Editor’s Note: This could be the most critical investing broadcast you’ll see all year. Renowned forecaster Porter Stansberry and tech insider Jeff Brown expose a government-backed campaign to channel trillions of dollars into just a handful of specialized companies. This isn’t just a new market megatrend, says Porter, but a matter of pressing national security for our country. Get the details here, or keep reading to get the details from the man himself…
There’s no time for niceties… 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, right now. Fair warning: when you discover what’s going on, you’ll wish it wasn’t true. But, as the saying goes… if wishes were horses, beggars would ride. Wishes can’t stop the unstoppable. Wishes can’t change reality. And every time I’ve exposed that reality before, I’ve been met with resistance. Even ridicule. That’s what happened 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. 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
Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media Why Chipotle Stock May Bounce After a Brutal Sell-OffWritten by Thomas Hughes. Published 10/31/2025. 
Key Points- Chipotle Mexican Grill's stock market capitulated after several quarters of slowing growth.
- Macroeconomic headwinds cut into results while the business increases its footprint and leans into productivity.
- Analysts' sentiment trends reveal the 20% late-October price plunge overextended the market, setting it up for a rebound.
Chipotle Mexican Grill's (NYSE: CMG) market finally capitulated. It took more than a year — including the departure of CEO Brian Niccol, a stock split, and sluggish comparable-store sales — but it happened. Now that the Niccol premium is largely priced out of the stock, it may be time for investors to start rebuilding positions, because the long-term growth outlook remains intact. Wall Street legend issues chilling new warning: "I've never seen anything as dangerous as this"
The man who predicted the 2008 crash and 2020 says today's soaring markets are NOT a bubble - they're something far stranger and more dangerous. He says it's about to change everything you know about money. Full story here. Current economic headwinds are weighing on results, but those same forces should become tailwinds in 2026 if the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) eases rates. In addition, Chipotle's international expansion could materially enlarge the business. International growth alone could more than double the company's scale over the next decade, making CMG stock look attractive at the split-adjusted lows near $32. Highlights from the Q3 earnings call include plans to accelerate growth by increasing store count, with a particular focus on Europe, the Middle East and Asia. The company plans to open 350 to 370 new locations globally, representing a nearly 9.5% increase at the high end, including up to 15 international stores. Most of the new locations will feature a Chipotlane — important for accessing digital-demand markets and supporting margins. Chipotle Falls as Macro Headwinds Cut Into ResultsChipotle's Q3 results show two clear themes. First, macroeconomic headwinds have reduced traffic and raised costs. Second, the company's operational quality endures: growth persists and cash flow remains strong, enabling reinvestment and share repurchases. Revenue missed consensus by a narrow margin, and overall growth was 7.5%, driven by a 0.3% comparable-store sales gain and the addition of 84 new restaurants. The disappointing element was lowered guidance — the company now expects comps to be negative for the year. Margin performance was a relative bright spot. While restaurant-level operating margin contracted about 100 basis points, the company delivered adjusted EPS of $0.29, slightly better than the MarketBeat consensus despite the top-line miss. Investors sold on the guidance cut. Management expects future growth to be driven primarily by unit growth, with margin pressure persisting in the near term. The risk is that comps decline more than anticipated and that margin recovery is slow. 
Chipotle's Share Buybacks Are ReliableChipotle's cash flow supports a robust share buyback program, and buybacks are likely to continue into 2026. Repurchases have reduced share count by about 2.6%, which is a meaningful lever for investors. The balance sheet reflects this activity (including a decline in equity), but otherwise remains solid. Liabilities are primarily lease obligations; there is no significant long-term debt, and cash sits at just under $700 million. Analysts' Sentiment Trend Says CMG's 20% Sell-Off Was OverdoneThe initial analyst response, as tracked by MarketBeat, has been negative: three firms cut price targets within roughly 18 hours. Their reductions landed in the $40–$45 range, consistent with the recent trend. In that context, some of the post-earnings sell-off was understandable. However, the slide into the low $30s appears overdone. At about $32, CMG trades below the low end of the analysts' implied range, under 10x the long-term earnings consensus estimate, and is positioned to rebound when a catalyst emerges. A move to $40 would represent roughly 20% upside from the post-release lows. The chart action has been ugly: the stock fell as much as 20% in one session and the cumulative retreat extended to around 50% from prior highs. That said, the market has returned to support levels established in 2022 and 2023 that seem unlikely to be decisively broken. Most likely, CMG will consolidate near its new lows until signs of economic improvement show up in results.
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