Agree to Disagree. No investment advice given or implied. Just watching Algos and AI taking control. The "Good Ole Days" were the Best

Joined June 2011
1,228 Photos and videos
🚨BREAKING: TRUMP-IRAN PEACE DEAL IS OFFICIALLY REACHED! πŸ”₯ Signing set for June 19 in Switzerland. Art of the Deal Peacemaker Trump delivers on his birthday! All military operations terminated immediately. This is HUGE!πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ

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Big_Block_Buyer retweeted
.@BernieSanders , it is a time to celebrate. @elonmusk has created enormous value for society by building @SpaceX, driving down the cost of rocket launches and creating a global satellite communication network that has brought high speed, low-cost internet and communication access to hundreds of millions and eventually billions of people along with critical advantages for our military and our nation’s defense. SpaceX and its technologies will cause an acceleration in the growth of wages and wealth creation globally, including in some of the poorest communities in the U.S. and around the world. Access to low-cost, high speed communications everywhere will allow children around the world to be educated, families to build businesses, and life-saving medical knowledge and care to be available everywhere. SpaceX will materially bring down the cost of compute, advancing AI and humanity. Meanwhile, 4,000 SpaceX employees yesterday became millionaires, including hourly wage employees who you claim you are trying to help. The Elon Musks of the world drive growth, global GDP, and provide access to goods and services at lower cost that would otherwise not exist. Elon’s nominal trillionaire status is due to his ownership of SpaceX, Tesla, Neuralink, the Boring Company and his other initiatives that have brought new technologies that improve our everyday lives. Elon is not sitting on a trillion dollar pile of cash, jewelry and gold. He is using his controlling stakes in his companies to advance mankind. Elon’s companies don’t pay dividends. They reinvest all of their capital to accelerate innovation and value creation. Elon is working 24/7 for all of us. He deserves respect and appreciation, not smears. Bernie, your socialism would never allow a SpaceX to be built. Socialism has only proven to impoverish mankind and lead to death and destruction. We need to create the conditions for more SpaceXs to be built, not attack the great entrepreneurs who are helping to advance our country.
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Big_Block_Buyer retweeted
Scott Jennings is right! When have you ever heard the left complain about billionaires like Alec and George Soros (who have built nothing BTW)?πŸ€” They don't!πŸ˜‰ Yet they are mad at an inventor of great things.πŸ™„

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Don’t argue with people over sixty. Just don’t. It’s not just an age; it’s a masterclass in survival. We grew up without Google, cellphones, without DoorDash, without therapy podcasts, and without an "undo" button. If something broke, we grabbed duct tape, WD-40, a hammer, and a look of sheer determination that made even the broken appliance second-guess itself. As kids, we knew exactly what kind of mood our mom was in just by the sound of how hard she slammed the cast-iron skillet onto the stove. They were the original latchkey kids β€” walking home from middle school with a house key tied around their neck, with strict orders to heat up lunch and not burn the kitchen down. By the time they were ten, they could bike to the corner store, buy a gallon of milk for the neighbor, feed the family dog, and still have time to play freeze tag in the yard until dark. Their knees were a permanent canvas of scrapes, bruises, and rubbing alcohol. Their universal first-aid kit was just a quick wash under the garden hose and a Band-Aid. If a bone wasn't sticking out, you were fine. They drank water straight from that same hose, ate Wonder Bread covered in butter and sugar, shared a single glass bottle of Coke among five friends, and somehow didn't die from a lack of sanitization. This is the generation that knows how to rewind a cassette tape with a No. 2 pencil. They know the suspense of waiting all week for a movie to air on TV, because if you missed it, it was gone. They remember rotary phones, looking up a family in a massive paper phonebook, and the excitement of getting a color television. They survived party lines, typewriter ribbons, early brick cell phones, and flip phones β€” and today, they might accidentally send you a 7-minute voice memo where the first 6 minutes are just them breathing and asking, "Hello? Can you hear me?" And don't you dare laugh. Because without a GPS, we could drive halfway across the country using nothing but an old paper map, a cooler full of sandwiches, and the gut feeling that "the exit should be coming up somewhere around here." The ultimate masters of household magic. We can stitch, tighten, glue, and fix just about anything. And somewhere in their pantry, they have a "bag of bags" that is literally older than half the gadgets you own. Leave people over sixty alone. We saw the world before the internet, and navigated the world after it. And through it all, they didn't just get by β€” they thrived.
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Big_Block_Buyer retweeted
$RKLB $ASTS: Shoutout to fellow space nerds for making it to Dow Jones News! @JacobKeeton20 @BrettKrieger12 @SpaceInvestor_D These 'nerds' earned millions betting on space years before the SpaceX IPO made it cool By Christine Ji (MarketWatch) -- Everyday investors - like a 'Star Trek' fan, an accountant and an engineer - use satellite imagery, track planes and visit rocket-launch sites After quitting his semiconductor-engineering job last year, 35-year-old Jacob Keeton left his hometown of Beaverton, Ore., and embarked on a 12,000-mile road trip across America and back. Over the span of 11 weeks, Keeton drove through Idaho, Utah, Oklahoma and many other states, visiting over a dozen national parks on his journey. The ultimate destination and reason behind Keeton's voyage was an unassuming six square miles of land hugging the Atlantic Ocean. For decades, Wallops Island, Va., has been home to a NASA rocket-testing facility. More recently, it's begun to accommodate launch pads for an aerospace company called Rocket Lab (RKLB). Keeton has accumulated tens of thousands of Rocket Lab shares and become a millionaire, brokerage documents reviewed by MarketWatch show. For Keeton, it's been a dream come true. "I've been a sci-fi nerd and space fan my whole life," Keeton told MarketWatch. He now identifies as "semi-retired," attributing his work status to the 40 hours a week or more he spends monitoring his Rocket Lab investment and the space industry at large. "I haven't got to visit the other facilities yet, but they're all marked on my Google Maps," Keeton said. "I've searched imagery of every kind from every facility. I've looked up tax records for anything that might have some nugget of information." He's even bought satellite imagery to track Rocket Lab's construction progress at Wallops. Keeton also made a pit stop in Florida to see 28-year-old accountant and fellow space investor Brett Krieger. Together, Krieger, Keeton and a third collaborator known anonymously as Space Investor host a weekly Tuesday live audio broadcast on X, drawing listeners ranging from thrill-seeking retail investors to NASA scientists. Krieger and Space Investor have seen the value of their portfolios inflate to millions of dollars over the past two years as Rocket Lab shares exploded by over 2,300%, to $108 as of Tuesday, and its market valuation reached $63 billion. The trio - who met on X through Rocket Lab discussion threads - made risky bets on a company whose success once seemed just about impossible. They are part of a crew of swashbuckling space enthusiasts and retail traders who explored for riches in the cosmos and now look smart on the eve of the blockbuster SpaceX IPO. These stargazers evoke comparisons to the investor cults that have surrounded stocks like Palantir (PLTR). While there is some overlap - Krieger currently owns Palantir shares and Space Investor has traded them in the past - investing large sums of money in rocket science demands a unique degree of grit and idealism veering on masochism. Krieger's investment plunged him into an open-source intelligence community that obsessively tracks every crumb of Rocket Lab news and data. "There are people going over to the New Zealand facilities every day, taking pictures of the Neutron progress or tracking planes, boats and shipping supplies over to Virginia," Krieger said. For decades, space exploration stagnated under the purview of bureaucracy-steeped government processes. Many scientists viewed Elon Musk's mission of building a private spaceflight company with contempt as SpaceX rocket launches failed one after another, incinerating some of Musk's personal fortune and putting his companies on track for bankruptcy in 2008. Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck seemed to stand even less of a chance when he founded the company in 2006, as an amateur rocketeer with no college degree and no funding. Beck hails from the southern tip of New Zealand, a country whose dominant industries are dairy products and tourism. But Beck had the crazy idea of creating a small rocket that would make frequent and cheap trips to space. As Beck later recalled on the "Relentless" podcast, in the early days he would scavenge for spare parts in junkyards to save money. Today, Rocket Lab's small-lift Electron rockets act like outer-space Ubers, delivering clusters of satellites into custom trajectories on behalf of imaging companies, government agencies and researchers. Electron is the second-most-launched U.S. rocket, trailing only SpaceX's Falcon 9. The company has also built its own vertically integrated satellite-manufacturing division. For his contributions to the New Zealand aerospace industry, Beck was knighted in 2024. "We all call him Sir Peter Beck out of respect," Krieger said. Rocket Lab has yet to turn a profit. The company is currently spending hundreds of millions of dollars building Neutron, a much larger rocket scheduled to be test-launched on Wallops at the end of this year. The stock trades at a rich valuation multiple, 100 times trailing sales, according to FactSet. But against all odds, Rocket Lab and other private space companies have created a vibrant commercial ecosystem at a time when space is once again capturing the hearts and minds of mankind. SpaceX's impending public listing has sparked an industry-wide rally in space stocks. Missile defense systems, orbital data centers, asteroid mining and Mars colonies: The final frontier beckons with untold riches and glory that Rocket Lab and others are racing to claim. Rocket Lab's loyal supporters are confident that Beck and the company will be successful. "He's a madman genius," Space Investor said. 'I sold half of my portfolio to pay down my house, car and all my debt' Rocket Lab successfully completed 21 Electron launches in 2025. Keeton first heard about Rocket Lab when he was a college student studying mechanical engineering, following the inaugural launch of its Electron rocket in 2017. His classes included satellite design and orbital mechanics, and he worked on a university project to build the base station for a ground launch system. When rumors swirled in March 2021 that Rocket Lab planned to go public via a reverse merger with a special purpose acquisition company, Vector Acquisition Corp., Keeton jumped in and bought 200 shares of the SPAC. Rocket Lab officially debuted on the Nasdaq COMP in August 2021. Over the next few years, Keeton accumulated as much as 50,000 shares of the company even as the stock bottomed at $3.53 a share in April 2024. Keeton's average cost per share was $6.36 in September 2024, according to brokerage records. As Rocket Lab increased the cadence of its Electron launches and reported a blowout quarter in November 2024, the stock shot up. At the beginning of 2026, Keeton trimmed his Rocket Lab position as his portfolio hit a peak of $6.4 million. Keeton now holds around 11,000 shares of Rocket Lab; brokerage records viewed by MarketWatch show that Keeton has realized over $3 million in Rocket Lab gains. Keeton has invested in other space names such as AST SpaceMobile (ASTS), but he noted that Rocket Lab has always been his biggest holding. On top of buying and holding, Keeton likes to trade momentum-based options, he said. The "space craze" was what lured Space Investor back to stock picking after a decade on the sidelines. "I've always been looking to the stars...watching 'Star Trek,' 'Star Wars,' all of that," Space Investor said. In his free time, he builds Lego rockets and model rocket kits with his children. "We launch rocket models every summer together," Space Investor said. Making risky investments and borrowing excessively had nearly bankrupted him during the financial crisis, Space Investor told MarketWatch, but the 2019 public debut of space-tourism company Virgin Galactic (SPCE) inspired Space Investor to set aside a few thousand dollars into a "YOLO" account. Space Investor initiated a position in Rocket Lab in 2023 after reading "When the Heavens Went on Sale," a book about the commercial spaceflight industry starring new space startups like Rocket Lab, Planet Labs (PL), Astra Space and Firefly Aerospace (FLY). Impressed by author Ashlee Vance's description of Beck's dogged determination, Space Investor aggressively built up his position as shares of Rocket Lab fell. He set buy orders for 100 shares every 10-cent drop, accumulating up to 10,000 shares of Rocket Lab for as little as $3.50 per share, according to brokerage documents. Over the past year, Space Investor says his portfolio of space stocks - which also included names like AST SpaceMobile and Redwire (RDW) - crossed the $1 million mark. "I sold half of my portfolio to pay down my house, car and all my debt," Space Investor said. Space Investor would only speak on condition of anonymity. MarketWatch reviewed Space Investor's brokerage records and verified his identity. Wall Street takes off Over the past 18 months, institutional investors have joined the Rocket Lab trade and their participation in the stock has steadily grown, leading Needham analyst Ryan Koontz to initiate coverage of the stock in April 2025. Like the retail crowd, institutional investors have been charmed by Beck and his executive team, which Koontz believes is a major selling point for Rocket Lab. Rocket Lab successfully completed 21 Electron launches in 2025, giving Wall Street a major boost of confidence in the company. "There's a heavy fixed cost to running multiple launch facilities," Koontz told MarketWatch. "If you're not doing enough launches, it shows up in your margins, and it's not pretty." Rocket Lab's gross margins reached a record high of 38.2% in the most recent quarterly report, up from 28.8% a year ago, according to company filings. Koontz himself has been a space enthusiast his whole life. "I was always kind of a geeky kid," Koontz said. "It was always something of interest to me, outer space and rockets and that sort of stuff." Decades ago, he worked as a telecommunications engineer before becoming a sell-side analyst. With the recent influx of institutional capital into the space economy, previously inconceivable technological advancements are suddenly within reach. "There's been more and more engagement as they come up to speed on the whole sector and realize that this is no longer just a little niche defense and aerospace play," Koontz said of institutional investors. "It's becoming a commercial force and it's starting to disrupt terrestrial industries." But Rocket Lab retail investors are not just fair-weather friends. As the stock languished in penny-stock territory around the end of 2024, insurgent squads of space enthusiasts huddled in scattered corners of the internet. Space Investor's posts from that era would generate the occasional like or two. Outsiders would sometimes stumble across the Rocket Lab community and be swept up in its orbit. Brett Krieger sports official Rocket Lab gear. That's how Brett Krieger found his way to Rocket Lab and became the millionaire he is today. A skeptic when he first heard about the company in 2023, Krieger soon changed his mind as he learned more about Rocket Lab. The company's space-systems business is a "one-stop shop," Krieger said. "They can build your constellation, they can launch it and they will operate it." Krieger doubled down on his Rocket Lab position as the stock troughed. While Krieger declined to disclose his exact holdings, documents viewed by MarketWatch show that he's built up a substantial position in Rocket Lab with an average cost basis of $6.73 per share, gaining millions over the past three years. Krieger further immersed himself in the online community of space-stock fanatics and last year he opened a position in AST. "When the Heavens Went on Sale" - which was adapted into a 2024 HBO documentary titled "Wild Wild Space" - has since become a canonical text in the Rocket Lab community, credited for bringing mainstream awareness to the company. An anonymous X account by the name of @SpaceGhost has assembled a Rocket Lab Wiki compiling every interview, commercial satellite deal, transcript and available piece of data on the company. Rocket Lab investors geek out over the company's signature aesthetic, from its sleek black carbon-fiber Electron rockets to a custom-built mission-control center designed with pitch-black walls and crimson LED lighting. Krieger describes the room as "Darth Vader-themed." It's a vibe that Beck has leaned into by playing the "Star Wars" soundtrack throughout the headquarters, according to Vance's book. Fans purchase Rocket Lab-branded shirts, jackets, model rockets and even baby onesies. These self-described space nerds don't just live online. In April, Krieger drove two hours to Florida's Cape Canaveral to watch Blue Origin's third launch of its New Glenn rocket, which was carrying an AST BlueBird satellite. He was joined by fellow enthusiasts and investors, some of whom had flown in past midnight to catch the early-morning April 19 launch. Krieger and Keeton both plan to travel to Wallops to attend the Neutron launch later this year. Plans are circulating amongst the community to charter a private jet and throw a massive party, Krieger said. 'The second-worst thing that can happen' Blue Origin's next major test was not as successful as the one Krieger witnessed. On May 28, a fiery mushroom cloud enveloped Cape Canaveral as New Glenn's engine malfunctioned during a pre-flight test, blowing up the rocket, launch pad and other nearby infrastructure. "They say in the industry destroying a launch pad is the second-worst thing that can happen," Keeton said, "with the first being loss of a crew." The explosion has reportedly set back Blue Origin's progress by at least six months, not to mention derailed satellite-deployment timelines across the entire industry. Shares of Rocket Lab, AST, Planet Labs and other space stocks tumbled in the aftermath. It's a stark reminder of the space industry's inordinate risks, especially for newer space investors who entered the arena amidst the roaring momentum of the past two years. However, Clear Street analyst Greg Pendy sees the Blue Origin mishap as an opportunity for Rocket Lab to seize market share. "We see a backlog of satellites looking to launch, with canceled missions," Pendy told MarketWatch. When rockets do come back online, Pendy anticipates major congestion at launch points in the U.S. "Rocket Lab is unique because they have the ability to launch not only from the U.S. but also New Zealand," Pendy added. With the SpaceX IPO coming this week, space investors face another source of uncertainty. Undoubtedly, Musk's SpaceX is the trailblazer to which the rest of the industry owes its existence. But it's also a ruthless competitor, and its record-smashing public listing threatens to crowd out other names in the space ecosystem. "Everyone is wondering if it's going to suck up liquidity in the field or if it's going to draw more eyes and liquidity," Keeton said. "I personally think it's going to be a bit of both." After the SpaceX IPO, Keeton plans to take a break from actively monitoring his space investments. His next plan for retirement is very down-to-earth. "I'm moving into a van starting this summer," Keeton said. -Christine Ji
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$UMAC article for our potential new taxpayer led investors from Jan - a lot has already changed but the thesis is the same
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$UMAC scaled out partial 30 Going on 12 year anniversary following stocks in the Drone Zone
$UMAC so far so good I am so over weight this, so watching this a lot more than anything else Pretty happy it bounced exactly where it needed to.
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We are excited to announce that we will be ringing the opening bell at the #TorontoStockExchange this Thursday, June 4. A proud moment for our team and shareholdersβ€”and another meaningful milestone in Aduro’s journey. From our public listing on the @CSE_News, to ringing the @Nasdaq bell, to now trading on the @tsx_tsxv under ticker ACT, each step reflects steady progress across our technical, commercial, and investor engagement efforts. As we mark this moment, we remain focused on advancing Hydrochemolyticβ„’ Technology across waste plastics, heavy hydrocarbons, and renewable oils. #TorontoStockExchange #OpeningBell $ADUR #CleanTech #EcoInnovation $ACT.TO
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$UMAC Treating this like an earnings reaction Same wording as $PDYN - let's see what the 15/30 minute low is and then trade against that I took 10% of my common off in $24s in pre and feel blessed to do so. This news could have easily came out when the chart was not in a good position and I'd be kicking a wall vs this being my top position. My price target for next year was in the $40s and I didn't expect mid $20s til late this year. I think I will take some 27 calls off this morning as the volatility should spike hence I might get some extra juice on the premium. Maybe. 28 LEAPs wont be going anywhere until Labor Dayish 2027. ----------------- If you were around in the old drone days these things took off when Hegseth pumped them I believe summer of 2025. Then they promptly dumped. I made the mistake of believing Heggy and not realizing just how SLOW the federal government works because up until 18 months ago I invested solely in private enterprise companies. So I made a lot of unrealized gains and gave back way too much of it (mostly $RCAT and $UMAC at the time, more the former than the latter) I won't make this same mistake twice. Either this thing will capture the people's attention over next week or two, or it will gap and crap etc. Whatever the case this is headed to triple digits PPS in the next "X" years. I'll keep "X" to myself for now. $40s is reasonable by end of 2027.
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$UMAC in the Supply Chain Drone Zone
$UMAC nice early start Total comfort on this story - no clue where the PPS goes, will go up and down. It's all about year end 2027 revenue from here; when the market starts to discount that we will get fireworks.
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$LPTH going for 24 year highs today?? "As for me.... I like the stock!"
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Big_Block_Buyer retweeted
This is pretty much the state of the whole stock market now
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This is why I am excited about $FABC. $KOPN CEO just stated on his earnings call this morning that the AI part of his business will be bigger than his entire defense business. $FABC is 100% that side of KOPN's business. The interconnect business is a $100B industry , its the critical part of connectivity in an AI data center. $FABC is making the start of the art technology through KOPN. The speed of an AI data center is the speed of the GPU the speed of the CPU the speed of the interconnect. "Huang's Law", named after Jensen Huang from $NVDA states that the speed of AI compute (determined by the above formula) is going to double every two years. This is an evolution from Moore's Law. Gordon Moore, former CEO of $INTC, in 1965, said that CPUs will double in speed every 18 months, But this law has run out after working for 60 years. Its not just CPUs now, but GPUs and interconnects. Which is why NVDA is investing billions in optics, away from $CRDO's ($22 billion market cap) copper-based interconnects. $FABC ($30 million market cap) will have the only viable MicroLED interconnect on the market. That's the arbitrage.
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$UMAC Drone Motors now Batteries
πŸ“’ 𝐉𝐔𝐒𝐓 𝐈𝐍: $UMAC Unusual Machines to Acquire Drone Battery Maker Upgrade Energy πŸ‘‰ 𝐊𝐞𝐲 𝐇𝐒𝐠𝐑π₯𝐒𝐠𝐑𝐭𝐬: ➀ Unusual Machines signs definitive agreement to acquire π”π©π π«πšππž π„π§πžπ«π π². ➀ Deal valued at approximately $πŸ“πŸπŒ in cash, stock, and earnout consideration. ➀ Upgrade Energy manufactures π›πšπ­π­πžπ«π² and power systems for drones. ➀ Company operates πŸπŸ–,πŸ“πŸŽπŸŽ-square-foot California production facility. ➀ Unusual Machines plans second π›πšπ­π­πžπ«π² production site in Orlando. ➀ Acquisition expands 𝐍𝐃𝐀𝐀-𝐜𝐨𝐦𝐩π₯𝐒𝐚𝐧𝐭 drone component capabilities. ➀ Upgrade Energy to join Unusual Machines’ growing 𝐝𝐨𝐦𝐞𝐬𝐭𝐒𝐜 𝐝𝐫𝐨𝐧𝐞 ecosystem
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$KOPN not participating in The Drone Zone Weakness today $UMAC $ONDS ER CC investors on deck next week
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