Man Who Called Enron Issues Urgent Warning

Editor's Note: $1 billion fund manager Louis Navellier sold Enron before it collapsed by 99%. He says that not one... not two... but TEN Wall Street darlings could be next – and it's all thanks to a $7 trillion force ABC News calls "an economic nightmare." Click here to learn more...


Dear Reader,

Fortune magazine named it the "Most Innovative Company in America" six years in a row.

It was announcing larger and larger revenue with each passing quarter.

And 11 of the 13 analysts covering it called it a "Buy."

But in my system, this firm was an obvious "SELL." It failed both my quantitative model and my eight-factor fundamental model.

That company was Enron, the poster child for corporate fraud — not to mention the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history at that time.

After I closed our position, its share price crashed by more than 99%.

Today... I've discovered TEN publicly traded, widely held, and seemingly "too big to fail" Wall Street darlings that could fall dramatically in the weeks ahead.

They've all received an F rating in my system.

aifacility

And they're all at risk of being disrupted by a $7 trillion technological force sweeping across Wall Street and Silicon Valley.

It could reshape society and crush these firms – all in one fell swoop.

ABC News calls it "an economic nightmare."

Click here for more details...

Regards,

Louis Navellier
Senior Investment Analyst, InvestorPlace


 
 
 
 
 
 

Today's Bonus News

Planet Labs: The Satellite Stock That Keeps Shooting to the Moon

By Leo Miller. Date Posted: 3/22/2026.

Planet Labs Earth view with branding, illustrating satellite imaging growth and geospatial data expansion.

Key Points

  • Planet Labs shares delivered one of the most impressive performances of 2025, rising nearly 400%.
  • The company's latest earnings report added more fuel to the fire as sales, earnings, and guidance came in well above expectations.
  • Planet Labs is generating impressive results, and management believes AI could unlock even more growth.
  • Special Report: The Biggest IPO Ever: Claim Your Stake Today

Investors just can't seem to get enough of satellite and geospatial imaging stock Planet Labs PBC (NYSE: PL). In 2025, the stock delivered an astonishing return of 388% as the firm's revenue growth accelerated sharply.

That momentum has continued in 2026, with shares up more than 30% around mid‑March. On March 19, Planet Labs jumped almost 9% during the regular session before its earnings release, and then rallied more than 25% after reporting results.

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Given the meteoric rise of this industrial stock, is there still upside? Examining the company's business model and recent financials can help investors answer that question.

Planet Labs: Improving Decision Making with Earth Imaging

Despite sounding complex at first, Planet Labs' business is straightforward. The company operates the world's largest fleet of earth‑imaging satellites, which capture daily images of the planet's surface. Planet sells those images and related analytics software, generating recurring subscription revenue.

Planet Labs creates value by helping customers detect changes on the Earth's surface and make better decisions. In its fiscal year 2026 (FY2026), 59% of revenue came from defense and intelligence customers. Note that Planet Labs' fiscal year runs several quarters ahead of the calendar year.

Planet Labs' imaging helps these government customers monitor developments involving potential adversaries.

The company's customers include both public‑sector and commercial buyers. In FY2026, civil government customers contributed 23% of revenue and commercial customers 18%.

Commercial users span industries such as agriculture, insurance, energy, forestry and finance. For example, commodity trading firms can use satellite imagery to assess crop progress; a poor harvest reduces supply and can push prices higher. Early visibility from Planet Labs can provide a trading edge.

Launching and operating satellites is capital intensive, so Planet Labs needs scale to reach sustained profitability. That's why its "one‑to‑many" model is central: the company provides a common set of imagery to basic subscribers, creating more scalable economics than legacy competitors that sell each image to a single exclusive buyer. Higher tiers offer regional, higher‑resolution imagery and premium tiers provide exclusive access when a satellite passes over an area of interest.

Planet Labs Posts Big Beats, Crushes Guidance Expectations

In its latest quarter, Planet Labs reported revenue of $86.8 million, up 41% year over year (YOY). That comfortably beat estimates near $78.2 million (about 27% growth). The company also posted adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0, an improvement from a 2‑cent loss a year earlier and better than the 4‑cent loss analysts had forecast.

For FY2027, Planet Labs guided to midpoint revenue of $427.5 million, implying roughly 39% growth and signaling a meaningful acceleration versus FY2026's full‑year growth of 26%. That guidance outpaced consensus of $380 million.

Notably, for the first time the company generated positive full‑year adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow (FCF): adjusted EBITDA was $15.5 million and FCF was $52.9 million.

Looking into FY2027, however, management expects adjusted EBITDA to decline, guiding to a range of $0–$10 million. It also expects FCF to remain positive but provided no detailed range.

Planet Labs appears focused on growth over near‑term profitability. The company's $900 million backlog, up 77% YOY, is nearly three times its FY2026 revenue of $307.7 million. Serving that backlog requires investment — for example, Planet expects to double its satellite manufacturing capacity in FY2027.

Management also expects to deliver only 37% of the backlog over the next 12 months, underscoring the longer‑duration nature of the business and making near‑term EBITDA declines less alarming.

PL Eyes AI‑Driven Demand Unlock in Civil and Commercial Markets

After the recent rally, Planet Labs' market capitalization tops $10 billion, implying a very rich forward price‑to‑sales multiple of roughly 23x–26x. The stock's momentum reflects strong business performance, but the valuation already prices in substantial growth for years to come.

That level of growth isn't impossible, but it's hard to predict. Management believes improvements in AI will unlock more demand in the civil and commercial markets in FY2027. Revenue from those markets was flat or down in FY2026, with defense and intelligence driving growth; management argues the civil and commercial opportunities could ultimately be larger.

Ultimately, investors can't rely solely on current financials to justify Planet Labs' valuation. Owning the stock requires conviction in the company's long‑term growth story and the value of its product offering.


Today's Bonus News

The Metals Company: Unlocking a Klondike-Quality Mineral Rush 

By Thomas Hughes. Date Posted: 3/30/2026.

Deep-sea mineral nodules on a ship deck, highlighting The Metals Company’s ocean mining operations for battery metals.

Key Points

  • The Metals Company, Inc. is on the verge of licensing approval and commencing commercial operations.
  • It is the leader in a rush to unlock a multi-trillion-dollar seafloor opportunity. 
  • Revenue is expected in 2027 and profits the year after. 
  • Special Report: The Biggest IPO Ever: Claim Your Stake Today

The Metals Company, Inc. (NASDAQ: TMC) is as futuristic a company as can be, yet not involved in space or AI. The company aims to unlock a mineral rush expected over the coming decades by harnessing a resource once only dreamed of by scientists, politicians, and schoolchildren. It focuses on deep-sea nodules—previously unrecoverable but now a potential route to mineral independence. Each nodule contains manganese, nickel, cobalt, and copper (all critical for battery production), along with trace amounts of rare-earth elements, and there is a lot of it on the seafloor.

The Metals Company targets the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, a 4.5 million–square–kilometer area between Hawaii and Mexico. The nodules lie roughly 4,000 to 5,500 meters below the surface, and can be worth up to $1,500 per dry metric tonne.

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Estimates suggest a single mining site within the zone could be worth up to $1.7 billion annually, and the zone as a whole may contain roughly $19 trillion in minerals. The main remaining hurdles are regulatory approvals, which are underway.

The Metals Company plans to collect nodules via a partnership with Allseas, a Swiss-based company and a leader in subsea construction, pipelaying, and heavy lifting. Allseas will use a hydraulic collection vehicle that lifts nodules off the seafloor by suction, minimizing silt disturbance and delivering material to a floating processing ship.

The Hidden Gem is a converted drilling ship and the first floating processing plant of its kind. Owned and operated by Allseas and commissioned by The Metals Company earlier this decade, initial testing has been completed. The ship successfully recovered 3,000 tonnes of nodules in 2022 and is awaiting regulatory approval. NOAA deemed the company's application largely in compliance, and company executives believe licensing approval will be granted before the end of Q1 2027.

Analysts Like the Numbers, but The Metals Company Is a Speculative Buy

There is limited analyst coverage, but enough to provide a baseline view. The four analysts tracked by MarketBeat give the stock a consensus Hold with a 50% Buy-side bias and 25% Sell-side. Three of the four ratings were set in January 2026, the fourth in December 2025, so they are relatively current. There is an additional fifth rating at Buy, but it is more than 120 months old and therefore less relevant. Price targets imply significant upside—the consensus suggests roughly 165% upside, while the low-end target still implies more than 100% upside.

One key sentiment driver is the outlook for revenue and profitability. The analyst group forecasts initial revenue of about $50 million in 2027, rising to more than $550 million by 2028—a roughly tenfold increase.

Earnings are expected by 2028 as this relatively asset-light operation begins generating revenue soon after commencing commercial operations. Operational risk is limited because the technology has been proven; the primary constraint will be processing the nodules, and the company is making progress on that front.

Catalysts in 2026 include advances in nodule-processing activities. The company plans to use rotary kiln electric arc furnace (RKEF) technology, either through contracts or in its own facility. The company is already working with Japan-based Pacific Metals for testing and verification while also exploring construction of facilities in Texas.

A feasibility study is underway for a Brownsville, TX facility that could process nodules alongside other feedstocks. RKEF is used globally to process nickel; in this application, the resulting products would include a high-grade nickel-copper-cobalt alloy and manganese silicate. Importantly, the process produces no solid-waste tailings—all inputs are converted into usable materials, including fertilizer-grade ammonium sulfate.

TMC Stock Is Cheap, but It Can Get Cheaper

The Metals Company's 2026 stock price action has been volatile. The market retreated from long-term highs and is on track to test—and potentially break—a critical support at the 150-week exponential moving average (EMA). The 150-week EMA is commonly used as an indicator of long-term buy-and-hold sentiment and can act as a pivotal support level.

TMC stock chart displaying the share price at risk of a deeper decline.

If price action falls below this level, the stock may struggle to regain traction until a stronger catalyst appears. However, institutional activity suggests a bottom could be near: institutions are net buyers and have been increasing activity as the price has declined.


 
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