Editor's Note: Silicon Valley legend Jeff Brown is forecasting that Elon Musk’s "Kardashev Project" is about to trigger the greatest wealth creation event in history. If you missed out on Tesla... Click here to see the details of what Elon has coming next or read more below.
Dear Reader,
Elon Musk just made a huge announcement…
That could spell the end for Microsoft.
It’s all part of his masterplan.
While everyone is talking about the SpaceX IPO, Elon Musk has moved on to bigger and better things…
With the potential to be much more lucrative for folks who make the right moves today.
Everything is coming together quickly.
Tesla and xAI’s newly announced “Macrohard” project could disrupt the entire software industry.
But it’s just one small part of Elon’s next move… one more blurring of the lines between his companies.
Once his plan is complete everything about the way we look at Elon Musk and his companies like SpaceX and Tesla will change.
Elon believes it will even trigger a quadrillion dollar wealth creation event…
And give folks a shot at up to 500%+ gains in the near term and far more in the years to come as Elon Musk makes the world’s first $10 trillion company.
Silicon Valley insider, Jeff Brown, put together a brief video explaining Elon’s masterplan…
The drastic move he could make as soon as the end of this month…
And exactly where investors should position themselves today.
Click here to get the full story. It’s completely free to watch.
Regards,
Lindsey Hough
Managing Director, Brownstone Research
P.S. The kind of move Jeff is sharing today has triggered gains of up to 2,100%. This time around, he believes it will be even bigger.
Click this link now to get ahead of Elon’s next move, before it’s too late.
Amprius Stock Price Gets Amped by Hyper Growth Outlook
Reported by Thomas Hughes. Date Posted: 3/5/2026.
Key Points
- Amprius Technologies is on track for hypergrowth and outperformance in 2026 as manufacturing and demand trends collide.
- Ramping production and full-NDAA compliance unlock the door to accelerating government demand.
- AMPX batteries can disrupt the battery market, offering superior performance and energy density, enabling larger payloads and longer ranges.
- Special Report: Have $500? Invest in Elon's AI Masterplan
It has taken time, but Amprius Technologies' (NYSE: AMPX) execution is paying off and amplifying its hypergrowth outlook. A key takeaway from its Q4 2025 earnings report was stronger-than-expected guidance pointing to another year of solid gains.
Management expects revenue growth to slow but still exceed a 70% pace, and its guidance appears intentionally conservative.
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Other details included a one-time charge related to the discontinued lease of a Colorado facility. Originally intended to serve as the manufacturing base, Amprius has shifted to a contract-manufacturing model for its high-tech batteries, relying on third-party manufacturers.
The charge is a one-time event that helps clarify ongoing cash-flow commitments as the company strengthens its manufacturing base. Three South Korean battery manufacturers and one U.S.-based manufacturer were recently added to the network, putting the company on track for full NDAA compliance and accelerating government business this year.
Amprius Accelerates its Profitability Outlook in 2026
Amprius had an electrifying quarter: revenue rose more than 137% year-over-year (YOY), beating consensus by over 1,000 basis points (bps). Strength came from both new and existing clients and strong execution, with client and contract wins pointing to additional momentum in 2026.
Margin improvement was another notable catalyst. The company's revenue leverage, a tighter operating model, and improved operational quality produced meaningful gains across the income statement. Gross margin widened by 4,500 basis points (45 percentage points) to 24%, producing a 365% YOY improvement in gross profit and delivering the first quarter of positive adjusted EBITDA.
Amprius continues to burn cash, but losses contracted sharply and are expected to keep improving in coming quarters. Analysts currently model an inflection to adjusted profits in Q1 2027, although it could occur by late 2026. Management is guiding to positive adjusted EBITDA.
Analysts Point to 60% Upside Potential and Long-Term Highs
Analysts have been slow to fully update estimates after Amprius' Q4 results, but the bullish trends leading into the release should strengthen in its wake.
Coverage has expanded to nine analysts on a trailing-twelve-month (TTM) basis, sentiment has firmed to a Moderate Buy with an 88% buy-side bias, and price targets have moved higher.
The consensus price target implies more than 30% upside from the pre-release close, while the high end — established by Northland Securities last year and reaffirmed by Needham in January — suggests an additional roughly 25% upside may be possible.
Institutional interest is another catalyst. Ownership was light at about 5% as of early March, but the trend is strengthening: institutional buying spiked in Q4 2025 and remained strong in Q1 2026, providing a tailwind for the stock.
That increasing ownership is notable given the recent short interest, which rose in late 2025 and early 2026 and set the market up for a potential short-covering rally or squeeze.
No Red Flags in AMPX's Balance Sheet: Green Flags in Its Price Action
Amprius' balance sheet shows no immediate red flags. The company is well-capitalized, held net cash versus total liabilities, and increased shareholder equity in 2025. Equity rose nearly 50%, leaving leverage at very low levels and positioning the company to continue executing its strategy.
Looking ahead, the cash balance may decline in coming quarters, but additional capital raises seem unlikely for now. With no need to build its own manufacturing capacity, Amprius can focus capital on development, marketing, and sales — a factor that supports expected outperformance in the year ahead.
The stock's price action also shows constructive signals. Monthly, weekly, and daily charts converged on bullish indicators following the release. While periodic pullbacks are possible, those dips could present buying opportunities for traders and investors.
Over the long term, the stock may sustain upward momentum for many quarters — potentially years — with technical projections suggesting a potential floor near $30.
Warm Winter Hit Vail's Earnings. What Does It Mean for the Stock?
Written by Jennifer Ryan Woods. Article Posted: 3/11/2026.
Key Points
- An unusually warm winter and historically low snowfall in the Rockies led Vail Resorts to miss fiscal second-quarter earnings expectations and cut its full-year guidance, with skier visits falling 12% as limited snowpack reduced available terrain at key resorts.
- Although Vail’s stock has struggled in recent years, falling more than 60% from its 2021 peak, analysts still see significant upside, with the average 12-month price target of about $171 implying more than 25% potential gains from current levels.
- Investor sentiment remains divided, as short interest has climbed to nearly 12% of the public float even while the company’s 6.6% dividend yield may help support the stock.
- Special Report: Have $500? Invest in Elon's AI Masterplan
A historically warm winter weighed on ski resort operator Vail Resorts Inc. (NYSE: MTN), producing disappointing fiscal Q2 2026 results and prompting the company to cut its full-year guidance. Shares initially fell after the report was released following the market close on March 9, though they later recovered. Price action was marginally positive the day after the release, with shares hovering around $135 on above-average trading volume as investors digested the earnings miss and updated outlook.
Investor sentiment toward the stock remains mixed. Despite the weather-driven setback, analysts still see meaningful upside, though rising short interest suggests some investors remain skeptical about the company's near-term prospects.
Warm Winter Hits Earnings and Skier Visits
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The Colorado-based company, which operates more than 40 mountain resorts including Vail Mountain, Beaver Creek and Breckenridge, reported earnings of $5.87 per share. That was down from $6.56 per share a year earlier and missed expectations by $0.18.
Revenue for the quarter totaled $1.08 billion, a 4.7% year-over-year decline and more than $27 million below estimates. Because the Rockies generate the lion's share of Vail's resort EBITDA, historically low snowfall in that region had a disproportionate impact on results.
Epic Pass and Diversified Resorts Help Cushion the Blow
In the earnings release, Katz said the decline in lift revenue was modest given the backdrop, highlighting the stability of Vail's operating model. Growth in the Epic Pass program, which lets skiers pay upfront for access to multiple resorts, helped provide stability—pass holders account for roughly 75% of visits each year, creating a steadier revenue stream even during difficult seasons. The company's expansion into more geographically diverse locations has also softened the effect of regional weather swings.
Because weather continues to limit available terrain at some resorts, Vail lowered its fiscal 2026 net income outlook to a range of $144 million to $190 million, down from a prior forecast of $201 million to $276 million. The company maintained its quarterly dividend of $2.22 per share, saying this year's decline in cash flow does not reflect the business's long-term ability to generate cash. The dividend—roughly a 6.6% yield—could attract income-focused investors and provide some support to the stock.
Shares Have Struggled Despite Analysts' Expected Upside
Vail's stock has experienced a steady downtrend since its November 2021 all-time high near $372. Shares dropped to a low of $126 in early February, more than 66% below that peak. Over the past year, the stock is down more than 11%, compared with gains of over 10% for the leisure and recreational services industry and more than 18% for the Invesco Leisure and Entertainment ETF (NYSEARCA: PEJ), which tracks U.S. leisure and entertainment companies. Vail is trading at a price-to-earnings ratio just under 20, above the industry and broader consumer discretionary average of roughly 17.
Analysts are divided: of 13 covering the stock, four have a Buy, eight a Hold and one a Sell. Following the disappointing results, three analysts lowered their price targets. Barclays cut its target to $138 from $140, Truist lowered its target to $217 from $234, and Stifel Nicolaus trimmed its target to $172 from $175. Despite those revisions, the consensus 12-month price target of $171 still implies more than 25% upside from the current share price of about $133.
Short interest has risen sharply. As of Feb. 13, roughly 4.19 million shares were sold short, representing nearly 12% of the public float—about double the level a year ago.
For investors, the outlook for Vail may ultimately hinge on whether the recent weather-driven weakness proves temporary. Rising short interest signals some skepticism, but analysts' upside projections could materialize if visitation normalizes and the pass-based model continues to provide stability. In the near term, the stock's high dividend yield may help support the share price during what has been a challenging season for the company.
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