April 10th could change everything

I’m going to get right to the point.

 

Starting on April 10th, one single ticker could soar 200%... 300%... even 500% or more.

Now I realize this sounds bold… and very specific.

But here’s why I’m so certain…

Last April, my system flagged OKLO on the 10th; it ran 769%.

The next month, on the 10th, RGTI ran 464%.

Then on June 10th: THM, 288%.

It continued month after month all year long…

  • STIM - 40%
  • AMPG - 138%
  • TGB - 193%
  • IMPUY - 119%
  • CELC - 149%
  • SCCO - 60%
  • AXTI - 248%
  • TMQ - 39%

And the alerts from the last few months are already up double digits, with much more room to rise.

I don't know which stock it will be yet. But I know when it will appear, on the 10th. Same as every month before.

I've put together an urgent briefing that explains exactly why this keeps happening on the 10th - and how to position yourself before the next one hits.

Watch it here before April 10th arrives.

Chris Rowe


 
 
 
 
 
 

Just For You

Qualcomm's Robotics Push Could Be Bigger Than the Market Thinks

Submitted by Sam Quirke. Article Posted: 3/5/2026.

Qualcomm branding on chip-themed graphic with Snapdragon processor.

Key Points

  • Qualcomm's CEO flagged robotics as a major growth opportunity, projecting the segment will "start to get scale within the next two years."
  • Analysts at Wells Fargo and Loop Capital recently upgraded the stock and raised price targets to $185, citing easing pressures and emerging growth drivers.
  • The chipmaker's push into automotive, IoT, and edge AI is starting to show traction—robotics could become the next pillar of its diversification strategy.
  • Special Report: Elon Musk already made me a "wealthy man"

Shares of Qualcomm Inc. (NASDAQ: QCOM) were trading just below $140 early in the week, down roughly 25% from their January high. While shares had been under pressure since before Christmas, much of the recent decline followed weak forward guidance in the company's latest earnings report.

The stock has posted modest gains since its early-February low, but the move looks more like consolidation than the start of a decisive comeback. For many investors, Qualcomm still carries the stigma of being overly dependent on smartphones at a time when the broader semiconductor industry is being defined by data-center artificial intelligence demand.

Introducing "Elon Musk's Day-One Retirement Plan" (Ad)

Introducing "Elon Musk's Day-One Retirement Plan"

What if you could compress a lifetime of wealth-building…

Ten… twenty… even thirty years…

Into a single 24-hour window?

It sounds absurd.

But Elon Musk is about to make it a reality with something I'm calling…

"Day-One Retirement Plan." Click here to see the details.tc pixel

Yet a new narrative may be quietly forming that challenges that assumption.

Qualcomm's New Growth Story Beyond Smartphones

In comments earlier this week, Qualcomm's CEO Cristiano Amon pointed to robotics as a major opportunity for the company's next phase of growth. Speaking about the evolution of AI-enabled devices, Amon said he expects robotics to "start to get scale within the next two years."

That remark may not seem revolutionary on its own, but it fits into a broader strategic shift. Qualcomm has spent the past several years diversifying beyond smartphones, building new revenue streams in automotive chips, Internet of Things (IoT) devices, and edge AI computing. Robotics could be the next extension of that push.

Qualcomm has already introduced specialized processors for robotics systems, applying the same architecture principles behind its Snapdragon chips that made them dominant in mobile devices. Robots, industrial machines, and autonomous systems require exactly the type of low-power, high-performance computing Qualcomm specializes in. If robotics adoption accelerates over the next decade, that positioning could prove valuable.

Why the Market Has Been Skeptical on QCOM

Still, the market has remained cautious on Qualcomm—and for understandable reasons. The company's fortunes have historically been tied closely to smartphone demand, and the global handset market has struggled to regain momentum in recent years.

Weak guidance last month did Qualcomm no favors, reinforcing the perception that the company remains vulnerable to cyclical slowdowns in mobile devices. That narrative has weighed on the stock, especially as investors direct capital toward companies seen as clearer beneficiaries of the generative AI boom. The result has been persistent underperformance relative to its tech and semiconductor peers.

Analysts Are Starting to Shift Tone

The overall analyst consensus on Qualcomm remains a Hold, but recent commentary has grown slightly more constructive. Wells Fargo last week lifted its rating from Underweight to Equal Weight, and Loop Capital went further by re-rating the stock to Buy. Both firms also raised price targets to $185, implying more than 30% upside from current levels.

These analysts argue that several pressures that weighed on Qualcomm in recent quarters are beginning to ease just as new growth opportunities are emerging. The company's expanding data-center ambitions and its potential role in AI inference are additional reasons for a more bullish view heading into the coming months.

Those shifts may seem modest, but they matter because Qualcomm has spent much of the past year fighting the narrative that it's been left behind in the AI race. If robotics, alongside automotive chips and edge AI platforms, starts contributing meaningfully to revenue, that narrative could change quickly.

A Diversification Strategy Taking Shape

Part of the reason analysts are becoming more constructive is that Qualcomm's diversification strategy is beginning to show tangible progress. The company expects its reliance on Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) to decline over time while other segments expand.

Qualcomm has also been investing in AI-related technologies, including acquisitions aimed at strengthening its presence in data centers and high-performance computing.

These initiatives point toward a single objective: reducing dependence on smartphones and building a broader semiconductor-platform story. If Amon's timeline holds, robotics could become the next pillar of that strategy.

Qualcomm Robotics Traction Could Shift Investor Sentiment

If Qualcomm begins demonstrating real traction in robotics in the coming quarters, investors may reassess the company's long-term growth profile. For now, the stock's behavior suggests investors are still waiting for proof. Shares have stabilized since early February but have yet to mount a decisive recovery. That cautious price action reflects the tension between a weak near-term narrative and what could be a compelling long-term opportunity.

Investors should watch for the stock to continue consolidating around the $140 level or to break higher as confirmation that bulls are regaining control. A steady pattern of higher lows in the weeks ahead would go a long way toward validating the market's willingness to back Qualcomm's evolving growth story.


 

Just For You

Robinhood Fell 40% in 3 Months—Warning Sign or Buy-the-Dip Setup?

Submitted by Jennifer Ryan Woods. Article Posted: 3/6/2026.

Robinhood logo on black plaque over green backdrop.

Key Points

  • Robinhood shares have staged a modest rebound over the past month as cryptocurrencies recovered and investors reacted positively to new growth initiatives, though the stock remains down roughly 40% over the past three months.
  • Despite the recent volatility, Wall Street analysts remain largely bullish on the stock, with an average price target of $121, implying more than 50% upside from current levels.
  • Even after its recent pullback, Robinhood shares are trading at a premium compared with its fintech peers, suggesting investors are still pricing in strong future growth.
  • Special Report: Elon Musk already made me a "wealthy man"

Shares of financial services company Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ: HOOD) have bounced over the past month, rising more than 10% and trimming some earlier losses; however, the stock remains nearly 40% lower over the past three months. That kind of drop might look like an obvious entry point, but it isn't the whole story.

Despite the recent pullback, the stock is still up sharply—roughly 65%—over the past year following a massive rally in 2025. That raises the question: Is Robinhood's decline a warning sign of further weakness or a buying opportunity? Wall Street appears to lean toward the latter, with the majority of analysts maintaining Buy ratings and an average price target of $121—nearly 50% above the current share price.

Robinhood's Massive Rally Reverses

Introducing "Elon Musk's Day-One Retirement Plan" (Ad)

Introducing "Elon Musk's Day-One Retirement Plan"

What if you could compress a lifetime of wealth-building…

Ten… twenty… even thirty years…

Into a single 24-hour window?

It sounds absurd.

But Elon Musk is about to make it a reality with something I'm calling…

"Day-One Retirement Plan." Click here to see the details.tc pixel

Shares of Robinhood, best known for its mobile-first brokerage platform popular with retail investors, enjoyed a momentum-driven rally through much of 2025. Investors cheered the company's earnings reports, a surge in crypto trading—which represents a sizeable portion of its business—increased retail trading activity, and several new product launches. The enthusiasm pushed the stock up almost 250% between January and early December. As the year ended, however, momentum faded, and by late January the stock had returned to double-digit percentage losses.

Shares plunged after the company's mixed Q4 2025 earnings report on Feb. 10. Despite an earnings beat, a revenue shortfall—partly driven by weaker crypto transaction revenue—spooked investors. The stock lost almost 17% in the two sessions following the report. Several analysts trimmed price targets, though many maintained Buy ratings. In the weeks that followed, shares remained volatile, trading in the mid- to upper $70s.

Crypto Rebound Gives Shares a Boost 

On March 4, a modest rebound in cryptocurrencies helped lift Robinhood about 8%. Anticipation of a company announcement that evening about new product initiatives also supported the rally. After the market closed, Robinhood announced a new Platinum card aimed at wealthier consumers—a follow-up to its Gold card launched in 2024. The Platinum card carries a $695 annual fee and could be an important revenue diversifier, expanding beyond the company's core base of younger, less-affluent customers. It will compete with premium cards from American Express (NYSE: AXP) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM).

Robinhood also said it would add features such as custodial accounts for minors and a pilot program to match financial advisors with eligible clients. These initiatives are part of the company's broader effort to build a "super app" offering a comprehensive suite of financial services. Investors initially reacted positively, pushing the stock about 3% higher early in the session, but momentum faded and shares reversed. The stock closed at $80.52, down 2% for the day.

Analysts See Upside, But Valuation Remains a Concern

The recent pullback could present an opportunity for investors, since many analysts still see upside from current levels. Seventeen analysts maintain Buy ratings. Of 20 forecasts, 17 have price targets above $100, 14 expect the stock to trade above $120, and the highest target sits at $180.

Even after the decline, Robinhood may look expensive to some investors. The stock trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 39, well above the fintech industry average of 14. Its price-to-sales ratio of roughly 16 is also far higher than the approximately 4.4 multiple seen among peers. Compared with some competitors, Robinhood still trades at a premium: Interactive Brokers Group (NASDAQ: IBKR) has a P/E of 30 and a P/S of 11, while Charles Schwab (NYSE: SCHW) has a P/E of 20 and a P/S of 16. That premium suggests investors are pricing in strong future growth.

Looking ahead, investors will watch whether the company's new initiatives—its push into premium credit cards and expanded platform services—can sustain revenue growth. If those efforts gain traction, they could help justify the current valuation. But if growth slows or crypto activity weakens again, the stock could face further downside. For now, the pullback may offer an entry point for investors willing to tolerate volatility.


 
Thank you for subscribing to TickerReport, where we work around-the-clock
to bring you the latest market-moving news.
 
This email content is a paid advertisement sent on behalf of True Market Insiders, a third-party advertiser of TickerReport and MarketBeat.
 
Contact Us  |  Unsubscribe
 
© 2006-2026 MarketBeat Media, LLC dba TickerReport.
345 N Reid Place #620, Sioux Falls, SD 57103. USA..

Subscribe to receive free email updates:

0 Response to "April 10th could change everything"

Post a Comment