🚨Opportunity of a Life Time! (These 6 Stocks Could PRINT Millions Soon)

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3NittyekA4

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Analyzed

Solicitado Em

June 21, 2026 at 06:01 AM

Desempenho Geral

-6,35%

Recomendações

NVDA BUY
"Top of my list would be Nvidia."
Contexto: “So, if I was starting fresh today, I to me it's simple. Top of my list would be Nvidia.”
Preço na data de publicação: $210,69
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $210,96 (Jul 11, 2026)
Lucro/Perda: +$0,27 (+0,13%)
AVGO BUY
"As far as my other pick, I would say Broadcom."
Contexto: “As far as my other pick, I would say Broadcom.”
Preço na data de publicação: $411,35
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $399,97 (Jul 11, 2026)
Lucro/Perda: $-11,38 (-2,77%)
VRT BUY
"The next one is Vertive VRT."
Contexto: “The next one is Vertive VRT.”
Preço na data de publicação: $333,05
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $318,86 (Jul 11, 2026)
Lucro/Perda: $-14,19 (-4,26%)
GOOGL BUY
"my first is going to be ... Alphabet or Google."
Contexto: “So, my first is going to be no surprise because I talk about it a lot on my channel, but it's Alphabet or Google.”
Preço na data de publicação: $368,03
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $358,89 (Jul 10, 2026)
Lucro/Perda: $-9,14 (-2,48%)
GOOGL BUY
"I knew it was very undervalued last year when I bought pretty heavy."
Contexto: “So, Google to me, um, I still believe is super undervalued and I knew it was very undervalued last year when I bought pretty heavy.”
Preço na data de publicação: $368,03
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $358,89 (Jul 10, 2026)
Lucro/Perda: $-9,14 (-2,48%)
IONQ BUY
"The next one for me is ion."
Contexto: “The next one for me is ion.”
Preço na data de publicação: $56,55
Preço de fechamento do último dia: $42,86 (Jul 11, 2026)
Lucro/Perda: $-13,69 (-24,21%)
BRK.B BUY
"I'm talking about Berkshire Hathaway."
Contexto: “And I'm talking about Berkshire Hathaway.”
BRK.B BUY
"that's one of the ones that I've been buying the most heavy in my portfolio."
Contexto: “...that's one of the ones that I've been buying the most heavy in my portfolio.”

Transcrição Completa

With all these exciting sectors and stocks seemingly going up to the moon, which one should we focus on? Where should we be researching? And right now, with things seeming like they're all the way at the top, is it a good time to invest or should we wait? Or how should we structure our portfolios in order to get that upside, but also be careful of the crash possibly coming? Today, I have Brian of Business with Brian on with me, and we're going to dive deep. He has an awesome YouTube channel that I'm sure you've already checked out, but if not, his link is down in the description below. Today's discussion is going to be a master class and I'm looking forward to hearing what he has to say. We also go through everyone's favorite question. If you could only invest in three stocks today in the middle of 2026, which ones would you pick? My name is Nolan Goa. My students call me Professor G, and I made this channel to make investing simplified. Remember that all investing carries risk, so do your own research. This is not financial advice, and I'm not a financial adviser. >> Thanks again for coming on here, Brian. This is exactly what I have been excited for for about a month now. Most of my community members have asked for you by name. So, I am excited to uh hear what you have to say for today. How you doing today? I >> I'm doing great. I'm doing great. It's good to good to be able to chat with you again. I love it. >> Love it, man. Well, genuinely, your channel is one of the only ones that I actually watch and learn something. So, thank you for that, honestly, from the bottom of my heart. Uh, and I don't take that lightly. I hope you don't either. Um, but let's just jump right in. Um, I I'm excited because honestly, your last couple of videos, like the last, I would say 10, honestly, have been very, very solid. And they've all been surrounding a certain theme. And I don't know if you're doing this on purpose or not. I'd love to hear. But it does seem like right now, more than any time in history, or at least more than any time in recent history, there's just a lot of craziness, a lot of excitement around so many different things. We have things like quantum computing and AI and crypto and now space and all these other things. Help me understand, you know, what what what should my viewers be thinking about? Where should they be putting their time and effort as far as research uh for these types of, you know, new things that are coming up? Uh it it really comes down to trend. And the hard part is how do you get ahead of the trend? And this is something where like my corporate life, that's what I did. I used to buy men's apparel which seems awkward because like I wear the same style of shirt every time and um you know I used to work in toys like that that was like my my framework of what I used to do. So to me I love this because I love investing and that's kind of what you need to look for. So quantum think about quantum for me that's exciting. It's exciting for what it's going to do. It's exciting for what it's going to open up for technologies research all of those different you know areas of improvement. But when you think about it from an enduser, uh when you think of the masses, you and I, we're never going to see it. We'll probably never touch it. We'll never experience it firsthand. Uh we we'll see the impacts of it, but we'll never interact with it. Um you think of nuclear. Nuclear, I I genuinely hope you don't interact with it firsthand, but once again, we'll we'll it'll feed other things. Um and then robotics. Robotics is another one that's super exciting. It's going to change the dynamics for everything that we do, but once again, when are you going to touch it? when are you going to feel it? U so see you almost need to have the mindset of okay I I've got young kids right now what is it going to look like in 15 years like we talk about driving we talk about all these other things like so many things are going to be automated but it's just an extension of AI and this is one where even when I when I talk to to people more as an inner circle it's what what do you think is going to happen with AI and people often refer to as baseball like how many innings we're in or you know what quarter are we in and you people will come to me and say, "Hey, we're definitely at halftime with AI uh like the next stretch like we're going to go into software, right? We're like this is going to be the next area that kicks off." And I kind of scratch my head and go, "Well, software is a component. Yes, we saw that with the growth cycle with cell phones and and the, you know, other components of tech." But I would disagree in the sense that we're probably in only the first two minutes of the football game. Like we're we're not even close to finishing the first quarter in my opinion. And that's that's what I think almost makes it more exciting because think about AI in the sense that we can all interact with it, the masses, everybody. That's what changes this technology from any other. And I would say that's just the foundation. What's going to take it to the next level or what's the next stack on top of that? In my opinion, it's it's going to be edge computing because it needs to move from the data warehouse into being closer to us. That's a double-edged sword because there I feel bad for anyone under the age of 25. Like the the mere mention of AI probably makes them cringe because it it's just destroying every aspect of their future self. But for us being able to invest in it and what it's going to do for society, it it's very massive. And with that consumption is going to mean massive growth for the rest of us, especially if we're able to invest in it early. So that's why like some of the stocks we we talk about, I'm going to probably focus more on edge computing because I truly believe that's what's going to have mass consumption and purchasing and drive what society is going to want from the next level of technology. And that's just merely a that's a downstream effect of what can we truly want to invest in or what's going to cause supply and demand. It's always about supply and demand. Stock prices are about supply and demand. It always comes down to the human element. And what do humans want? They want more. They want easier life. They want all these other things. And I think this is the way to get there within a reasonable price because robotics are going to help us. Yes. But for everyone to be able to afford one, not realistic. But >> everything else more within reach. I that that's my point of view. What's what's yours? >> Man, I I actually really love that point of view. When I'm thinking about it, I'm trying to think of, okay, is that uh repeatable, right? Like has that happened in history? And when we think about all the companies that are or at least most of the companies that are our largest companies, they are companies that we all interact with in some way, shape or form, right? Google, Microsoft, um even Tesla, you know, Amazon, we're very much using each and every one of those things. And so I like that take a lot. I I personally do I have been deep diving into quantum computing trying to really understand it and there's so much to to grasp there. So I feel like when you're talking about innings I feel like I'm in the first inning of understanding that. But just what I do understand I like what I see. I like the problems that it can solve because I really do think that there are going to be those types of problems and specifically um with cyber security. I think that could be a huge one that quantum computing is going to help with a lot. Um but I I would agree. I think AI is front and center, but I think everybody at this point is like, well, Nvidia already made its run. Um, you know, Mic run already made its run, so I'm looking for the next thing. But what you're saying is that we're in the first two minutes of the football game or right now with the World Cup going on, we're in the first two minutes of uh >> So, uh, yeah, I mean, uh, I totally see where you're coming from there. I definitely have a heavier portion of my portfolio as far as individual stocks in more AI, more picks and shovels type situation kind of what you're talking about, but I am excited to hear your uh stocks at the end of this because I would love to learn something new. So, that's awesome. >> It's going to be very boring. >> Well, I'm here for the boring. Most of my >> already >> most of my stuff is boring as well. Well, that's great. And thank you so much. I mean, it it's really good for our viewers to hear your mindset behind it, right? I think a lot of YouTube videos, I'm not going to bash on, you know, anybody else, but what I would say is there's a lot of YouTube videos and even blogs out there saying, "Buy this stock. Buy these five stocks." not a lot of why or okay yes these five stocks are good buys but here are the metrics or here's the reasoning behind why I believe these are good stocks to buy because there are other ones out there I think people forget that there's not just this group of 10 good stocks out there's a multitude of opportunity out there and you can that's why I was trying to think like okay how could I repeat the process of your why um and it makes a lot of sense awesome man. Okay, so speaking on um kind of the the big front and center things right now, we have the SpaceX IPO, we have Anthropic, we have we got Open AI, we have Stripe, we have so many huge IPOs happening this year. How should we think about this? Like what what what are your thoughts for the IPOs? I know you just did a SpaceX IPO video, which was great. I've done something similar. Um, I would love to hear, you know, what are your thoughts on these huge IPOs and just IPOs in general? >> They may make some enemies or gain some more friends. My opinion, having been on the other side of the business, IPOs are fantastic for insiders to make bank. That is the whole point. It's for insiders to have an exit. It's to throw it out there, have everyone get excited, and put their money in so that you can make a fantastic profit. And that's why I don't love private equity and the whole private aspect of that because there's only a few people that can invest there. Some of us are lucky enough to be able to do that and there's laws that are changing that are hopefully going to make that more open up for people because the rich people are getting exceptionally more rich off of these preIPO scenarios once they go IPO. IPOs like the pie has already been fully baked by the time we're able to actually get access to it. Great. there's a fully baked item with some crumbs and you get excited about it in hopes that it has a normal growth cycle and it has people excited about their product over time, but it's more of a linear growth. Whereas before it even becomes an IPO, it it's it hockey sticks is like what we often reference to is it just jumps right up because people get excited about what the new technology is and people want to be able to see it'll get there. The whole reason why those companies tend to go public in the first place is because they've been paying most of their internal employees with reserve stock units or you know some some equity in the business and that that keeps them in there when it goes to IPO so they can make their money. Once again for insiders it's the exit plan. For the rest of us like the hype is there for us to get excited to to buy their fully baked pie. I I don't love it. I don't I think IPOs are awesome for people to get into something that they haven't been able to do. But if you're smart about it, you can see that a lot of big companies, whether it be Google or, you know, Amazon, Microsoft, a lot of these companies are investing in these companies before they go public and you can make your money in a different way. So that's one thing that I highly recommend. Like people don't think of that angle. It all adds up. >> Well said. Well said. Yeah. I mean back in uh my earlier days in business I was a part of a company that we took company public and I've worked in venture capital and I've worked in private equity and so I've seen all the different sides of all this and it's exactly what you said and again I don't want to make enemies either but yeah >> um it it it's common knowledge at this point I think for for most people that that's where the money is made and the there can be money to be made afterwards but it's in a smart way and a >> timing to to a certain extent taking some calculated risks obviously because when I tell people that I'm not buying the SpaceX IPO or I'm not going to buy the Anthropic IPO. What I'm not saying is that company is bad or that company is not going to succeed. I do believe that these companies to be honest might be too big to fail and they will succeed in in my opinion. But it's the valuation that I have a problem with. I mean, the valuation of SpaceX at almost 2 trillion, I mean, in order for that to become the biggest company in the world at 5 trillion, it's only going to make you what, 150% on your money. That that's that's crazy. Like, Micron made over a,000% in the last year. There there's just a lot better valuations and and we have to start thinking like investors when we're talking about investing. So, love what you said there. >> Yeah. Oh, and and I love the fact that you have insight in it from a different perspective. How many people have that? So, I mean, that's that's treasure for for everyone to hear, too. >> Absolutely. Absolutely. Cool. Okay. So, I'm going to kind of throw a curveball at you on this one. And this is one that you and I probably get all the time from our uh community members and comments and maybe friends and family. And it's definitely something everyone's wondering and asking, but it's hard for us to answer. And so, I'll answer first just not to put you on the spot, but I appreciate that. >> So, the question basically is what do you think's going to happen in the stock market over the next year, right? Most people will ask that and they're just hoping to see, you know, like what what's where's the crystal ball? What do we have? And I know for me, my answer right now is it feels like we are held up by a house of cards or maybe even some slightly leaning dominoes. And at some point, one domino is going to go, the next one's going to go, and the whole thing's going to fall over. And it just especially having to do with valuation, having to do with geopolitical risk, having to do with I mean the the dollar debasement and ddollarization is still an issue. There's a lot of reasons why I believe that if there was a large sustained dip or crash in the market and it happened in the next 6 to 12 months, I wouldn't be surprised. On the flip side, AI and all these other really cool, fun projects are coming out of nowhere and perfectly timed that might hold the stock market up high enough that we may need a correction and we may actually not have one and it might just keep going up. Along with that, we have inflation continuing to rise, meaning that all of those stocks and ETFs are going to continue to rise at, you know, crazy valuations as it is. So to me it's it's a hard answer to give because at the end of the day if it goes down I could understand it. If it goes up I could understand it and people say okay cool. What do I do with that information? Well that's going to come with the question that I'm going to ask you after this. So as far as what do you think might happen in the next year? Like what are some things to think about at least for our audiences? I think that this is one of the most confusing times to ever be an investor and that's coming from somebody who's been doing this for, you know, 20ome years. It's illogical because in a lot of ways, like you you set it up, like there there's a house of cards in some ways where each week there's some crazy news like the news cycle is what dictates the stock market more than anything these days. one little blip and you're expecting things to come crashing down and it takes a small dip and then for somehow like a couple days later we we recover and sometimes I'm left scratching my head going how on earth are we able to to sustain that like do they realize these 10 other things just happened plus we have inflation pushing us down like the gas prices are skyrocketing like I don't have to say that because we all see it already but all of these things are wildly in some ways inappropriate because it by all means and senses like this of all times we should see major corrections and we don't which also has me even a little bit more worried because whatever that final straw is to break the back it's got to be pretty bad and it's it's going to be to your point in some ways catastrophic but I'm okay with that because like the AI trajectory isn't isn't changing like the buying isn't going to change our need our demand for the services that they provide. No matter what the stock market does, we're still going to require all of those things, all of those services. That's not going to change what we need and rely on. So for me, that's a sense of like the safety net that says that trajectory, everything is still going to be there. So in order for anything to fall and collapse is pretty hard to imagine. So that's good. But in the same point that you made is it seems like we are set up for something to finally like crack and the fact that it hasn't happened seems a little shocking. So to your point if it happens I'm not going to be surprised cuz I've been expecting it for a long time now. So I guess then to follow up something that you could answer is we know that you you know you you've shared your portfolio before. You you invest a little more aggressive and I would say even probably a little more aggressive than I do. So for you personally, I think just because I have a lot of viewers closer to age with you and then much older as well and so they're wondering if they have a more aggressive appro portfolio, what should they do right now? Is it that you know like for you personally are you thinking at all sell out of risky positions and hold some cash? Are you setting up your portfolio in a way where there is a possibility and probability that it will probably dip and you're going to be okay with that because these are longer term holds and then what do you do if it does dip? Like what what are some things that you could share that you're thinking through? Yeah. And that's a fantastic question because I I think it's relevant to everybody, but it also depends on your age and if you're getting close to retirement like clearly you you just can't be that aggressive. You just can't. So, like when I get to the point like in 10 or 15 years where I'm like, "Okay, I'm going to I'm going to hang it up. I'm going to walk away from YouTube. I'm not going to I'm not going to do anything. Like, I'm just going to live off all of my returns." Well, I would I would have in bonds what I would need to write out a market correction. Like, it if it's an average of two years, I'm making that up. I don't know what the stat is off the top of my head, but if it's close to two years, I would have two years worth of bonds sitting there and keep my investments doing what they need to do. That way if it does come crashing down, I know that in two years when it it get gets back to where it was, like I've survived on the bonds and then I know that the growth is just going to continue to to keep going at that point. So that's one way of looking at it. Another way is like I I I very transparent with my, you know, my uh portfolio. I'm not doing anything right now. I'm not selling anything. I'm not trying to bank anything. I'm not trying to time the market. I am perfectly comfortable just writing it out because I know that my my my trajectory. I' I've got a while before I need to really be worried about that because I'm not going to be pulling from those investments anytime soon because I just don't need to. And with that in mind, like it it's a very simple equation as far as if I were to try to time it, the reality is I know I would suck at it. And I know that's not a very great technical term to use, but I know it would be really bad because I know that I would be selling sometimes in the middle or the bottom and maybe buying closer to the top. Like it just it's not going to work out well. So for me, I even shared this example I think with somebody like a couple days ago where in 2022 my portfolio went down 32% that year. It took a massive dive because like I'm in tech. Tech took a major hit in 2022. But you know what? The next year, I think my portfolio was up over 100% in one year. So I I'd already kind of turned around what I'd done. And then in 2024, like it was also equally up. And so now being that aggressive, like I don't recommend it because I I know what I'm doing. ETFs are great for everybody else. And too many people feel like they can get into stocks, be aggressive, and make up a ton of ground. Like you can't make up ground in investing. It comes down to time. like it. The more time you have, the more you're going to be able to make. You're not going to be able to make more with what you have by just being more aggressive. In fact, you're probably going to lose a lot more than you want. >> Yeah. Unfortunately, I see that often. A fair amount of people come to me saying the phrase, "I need to catch up. I feel like I'm behind." And I say, "Okay, there's ways to catch up, but it's not what you think. It's uh we're going to need to double down. We're going to need to cut some expenses. is we're going to need to invest more into tried and trueue things, not try to figure out this needle in the hay stack that might go up 200%. Most likely go to 0%. So, I'm glad that you said that. Now, in 2022, when your portfolio dropped that amount, uh do you remember did you add more to the portfolio at that point? Did you just let it ride through? Like what what was your play during 2022? >> I doubled down. I put as anything that I had coming in for any form of money, I was dumping in a smart way into my mega caps because that's the safe play because I know the mega caps are going to come back to where they are because they have strong fundamentals. They have strong cash balances like they can ride out storms just like me. So like a business operates very similar to me. They they try to make sure their cash balances are in a way that on the down years that they can like write it out without having to take on extra burden. Like I've managed businesses like if you manage the P&L that's what you do. Like you keep your savings account ready to write out that that challenge so that your business doesn't go bankrupt. You have to manage your own finances the same way. Like you you can't live in debt all the time. you you need to manage and create your buffers so that you're you're not living in an ultimate state of stress. >> Good. Beautiful. See, it's just good to hear because you and I have similar ways of actually investing, actually running our households and running our lives as far as financially. But I think that your some of your content uh shows a little bit more of aggressive investing, which is great. You understand it. You lived in that world. That totally makes sense for you to be investing in it. But I think it's helpful for my audience to see even somebody who does, you know, go a little more aggressive on certain stock picking and things like that. Still has the fundamentals. Uh you didn't say it out loud, but things like having an emergency fund or having enough safe invested. Um you even said when you get to retirement, having a cushion so that it can make it through any type of real dip. Like you're doing all the things that most financial professionals would explain to people. It's just people sometimes people want to jump the line a little bit and just get straight to the high investing. But the reason why you're able to invest with such confidence and keep the investments in the market is because of all the leg work you did to get you to that point. Your discipline to get you to that point. So bravo to you and that's great for my audience to hear. Um let's go ahead and shift gears a little bit here. Let's talk about another question. So, if the first question I get all the time is what's the stock market going to do in the near future, the second question I get all the time is what couple of stocks should I buy or what's the best stocks to buy? And again, we can't tell anybody what to buy and that that would be terrible for anybody to even listen to that and then just go out and buy it. But what we can say is some of the stocks that we personally either like or are buying or is on our watch list or whatever. So, I'm going to pose the question to you, and I think you and I can go back and forth and just say, what are the top three growth stocks that you'd buy right now in 2026? And we can just keep it as simple as that. Absolutely. So, if I was starting fresh today, I to me it's simple. Top of my list would be Nvidia. Even if you look at my portfolio, Nvidia is towards the top. And I know that's boring and that's the part I mentioned earlier, but here's the reality. If we're only in the first few minutes of the game, AI has a huge stretch ahead of it. And Nvidia is at the very tip of all of that. Their market share is like 90% within the area. And everyone keeps saying, "Well, yeah, but all the hyperscalers are trying to chip away at it." Go ahead. I mean, they can. They're going to be chipping away at other components of it. But keep in mind, Nvidia is also the tip of the spear in some components of robotics. They're also tip of the spear when it comes to software for quantum because quantum doesn't always operate as its own. It needs traditional computing to be able to allow humans to interact with the quantum. So guess what? Nvidia plays the role there. So I mean they're winning on every front. And then when it comes to, as I mentioned earlier, edge computing, Nvidia is going to be right there. They're going to be designing a lot of those chips. Who knows what technology is going to be there. So, I don't feel like they have, excuse me, I don't feel like they just have a three-year life. I don't feel like they just have a fiveyear life. I feel like they are on a trajectory for 10 years. And Jensen, quite honestly, is amazing. Like, he he's making all these connections. He's making all of these branches that go into other industries. And it's so smart because he's already thought through where is it going to go? And everyone wants to find out what he's thinking clearly because he's getting ahead of it. Yeah. So like right now 90% of its revenue is from data centers. I think everyone sees that but the fact that their revenue it is up 254% in just 2 years and that's not slowing that's actually accelerating and just last year the revenue was up 114%. That to me is just wild and then profitability I mean 60% operating margin to me once again this is not normal like people will probably read that and like yeah their operating margin is you know xyz. Well, guess what? When I when I worked at uh Albertson's, I think our operating margin total was like 6%. That's the difference between these industries. It's also why Albertson's is much smaller company as a whole. As far as my other pick, I would say Broadcom. And the reason why I like Broadcom is because Nvidia's within AI is kind of like the brains and Broadcom is kind of like the muscle because they're going to be designing all of those chips that go into the hyperscalers. They're using those to to get ahead with some of their own custom chips. But when it comes to the edge, guess what? Broadcom is going to be one of those key players to really make that happen. Whether it being your vehicles or, you know, whatever electronics is going to be there, them too, the revenue is up 92%. And their software arm is actually up 253 because they purchased VMware, which I think is an area that is going to continue to be just a cash cow for them. It's a phenomenal area for them. So to me like all of the things that they've got going on and they're working with all the major hyperscalers honestly that that to me is an easy no-brainer. The next one is Vertive VRT. So Verdev to me is the picks and shovel that supports the other two because the data centers are going to be there. Verive does the cooling. They do it better than really anybody else because they have quite a bit of market share. 23% of the global data center cooling market and it's double its nearest rival. and they have a backlog that's up 77% year-over-year. Their orders are far outpacing what they're actually producing and doing. That to me is perfect setup. I love to see when a company's bookings just go out there quite a long term because they're they're working with customers who have deep bank accounts. They're not going to, you know, not pay them. They're not going to just drop out and say, "Hey, we're out." But guess what? the way those contracts are written, even if those big companies say, "Hey, we're going to push pause. We're not going to do it." They're going to still get paid. In fact, they'll get paid more because then they're not going to have to do the work. So, either way, the fact that they have those bookings, I guarantee you, they are set up for success. So, those to me all support what I was originally talking about with AI. And I get it. There's so many things that are happening, but this is my list and this is what I stand behind. So, now I'm going to flip it back. I can't wait to hear your list. >> Perfect. Yeah. I know. I think you set up that list really well earlier in our conversation. Looks like you really are going, you know, very heavy in the AI world, which totally makes a lot of sense and it makes me think, too. So, thanks for those. That was great. You you had two larger, you know, mega cap there and then uh one a little bit smaller cap, which is kind of the way I went with this as well. So, my first is going to be no surprise because I talk about it a lot on my channel, but it's Alphabet or Google. So for me, uh, they are a leader in AI with enormous resources, right? They're investing tens of billions of dollars into AI infrastructure, chips, and models while leveraging products used by billions of people worldwide. A huge one for me is that they have multiple growth engines outside of just search, right? They have YouTube, they have their Google search obviously, >> and Whimo. >> Whimo. I mean, Whimo is the the other part that I love the the future technologies, right? Um, we talk about quantum computing. They are deep in the quantum game. >> Yeah. Their willow chip is amazing. >> Amazing. Right. And and the thing that they have is the parent business to support any crazy, you know, spend that they're going to need to do to keep up with anything. So, the autonomous driving with Whimo like you're talking about, the obviously search and YouTube is just on a different planet. They own so many different new technology style businesses that um you know everybody thought at least you know a lot of people told me that chat GPT or one of these other ones is going to take YouTube out. Well, the search itself, even though it is fun to search on Chat GPT or some of these other AI models, that's not hard to build out for a company like Google, which is why they built out some things like that, but it's really the way they monetize all of the different search and the different ways they have through it. So, Google to me, um, I still believe is super undervalued and I knew it was very undervalued last year when I bought pretty heavy. The next one for me is ion. And so, this is one obviously you've talked about a lot. I've talked about a lot. This is the more research that I do in the quantum world. This is just the one that I'm going to make a bet on. And I do call it a bet at this point because we are far from commercialization. We're far from this actually materializing. Like this is still something that could go to zero to be honest. And it also could be something that could be disrupted. Other companies could come in and do what they're doing. They're just so far ahead. And I love a first mover. I love the first mover advantage. Q is one of the few like they're they're actually generating revenue. So I mean they're I almost picked them. I'm glad I didn't. Um but I think they're a solid choice. Thank you. Good. See that that helps me out then. So one of the big things that I really like whenever I'm looking for a looking at a smaller company because it's it's not the hardest thing in the world to look at one of the top 10 companies and say like, you know, Google. Yeah, I think Google's going to keep being Google. Sweet. Good job. But for something like Ion Q, what I'm looking for is what types of partnerships do they have. That right there shows proof. Again, working in venture capital and working in uh you know, owning, running and selling businesses, it's all about the capital. It's all about who you know, what you know, the the proof around it and proofs in the pudding there. And so the strong partnerships and growing commercial adoption. ion Q has partnerships with major technology companies including Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, and Google Cloud. So, I mean, those are if you're going to be a part of any three, I think those are the three you'd want to be a part of as a small business. You're you're kind of keying in on something too where as far as like who would have thought the hyperscalers are actually great quantum plays because guess what? They're offering all of these different quantum platforms via their own systems. So, like AWS and things like that, Azure. So, there's more ways to get into quantum than just the pure place, but I love your choice. Now, my last one is going to take just a different spin, and I'd love to hear what you have to say about this one. So, right now with like we talked about SpaceX, um you know, any of those IPOs, what I said from the beginning was I don't have an issue with the company itself. I have an issue with the valuation. Along with that, everything or a lot of the stuff in the stock market's overvalued. Things are very expensive. There's a lot of hype. And we both kind of agree that at some point there could be a correction. And if there is a correction, it might be a catastrophic one just because of the need that we might see in the market. There's one company that is very very ready for this drop and they have $400 billion sitting off to the side ready to deploy when this happens. And I'm talking about Berkshire Hathaway. And I know that this is not the most popular company in the world right now. I hear a lot of people that are frustrated with its flat performance over the last year or so. We have to remember that if you look back in the last 50 years or so, it's outperformed the S&P 500 by a magnitude of I forget the number, but it's three or four times. And there's not many companies that do that even within a 5-year period, let alone consistently for that period of time. And how they did it was they're very, very patient during the good times. When the bad times happened, they came in and scooped up a monster share in companies or bought companies straight up. So, there's one company in my opinion that is sitting there frustrating a lot of their investors because a lot of investors are short-minded, short-term minded and uh as soon as there is a market dip of some sort, they have a new CEO at the helm that's ready to invest in specifically technology as he bought a huge portion of Google the other day. I don't think that there's a better company to safely hold your money off to the side with the upside like Bergkshire. What's your thoughts? I I don't disagree like that. They're very smart on playing the long game. I was just doing the math in my head. So, if you think about it with 400 billion sitting on the side, if there's a major market correction, they could literally buy Coca-Cola, Nike, Starbucks, McDonald's. They could scoop them all up. Like they could literally have cash in hand to scoop up some of the biggest names in retail that we've ever had as a brand. Like that's pretty wild when you think about it. But I mean, if the discount prices are there, that's their model. Like they love the brands that are very uh customerf facing. They recognize them. They're well-known brands. People love them. Like that would be the perfect storm per se for them. >> Absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, there's there's not a lot of companies out there with a PE under 15, and right now they they have that, which is crazy. >> So, I mean, I've already been a long-term investor. I've been investing in Bergkshire for about 12 14 years now. But, uh, that's one of the ones that I've been buying the most heavy in my portfolio. I know it's not super flashy and it probably won't go up thousands of percent, but I do believe in kind of what you said. If there is a dip in the market or a crash even, uh, having those companies that are tried and true that have made it through multiple other recessions and things like that, it's a smart idea to get them on sale. And I honestly think the sale for Berkshire is happening now rather than when the sale for the other companies are going to happen, which could be, you know, during the crash. And for anybody watching this, um, we'd love to hear what are your favorite stocks right now to be looking at possibly to buy in the next couple of months here, whether there's a downturn or not. What types of stocks are you looking at? Go ahead and throw that in the comment section down below. Check out Brian's channel. I'll have that linked down below. Thanks again, Brian. Yeah, my pleasure.