigger-than-expected profit for the latest quarter, and the company behind the Jimmy Dean and Hillshire Farms brands rose 2.4%.
They helped make up for a nearly 3% loss for Berkshire Hathaway after Warren Buffett's company reported a drop in profit for its latest quarter from a year earlier. The drop-off was due in part to the falling value of its investment in Kraft Heinz.
The pressure is on U.S. companies to deliver bigger profits after their stock prices shot to record after record recently. The jump in stock prices from a low point in April raised criticism that the broad market had become too expensive.
Stocks are coming off their worst week since May not so much because of that criticism but because of worries that Trump's tariffs may be hitting the U.S. economy following a longer wait than some economists had expected. Job growth slowed sharply last month, and the unemployment rate worsened to 4.2%.
Trump reacted to Friday's disappointing jobs numbers by firing the person in charge of compiling them. He also continued his criticism of the Federal Reserve, which could lower interest rates in order to pump adrenaline into the economy.
The Fed has instead been keeping rates steady this year, in part because lower rates can send inflation higher, and Trump's tariffs may be set to increase prices for U.S. households.
Friday's stunningly weak jobs report did raise expectations on Wall Street that the Fed will cut interest rates at its next meeting in September. That caused Treasury yields to slump in the bond market, and they eased a bit more on Monday.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury slipped to 4.19% from 4.23% late Friday.
"In our view, if the Fed starts to cut rates at its September meeting, we believe this would be supportive for markets," according to David Lefkowitz, head of US equities at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Such hopes, combined with profit reports from big U.S. companies that have largely come in better than expected, could help steady a U.S. stock market that may have been due for some turbulence. Before Friday, the S&P 500 had gone more than a month without a daily swing of 1%, either up or down.
This upcoming week may feature fewer fireworks following last week's jobs report and profit updates from some of Wall Street's most influential companies. This week's highlights will likely include earnings reports from The Walt Disney Co., McDonald's and Caterpillar, along with updates on U.S. business activity.
On Wall Street, American Eagle Outfitters jumped 23.6% after Trump weighed in on the debate surrounding the retailer's advertisements, which highlight actor Sydney Sweeney's great jeans. Some critics thought the reference to the blonde-haired and blue-eyed actor's "great genes" may be extolling a narrow set of beauty standards. "Go get 'em Sydney!" Trump said on his social media network.
Wayfair climbed 12.7% after the retailer of furniture and home decor said accelerating growth helped it make more in profit and revenue during the spring than analysts expected.
Tesla rose 2.2% after awarding CEO Elon Musk 96 million shares of restricted stock valued at approximately $29 billion. The move could remove potential worries that Musk may leave the company.
CommScope soared 86.3% after reaching a deal to sell its connectivity and cable business to Amphenol for $10.5 billion in cash, while Amphenol rose 4.1%.
They helped offset a 15.6% loss for On Semiconductor, which only matched analysts' expectations for profit in the latest quarter. The company, which sells to the auto and industrial industries, said it's beginning to see "signs of stabilization" across its customers.
All told, the S&P 500 rose 91.93 points to 6,329.94. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 585.06 to 44,173.64, and the Nasdaq composite leaped 403.45 to 21,053.58.
In stock markets abroad, indexes rose across much of Europe and Asia.
South Korea's Kospi rose 0.9%, and France's CAC 40 climbed 1.1%, while Japan's Nikkei 225 was an outlier with a drop of 1.2%.
___
This version has been corrected to say that the U.S. stock market had its worst week last week since May, not April.
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AP Business Writers Matt Ott and Elaine Kurtenbach contributed.
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