The $14 Stock You’ll Wish You Bought before the SpaceX IPO
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"in 2021, I bought Palanteer about $20ish dollars a share"
Contexto: “My name is Felix. I'm an ex-investment banker. And in 2021, I bought Palanteer about $20ish dollars a share and everyone else said it was overvalued.”
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"So, this is going to be a tiny position, otherwise it's it's it's lunacy."
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Well, while everyone's obsessing over the Space X's IPO at about $2 trillion valuation, I'm going to give you four already listed space stocks that could deliver massive returns before SpaceX even goes public. Because what you want to ask yourself is this, by the time the SpaceX IPO happens, are the best returns already gone, or is there maybe more in this? We got to cover that. My name is Felix. I'm an ex-investment banker. And in 2021, I bought Palanteer about $20ish dollars a share and everyone else said it was overvalued. And that position is up, I don't know, 500% today or something. And I'm not saying that to show off. I'm saying that because I have a system for how to identify asymmetric opportunities, which means things that if they go up, they could go up 5x, 10x, right? And right now, the space economy is setting up to be one of the biggest wealth creation events of the next decade. But you need to know where to look and how to look. I'm not talking about the obvious names like Rocket Lab or AS or something like that. Everybody already knows about them. So, we're going to go deep on those four stocks. We'll also touch upon whether it's a good idea to buy the SpaceX IPX. And I'm going to do something more for you. I've actually put together a complete breakdown of the SpaceX IPO um including all the stocks that we're going to cover in this here and you can download that for free because there's a lot of information in this video and I get that you might drift off after 15 minutes. So if you download that document and you're somebody who can learn and read better from from from reading then go to felix.org/spaceex. It's completely free. No credit card required or anything like that. Um and it'll show you four space stocks or most investors have never heard of sort of undiscovered opportunities that could do really really well if you know how to handle it and if you know how to handle the risk side of that and that's very very important. But before we dive into those four stocks we need to talk about and there time stamps you can jump around if you must. We need to talk about what's really happening with SpaceX. So everyone's really excited about the IPO. It'll be huge. And I totally get it. SpaceX is definitely the most important space company in the world. Starship is incredible. Starink is printing money. Starink will be like being the internet and mobile phone provider for the entire freaking globe. So that could be a 10 trillion company, right? But what Wall Street doesn't really want to know is that when a company like SpaceX goes public, the IPO is not designed to make you money. It is designed to make the early investors rich. Think about it. SpaceX's been around for 20 years. The private equity guys, and I know of some of them, they're already in there. They've made a 100x returns. A 100x returns. So, they put a million dollars into it. They're sitting at 100 million. They put $10 million into it. They're sitting at a billion dollars, but the money is locked up because it's not publicly trading stock. They can't access the money. They just look rich, but they I'm not really rich, right? So, the IPO is the exit. I mean, I mean, exit, that's exactly it. They're selling. They're selling their shares to you. That's what Wall Street calls exit liquidity. That's what they call you and me, the retail investors. And it's exactly what's happening with companies or like you know with Uber and Lyft and Wei Work. They went public at massive valuations. The insiders cashed out and then retail investors bled for years. And I'm not saying that SpaceX is a bad investment. I actually think it's a very exciting investment. But I let me show you what happens. So if this is your timeline, this is day zero. This is the IP uh excuse my handwriting. I'm running with a mouse. What happens is that six months into this, when I use a text here, six months into it, something called the lockup period ends. And I've been there. I've invested in private equity and then it did an IPO and then what did I want to do? I wanted to sell because I'd been in this thing for a few years and I wanted to lock in my gains. So what happens at 6 months? So whether the stock price you know whether it goes up and there's nothing or whatever at six months all the institutional money you can sell and wants to sell they sell. So you typically get a pretty big dip. So that is the biggest risk. It is that six month theory because in the first six months you're not allowed to sell. Again I've been there. It's very very painful because you watch the stock go up and then go down. It's very frustrating because you want to sell and then you know you sell on the six-month mark. And yeah, SpaceX fundamentals are pretty strong, but it's listing at like a trillion and a half or maybe$2 trillion dollars. So even if they do everything perfectly, you're looking at maybe a 2x return over a period of time, which is solid, but it isn't lifechanging unless you have, you know, a lot of money to invest. Now, the companies I'm going to show you, these are already listed right now. Well, so they've been through the exit pain point and they're companies that build the rockets, the space stations, the hardware that will power the space economy and most of them are valued at a couple of billion dollars. So if one of them becomes a dominant player in their niche, this could potentially 10x, 20x, maybe even more. So that's the difference here with very very large companies where the smart money's already made all their money and then smaller niche companies where the opportunity is actually greater and these guys don't compete with SpaceX. They need SpaceX to they need SpaceX to succeed because SpaceX lowers the launch costs. It opens access to space. It creates the foundation and the hype for the entire economy. So SpaceX wins, all the space companies win. So, let me show you these four companies. I'm going to walk you through them. I'm going to show you the fundamentals. I'm going to show you the stock charts. Even don't be scared of stock charts. A lot of useful information in there. But you're sitting there thinking, I would really like to have some 20 to 50x returns. I'm not promising those. But you want to know what drives a company to those returns? Then I'm going to teach you that. I'm not here because it would take me like an hour and a half or two hours. But on the weekend, like for the first time ever and probably the first time ever and the last time ever, I'm running a free workshop on the weekend. It's called how to find 10x return stocks or 10, you know, multi-baggers as people call them. And I will literally break down Wall Street's rules for how we find them, how we identify them. And it's pretty simple to learn. It's literally something you can learn in like an hour or two if you join me live. So, grab yourself a free ticket. There is a link down below. I think it's called 10x returns.org. And all you need to do is be on time, take some notes, and if you're hoping for a replay, it isn't going to happen. Um, I spend quite a few hours working on that workshop already, and I'll do some more as I'm flying flying um for the next 12 hours uh after this here. I'll work on that because I want to make that really really valuable for you. But so so up for it because it'll be probably the last time we do that. And just having one of these 10xs can actually change your outcomes and your life completely, which is which is the cool thing. So, we're going to look at four stocks there. I put them on the screen already. I don't want to hold you hostage. And let me walk you through one by one. Red wire is sort of the picks and shovels of the space. Kicker symbol is RDW. And if you remember the California Gold Rush, you're probably not that old, but you never know. Um, the people who make money were selling the picks and the shovels and the jeans to the miners. So red wire is that pix and trouble play. What do they actually do? Space infrastructure. What the heck does that mean? Well, they build the hardware and the systems that make everything else in space possible. So solar arrays, antennas, sensors, robotic systems, and and in space manufacturing technology. So if you think about it this way, every satellite needs power. Every spacecraft needs antennas. Every space station needs structural components. And Red Wire builds all that. So they don't need to launch rockets or land on the moon. that is need space activity to increase because everybody needs their hardware and their solar arrays or in the international space station right now that power the entire station. Their 3D printing tone technology has been operating in space. So you can make stuff in space. Um they make star trackers, sun sensors, composite beams, all the kind of core stuff that every spacecraft needs. So why now? Well, we're entering a period of massive space buildout. There's the OTMUS program of NASA that needs hardware for the lunar missions. The Department of Defense is investing billions in space capabilities. Commercial companies are planning private space stations to replace the ISS. And these guys are going to supply them all probably. So they've they've got relationships with NASA, the Department of Defense, commercial space companies, and 60% of their money comes from the government, which is pretty good because it's usually pretty stable business. Now, is it a good business? Well, if we go into the Winston app here, named after my golden retriever, and first of all, you look at all these companies here, and you'll see that they've all got pretty poor scores, right? We score companies about 100th. Pretty terrible. Why is that so terrible? Because it's very early. now because I realized that this isn't very useful if you're a growth investor or 10x investor. Um I'm literally me and my team are building something like this right now. So every growth stock will have a little icon here that will say growth and you can hover over that and you'll see something like this because for growth stocks really what you want to look at is revenue growth. You want to look at are they spending money on R&D? You want to look at are the insiders, the founders, the managers holding or selling the shares. Very important. And how much cash have they got? So, we're going to put that together for everybody. And if you think that will be useful for to check against all your growth stocks and ideas, then there is a there's a free trial down below to the to the Winston app. So, you can check that out. And if you don't like it, we just cancel it. No questions asked. Uh, but I can tell you that RDW has revenue that's growing. Um, pretty good backlog of orders, but the real catalyst will be companies like Axiom and Blue Origin and Voyager and so on. They're going to they're building commercial space stations and Redwire is likely a supplier to these guys and then so power supplies, life support systems, manufacturing equipment and so on. Um the NASA Luna Gateway station also needs infrastructure. Again, Red Wire is competing for those contracts so they can get those contracts. That could be a really really big catalyst for these guys. And if you look at the stock chart here and this is what it looks like and you might think, "Oh my god, it's down. It was down like 46%." Well, the beautiful thing with that is that going up another 80% is also, you know, entirely feasible. Uh, so why am I looking at this right now? We're going to look about this a little bit more on the weekend. You see this recent high and where we are right now, we're at the same level. So, if you break out above that, that's a very, very good thing. And then you're probably going to go up to $20ish dollars and then you're probably going to hit your head on that, bounce a little bit, and then the question is, are you going to break out of that again? in which case you might go much much higher. But what I'm also loving is that I can see institutional money buying this. You can see it. We can see it right there. It might be hedge funds, whoever. Doesn't really matter. But I can see it them buying it. And therefore, that's something that I'm looking at. I'm not telling you to buy it. I'm not a registered financial adviser. This is not, you know, financial advice. This is just me sharing my research with you. And do please read the document that's that's attached to this. But, you know, this is a $2 billion company. This could become a $20 billion company. It's quite feasible, right? um could become a $200 billion company. It's entirely possible. That would be, you know, a lot harder for them to do. So, that's what we're looking at. Um the the growth stock card like this will be available uh hopefully today or tomorrow. So, you guys can can all check that out. But, let me talk about stocks, which is Voyager, ticker symbol V, is kind of fascinating because they're building what could be the replacement for the International Space Station. So they're defense and tech and space company. They operate defense and national security space solutions and then Starlap space stations. So the defense and national security stuff builds missile defense interceptors, kill vehicles, hypersonic missiles, um radiation hardened communication equipment and so on which is obviously getting some real revenue right now. Right. The space solutions part provides in space propulsion systems, infrastructure, all that kind of stuff. So the plumbing uh of a space operation and then there is the thing called spa star and Voyager is literally building a commercial space station called Starlab in partnership with Airbus and it's designed to provide continuous human presence in sort of low earth orbit after the ISS is decommissioned which is planned for around 2030. So, why is that happening? Because ISS was launched in 1998. It's pretty old. It's been in space for 25 years. And and NASA said, "We're going to take it down." But NASA also doesn't want to lose access to being in space. They want commercial companies to step in and they want them to rebuild the station or replace the station. And NASA has awarded commercial space station contracts. And Voyager Starab is one of the leading contenders in that. So when the ISS goes away, someone's going to fill that void. Voyager is positioning to be that somebody. And what I really like about these guys is not only is their revenue growing, but because they have the defense contracts, they're not burning through cash, so they can afford to do the space stuff because they've got cash coming in from defense. Now, if you look at the IPO here, sort of what I was talking about with with with SpaceX, and it might well look, you know, go the other way, but they listed in June, and by the time the end of the year came about, um, you know, the company went down some 70 odd percent. SpaceX might well be different because it is a very, very good business. But that's what I'm saying. Why do people sell out about 120 days into this, trading days into this? Because they know about the exit after 6 months. So people like kind of panic and wait for that and then it recovers. So often that gives you a nice entry point that might be lower risk than if you buy the IPO itself. Now if I look at the actual chart here, I've got a high here, right? That one. Got a high here. That one. And guess where we are right now. So we done it three times. I've done bugger all since mid 2025 or even Yeah, mid 2025. So if we break out of this meaningfully on the back of the excitement around SpaceX, there is a very decent chance this stock could go much much higher and we could actually reclaim potentially its all-time highs which in itself will be about 80% up. Um and the business has gotten better since it listed. Now, if you think that the only launch company worth in investing is SpaceX and maybe Rocket Lab, you might be missing the one flying under the radar, which is Firefly. Their flagship product is something called the Alpha Rocket, which is smart small launch vehicle designed to be well to bring small satellites up there. But they're also developing something called Equips, a medium lift launch vehicle that's going to compete in the larger payload market. it's going to compete with with SpaceX. And they've already been selected for NASA missions to deliver payloads to the moon. And these guys went public, if you go back in time here, quite a long way in time, at about $24. Right now, it's trading at about 43, but it's been some serious ups and downs as you can clearly see. Um, and what do I see? Well, I see it actually breaking out. I see it moving on up, so to speak. Each high is high is is is higher than the previous. each low is low higher than the previous uh and there is some serious interest right now in the entire space sector. might be worth looking at. And why now I told you we're going to put the the growth metrics live, right? We've already partially done that and you can see the revenue growth there. It's really really really accelerating. That's kind of what we're looking at, right? Okay. They're spending less on R&D relative to revenue. Um that could be that they've already done a lot of the upfront spending because they've been around for a while. They have $300 million cash on hand, which is pretty decent. So that kind of sort of qualifies them. And I should have mentioned these guys have landed on the moon. Seriously, they've actually landed on the moon, which is pretty pretty cool. So, they can definitely build stuff that can land on the moon. And the military, the US military wants the ability to rapidly deploy satellites. So, if there's a threat somewhere, they want to say, I want a satellite up there, you know, very, very quickly. And that's the sort of thing that Firefly does very, very well. Now, the next dog is probably not one that you've heard of. Um, it's probably not one that you'd look at even. and it's called Orbit International OBT. Let me just pull it up here. And the numbers don't look particularly great. It's it's a teeny tiny company. Um $13 million market cap. Um and therefore it sort of falls out of the radar of what institutions are looking at. Why it listed at $15 is trading at four is total cash burn. But what I like and we'll talk a lot about that on Saturday if you want to learn how to find potential 10 access. This is something that we like. Again, I'm going to explain that in a lot more detail on Saturday. Essentially, this thing has done bugger all since 2009. Yeah, that's a long period of time to underperform. Definitely no respective form. But it's a because it is such a tiny company and because Wall Street can't really invest in it because it's too small. It is the kind of asometric opportunity that I potentially love. So, what do they do? Well, they design and manufacture missionritical electronic components, power units for defense contractors, government procurement, R&D labs, all that stuff. And they have an electronic group, they have a power group. So they built these ultra rugged human machine interface devices, sort of keyboards, displays, control panels that could survive battlefield conditions, airborne conditions, space conditions. And they used the military aircraft, naval vessels, and so on. They make LCDs that you can read in the sunlight, which would be very cool. I can never read my laptop in the sunlight. They also built highly reliable power supplies. All the kind of highly reliable, uninterrupted stuff that the military would like, particularly if they're going into space. So the aerospace contractors, the same contractors building satellites, spacecraft, electronics, ground control systems, space-based military platforms, well this equipment that these guys build goes into that. And we know the department of war is increasingly spending a ton of money on space-based capabilities. So the demand for these missionritical militarygrade electronical components will grow. And if you look at just the maths here, you know, say they grow their revenue from the tiny 25 million to 50 million. That's 100% growth. It's the sort of thing that could make a stock like this on tiny volume. you know, just you just need one hedge fund to buy it and the thing could blow back up to, you know, $25 or something like that, in which case you would have made a lot of money. Again, I'm not saying that you definitely will. This is obviously a highly speculative play, but it's the sort of thing that makes traders money, but only if you manage your risk right. So, this is going to be a tiny position, otherwise it's it's it's lunacy. So, if you compare all of these, uh, and we also talk about that on Saturday if you want to learn like the full framework so you can find these yourself. Um, RDW, medium risk, medium reward. Voyager, high risk, potentially high reward. Um, the highest risk, of course, is the smallest player. The lowest risk is RDW. Doesn't mean there isn't risk in it, but it just means there is less risk in it than if you buy a micro stock. So, how do you deal with this? Well, you got to make a plan. You need to understand your risk tolerance. You probably want to be in maximum 5% of your portfolio or something like that in space, unless you have very strong views on it. You want to understand you know what is the core stock what's the growth stock watch for some of the catalysts that I mentioned some of the contracts coming out SpaceX itself now SpaceX is also going to suck up a lot of money think about it this way we're you know the top of the market massive rally these guys are going to suck up so many billions of dollars are people going to sell other things to buy SpaceX that's a real possibility that Wall Street's worried about so you always want to have a an exit plan but fundamentally the space economy is about 500 billion today. We expect it to be close to 2 trillion by 2035 with some pretty significant growth. Uh that might give you a better better visual here. So the winners are going to do very well and I think the naysayers on SpaceX are wrong. Yes, I think it could get a very very bumpy ride whether it goes up or down and nobody knows 6 months into it. I know a lot of smart people are selling. But if you become the mobile phone operator and the internet operator and the data supplier to every business, every person pretty much on the planet and also get a ton of military contracts because you're you got more satellites than everybody else and therefore you have better data than everybody else. that is potentially the biggest company in the world and therefore a valuation that is far beyond what you know an Nvidia is or an Apple is is actually possible. So if you've got some value out of this get yourself the free workbook the free research uh at felix or space x and then really the biggest investment you can make at any time in life is in yourself and in your skill level. Um, and that's why I'm running this free workshop for you is exercise. It's the first one we've ever done. Last one I think we'll ever do. And you will learn how to identify the kind of stocks that have the potential to 10x and it's going to be fun. Uh, bring a piece of paper or a notebook or something and if you got some value or you know some people who might get value out of the free training, forward it to them. That would be the best thing you could possibly do because then you are spreading the joy of of of being a more skilled investor. And I thank you for watching. It is confirmed that Cuba has stockpiled hundreds of attack drones that can reach US soil. And while that sounds terrifying, there is an opportunity in this very strangely. most.