3 Stocks You'll Wish You Bought in 2026 (And 2 You'll Regret Owning)
← Back to DashboardYouTube URL
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kyZLPPkfS1g
Status
Analyzed
Requested On
May 04, 2026 at 06:00 AM
Overall Performance
+4.47%
Recommendations
GEV
BUY
"the first one is GE Venova. GEV is the ticker."
Context: “What's the first name on this list of three companies to look at in the energy sector? >> Yeah, the first one is GE Venova. GEV is the ticker.”
Price on publish date: $1,083.46
Last day closing price: $1,082.14
(Jul 10, 2026)
Profit/Loss:
$-1.32
(-0.12%)
BE
BUY
"the second stock is Bloom Energy."
Context: “Let's get to the second stock on your list. >> Yeah. And the second stock is Bloom Energy.”
Price on publish date: $283.36
Last day closing price: $244.61
(Jul 11, 2026)
Profit/Loss:
$-38.75
(-13.68%)
BE
BUY
"it's been up 1100% since we recommended it less than a year ago."
Context: “...for our readers have been riding along with us for Bloom Energy... Cuz it's been up 1100% since we recommended it less than a year ago.”
Price on publish date: $283.36
Last day closing price: $244.61
(Jul 11, 2026)
Profit/Loss:
$-38.75
(-13.68%)
KGS
BUY
"This one is Kodiak gas."
Context: “Let's get on to the third company that's a buy for you in the energy space. Yeah, this one is definitely more off the beaten path... This one is Kodiak gas.”
Price on publish date: $67.80
Last day closing price: $69.86
(Jul 09, 2026)
Profit/Loss:
+$2.06
(+3.04%)
NEE
SELL
"the first one is Next Era Energy"
Context: “...these are the energy stocks that you would not be investing in right now. What's that first one to avoid? >> Yeah, the first one is Next Era Energy...”
Price on publish date: $97.88
Last day closing price: $87.96
(Jul 11, 2026)
Profit/Loss:
+$9.92
(+10.13%)
ACM
SELL
"And this is ACOM. ACM."
Context: “Let's get to that second stock that you are avoiding... >> Yeah. And this is ACOM. ACM.”
Price on publish date: $84.10
Last day closing price: $68.05
(Jul 10, 2026)
Profit/Loss:
+$16.05
(+19.08%)
Full Transcript
AI stocks are surging right now, but this always happens right alongside an AI boom. Joining us today is Rob Spivey from Alimemetry Research. Rob, I am so excited to have you on the show to talk about this sector that is going to be, if not already, starting to boom right alongside all of these AI stocks. You were on last month talking about energy a little bit, and we're going to dive even deeper into that today. So, let's just talk about energy and this AI boom. How much are these two always tied together? >> The only way you're going to get the AI boom is if you have enough power to power the AI boom. We're in a situation where if you just look back in 2022 when FK looked out FK, the regulator for the US power grid, the one who has to figure out how much power we need. When they looked at how much power more power they thought we were going to need by 2030, they said we were going to need like 24 gawatt. For perspective, that's like 2.4% growth over 7 years. That's nothing. By 2024, they were at something to the tune of 64 gawatts, right? You can see the trend. Last year, they were at 166 gawatts that they thought we were going to need. 16% growth in just 5 years. They were saying. So, it kind of highlights that front and center with this huge AI boom is it is a power boom because of the fact that you are need massive amounts of energy to be able to power these data centers and train it. And so that is the big thing is whenever you follow this, you need to know that you are 100% following not just an AI boom, but this is a hard asset boom that starts front and center with how we get electricity into those data centers. >> Yeah, absolutely. These two are a very much tied together and this week totally showed that the AI data center story is not slowing down. We saw, you know, big tech earnings this week and then all of those AI related stocks just soared. I we had some stocks go up more than 30% in just the last few days. So, this is a huge boom right now in the AI space. I'm curious. We're going to dive into whether the energy stocks are seeing the same kind of rapid increase this week or if there's still a big runway ahead. So, we're going to dive into that and also talk about one of my favorite things you talk about is three stocks to buy right now in the energy space and then two to avoid which are just as important to know in the energy world. These are the names that are probably going to fall behind that you don't want to be in right now. So, we'll dive into those. I want to talk a little bit more about from your uh accounting perspective, that's why I love to talk with you, Rob, when you're looking at uh what's happening in the AI story. Is there anything that could stop or slow down this massive boom we're seeing right now? >> So, to start with the accounting, right? I mean, when you look at it, it was staggering. You mentioned the idea of the the hyperscaler earnings that blew up on on Wednesday where you know Meta, Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet all reported just gang buster earnings that was that just blow the blew the uh blew the doors off. The thing that people reacted most to you look at Meta though was what Meta said not about earnings but what they said about capex, right? They said 125 to $145 billion of spending in terms of data center which is nuts to think about cuz just 2 years ago you were at the point where all the data AI uh AI data center spenders together were probably at like 250 or something but you know when you think about what is everybody worried could upset the apple cart here and it comes front and center with nimism right that's not in my backyard for those of you who didn't play Sim City when you were younger like I did because I'm a nerd right so nimism is the idea that you know all these People are looking at this. They're saying, "Hey, hold on. We've got all of our power prices are going up massively because of these AI data centers." It's not surprising that we've started to see this nimism crop up. I'm in Maine right now and right, we just almost had a moratorium on data centers pass before uh Janet Mills, the governor, basically vetoed it. And if she hadn't, then we weren't going to have any data centers built in man at all. I mean, you've got in Virginia, Lowden County having no basically making it really hard for people to build data centers. You had Brookfield, um, who has been a massive builder of data centers, basically walk away from an 800 acre campus elsewhere in Virginia. And I mean, even in just just to put this in perspective, even in Silicon Valley, you have an issue where you've got data center shells sitting there that just can't get power. If you were to say anything that people are starting to talk about being concerned as meta talks about$125 to $145 billion, but this is what we think is so important, Bridges. We think that there's a way around this that's going to be the solution that everybody's scrambling to and that's what we're excited about. Well, we're going to dive into some of these names here in just a minute, but I know you and your team at Alimmetry have really dove into that issue of what's some ways around the potential energy crisis out there and what's the best way to explore investing and some of these hidden energy plays that could really be big for investors. And that is all in a new special report you have on dark energy. This is looking at different ways within the energy space to invest. You can scan the QR code or click the link in the description to get access to that full report from Rob and his team at Ultimatry Research right now. Again, we'll have that link in the description if you want to go and look at that report. It's a special offer just for our YouTube viewers. But Rob, let's get into the energy discussion. Now, when we're looking at these three names that you are bullish on, that you think have a lot of runway still ahead in the energy field. What do these three names have in common? What are you looking for? When you think about it, you've got this nimism cropping up, which is actually kind of actually what's probably holding back just how far some of these valuations could run right now. It's important to step back and understand first and foremost when you see Meta talk about $125 to $145 billion of spending. When you see, you know, $700 billion of total hypers scale capex likely exceed that number this year when that was the budget. The reason why is because they all kind of understand that this is a winner take all race. meaning the first person who gets to AGI, right, general intelligence is probably the one who wins and nobody else actually gets an opportunity to do it. And so there's this there's this level of a prisoner's dilemma here where the first person who blinks and stops spending effectively declares, "I've lost." And so they're all leaning full board. So you know that they're all focusing on a solution that gets around this. And the solution is not going to be, oh, we're going to keep on hooking up to the grid. And this is what we think is so interesting for all the three names that we think are so compelling is all of them revolve around this idea of what we call dark energy. But dark energy is really simply just we call behind the meter power. Um meaning it's power that's not coming from the grid. It's coming from collocation something that's right next to the data center something else or as we like to call it BYOP. We may not be going out to a restaurant but it's bring your own power instead of bring your own bottle. Um and so we see that this is so clearly h and it's already happening. I mean just recently Oracle and SoftBank and OpenAI they announced with their uh their Stargate initiative right which is about building all these data centers around the United States. The biggest one is Stargate Jupiter and Stargate Jupiter it's like 2.4 gawatt they are going to build that entirely off of the grid. In fact with one of the companies that we're going to talk about in a moment they literally just signed a massive deal about it. You're seeing a bunch of these other solutions where we're building these campuses that are not hooked up to the grid. They basically are not relying on the grid for their power. So they don't have to worry about whether or not FK or one of the regulators can give them the stamp of approval and whether or not some somebody in uh in a state house can tell them you're not allowed to build that data center cuz they're saying hey we're not on your your infrastructure anymore so we're solutioning it. That's their solution to get around that nindism issue and that regulatory risk. >> Yeah it's fascinating and honestly it makes sense for these companies who need so much energy to just bring their own I loved what you said bring your own power. I think that's a great analogy to look at this, but it makes sense for these companies that need so much to be self-reliant. We see that in so many different sectors and so many different areas where that self-reliance takes away so much risk as a company. So, a great concept and the three names we're going to talk about fit that bill really well. Again, you have much more research and other names in the special report that you have, but let's get to the one that you were sharing with us today. What's the first name on this list of three companies to look at in the energy sector? >> Yeah, the first one is GE Venova. GEV is the ticker. The three parts of their business that that people pay attention to. They've got a wind turbine business, which we're not going to talk about right now. But then they've got the they make natural gas generator turbines, right? Turbines to create power at a natural gas power plant. And then they also have what's called the electrification part of their business, which is basically what's called balance of power in the industry, right? All of the other stuff you need. You need transformers, you need wires, you need um all the other stuff to basically be able to manage the power. And so when you look at that, what's what's fascinating about them is even after they've had a phenomenal run over the last 2 to 3 years, the market still doesn't fully understand what's going on for GE. And just to put in perspective, so first let's talk about it from a fundamental perspective and then we'll talk about the real secret, which is what we can see in uniform accounting that is so excite us so excited. 2 years ago they produced annually 12 to 15 gawatts a year of power capacity in terms of turbines, natural gas turbines and everything else. This year they're going to get to around 20. Their goal is by 2030 that they might get north of 25 to 30 gawatt. So over basically a 5 plus year period, they're going to more than double the amount of power they're able to sell capacity for, right? The turbines. And every single time they sell a turbine, there is a long tale of profitability that comes behind it. And so you look at it and so there is a a staggering amount of demand for what they have. And their backlog is already booked out to 2030 if they don't expand their capacity. So they've got a long thing, but the really exciting thing about GE Vernova, when we standardize everything, and that's what we do with uniform accounting, we're cleaning up the accounting noise so we can compare companies. There's only like really three big players in making turbines. It's Seammen's, GE, Vernova, and then also Mitsubishi and uh in Japan. That's basically it. The issue is all three of them are on different accounting standards. All all three of them operate different parts of the world. So when you try to compare them to understand how profitable they could be, it's really hard to do because the fact the numbers aren't the same. But when we clean it up and we standardize it, all of a sudden we could see something that jumped off the page to us, which is when you look at their peers, Genova's peers have a uniform earnings margin, how profitable they can be, of around like 20%. Genova, when they spun out of GE, because of all the cost and everything that GE shoved on them and encumbered them, they were sitting at a 3% earnings margin. And so, they're not just going to massively expand capacity, they're already on the way to massively expanding profitability, too. And you combine those two things and sure this company has had a crazy run, but this company could probably double or more beyond from now just because of those two drivers creating so much value for that business. >> Yeah, you hit my next question. I was going to ask about this, but it's already had a crazy run. It's up quite a bit right now, but I know that you are always looking at those accounting principles and looking at what money is actually coming in, what's the potential for the future, what are those margins looking like. When you're looking to invest in a company like Gernova, do you pay attention to that runup and the entry point that you're getting in? Are you really more so just looking at future long-term growth potential for this company? >> Right? We did research and what we found is in the middle of a bull market like this, we went back and we looked at the 1990s, the 2000s, the 2010s, the last 5 years, also in the 2020s. What we found is if you just bought companies that doubled, you had a better than a coin flip chance that that company in the bull market was going to double again. And if we used uniform accounting on top of it, what we found was actually that increased to a 60% odds. six out of every 10 that we would pick off would double again. And so when we look at Genova, we go, "Okay, hold on. We know that we've got the momentum confirmation tool. It's not because they double they're going to double again, but it's confirmation that the market is recognizing the fundamental momentum is real for this company." Well, if we see that and our uniform accounting shows us it's still cheap. Not like cheap, you know, insanely cheap like it's trading at a 10 times multiple, but it's cheap that earnings growth could go like this and the market's only pricing it to go like this. That is when we get really really excited because we say the market's picked up on it, but it's got a lot more room to run. >> I love to hear how you look at these names and that is really important when we look at this next stock on your list because you talked about stocks that double. This one has way more than doubled. This one is up almost 1,500% in one year. Let's get to the second stock on your list. >> Yeah. And the second stock is Bloom Energy. And this one to your point Bridget we fortunately for our readers so right like that special report that you highlighted for our readers have been riding along with us for Bloom Energy for a th000% actually like 1100%. Cuz it's been up 1100% since we recommended it less than a year ago. And so when you look at Bloom Energy this company is really really interesting because what it does is not like GE right GE makes the turbines that go in traditional natural gas power plants power plants. Bloom Energy has what are called fuel cells which basically what it does is it takes air out from it takes air and natural gas and a little bit of electricity to make a lot more electricity and that's all that it does. Um but so what it's basically done is it's created a solution that means you do not need to rely on the grid for your power if you're going to be able to stand up you know a data center a factory whatever else. What's fascinating about what they've built out is their their fuel cell business. Two years ago or last year, they were producing around 100 megawatts a year of power capacity. And they talked about the idea that they had 2 gawatt worth of capacity to be able to produce 2 gawatt annually of capacity on their current campus. But everybody was like, is this going to happen or not? Well, the earnings call that they just had this last week was so telling in terms of realizing that everybody is jumping on. I mentioned that idea of Stargate Jupiter earlier. Well, Stargate Jupiter just signed an agreement to get all 2.4 gawatts of power that they need using Bloom Energy's fuel cells. And that was such a massive vote of confidence for Bloom because it highlights that no, the big hyperscalers are starting to recognize that this is a viable solution with a break even between $50 and $80 a megawatt hour. It makes sense relative to the other solutions that they have. And so what's so exciting is yeah it's run a,000% like I said 1100% since we started re recommending it 1500% in the last year but again let's step back and do the uniform accounting analysis which is what gets us so excited about this again we said 100 megawws to 2 gawatt and they're talking about that by 2030 they could producing be producing 5 gawatts of power a year that they're selling out there and when they sell that power just like we talked about how Genova gets that slip of you know service demand well it's even stronger for bloom because these fuel cells each year they need to have the what's called the catalyst the reagents that are inside the fuel cell needs to be topped up so that you can basically make sure that the reaction is happening. So they have to go back to bloom to buy that. So each each megawatt they sell gives them this nice recurring revenue of business. But the bigger thing is so you look at what the market's pricing this company to do right now and the market is pricing the company for around call it $3 billion of uniform earnings a year by 2030. That would sound really high if you look at what Bloom's Azure reported metrics are. But for context, this is what's really cool with uniform accounting. We know that Bloom already was profitable back in 21-22. It was already making money when everybody else thought that Bloom wasn't making money. So, we already know that they can make a lot of money fast. But the second thing is if we just do that math that I talked about, how you look at comparable profitability to everything else. Well, GE Venova when they were making 15 um 12 to 15 gawatts of power back in 2 years ago, if they were at 20 to 25% uniform margins, which is where Bloom already is about to get to, they would have been throwing off 7 to8 billion of profit. So, for Bloom to get to $3 billion of profit with what they're forecasted to grow, easy. And they have the opportunity to expand capacity even more like I mentioned that 5 gawatt opportunity for expansion. And so we just think that even after this run, Bloom is going to be one of these companies that it transforms how we think about power and that recurring revenue, high margin business on top of it, the market's totally sleeping on that can add a lot to the upside for this business. Yeah, this whole conversation about Bloom really parallels so well to the conversation we've had in the last couple of videos we've had on the channel the last few days talking about the AI and the chip stocks and the explosive growth they've seen in the last month. you know, some of those names like Intel up 130% or more in just the last month. It's a huge runup, but the demand and the spending happening from these, you know, mega cap companies, it's not going away. It's not slowing down. If anything, the earnings reports this week showed that that capex spending is going up. And so, the same applies to this energy story. If Bloom Energy has shown and proven to these megga cap companies that are doing all of this capex spending that their product works, they're not going to pull that money away anytime soon. If if anything, that's just going to continue to increase. >> We've got Satia Satin Nadella CEO came out and said, "We've got Nvidia chips ready to go. We've just got the issue of basically getting the power to plug them in." And the COO said, "We need something like 500,000 more electrical engineers because of what we need to build on the power side." All these big hyperscalers, these mega cap companies, they are saying, "We're not going to stop spending, but their issue is not on just the chip side, right? It is on the power side cuz the power side is what they need, what they need to be able to make any of those chips work." And so while Intel or Micron right who had a great run at the beginning of this year or obviously we all know Nvidia for the last three years while they were running what everybody is starting to realize is actually the power story is going to figure out whether or not that can all work or can't work. >> And that just proves a really good point for the the long runway that a company like Bloom could have even though it's already had such a great run in the last year. Another great company to talk about in this story. Let's get on to the third company that's a buy for you in the energy space. Yeah, this one is definitely more off the beaten path. I think anybody who's paying attention to the energy world has probably seen Bloom and Genova pop up just because of what's happened. This one is Kodiak gas. And right, you'd say Kodiak gas, what does this have to do with producing power? Well, so what Kodiak gas does, which is really interesting, when natural gas comes out of the uh comes out of the hole in the ground, right? comes out of the well and it has to get to wherever it has to go. You have to compress that natural gas to push it through a through a pipeline. Well, they own fleets of these compressors that push that natural gas through the pipelines. And so already, of course, I you probably can tell that one of the things I'm going to say is we need a lot more natural gas if we're going to be consuming all this natural gas to be able to produce the power that we need to be able to power the A data centers. But that's actually not the most exciting thing about Kodiak. If you look over the last 6 months, they have announced some really interesting things because what do you need to be able to power those compressors, you need mobile fleets of power. And so they have a strong skill set in being able to run massive generators that are very efficient on cost and bring them wherever they need to be brought to be able to run the power that needs to be happening. And so historically, they've used that to run their compressor fleets. But what they've realized is, well, wait a second. We can actually get even better pricing taking this to data centers in West Texas or in, you know, or in central Texas or anywhere else that we operate, even in, you know, in in uh in Pennsylvania where they're building one of the a massive data center campus outside of Scranton. And they said, "Well, wait a second. We can bring this here and we can actually sell the power here at an even better price." And they've gotten on for Caterpillar, they've gotten in Caterpillar's backlog to buy a bunch more generators. So, they can bring several hundred um several hundred megawws worth of power to bear wherever it needs to be born. And the market is still not fully comprehending how that releability potential for Kodiak. And so Kodiak is going to potentially be able to double dip in terms of more demand for natural gas means more demand for their compressor fleets, but also more demand for power on demand means they can actually sell their power capacity at higher prices elsewhere. And you put all that together and that's why this company looks really, really interesting. It's not a company that we're quite ping the table like Bloom and Genova, but it's a company we are definitely sticking around and paying attention to for that reason. >> Yeah, the natural gas story is also interesting. This this would fit into that storyline that I've heard talked about from many different analysts and people over the last month or so with the Iran conflict talking about well one thing that helps with energy dependence in the US is we have a lot of natural gas. We are one of the main suppliers of natural gas and so turning towards more of this as a solution could be seen a lot more as far as development goes for energy independence over the next few months. Do you think that that plays into Kodiak's story at all? >> Oh 100%. I mean we have such a global competitive advantage in terms of natural gas and what that means for our ability to really be immune to what's happening in Qatar and what's happening at the trader where Europe saw in a day it might not have been a day it might have been 3 days the price of natural gas double for them and at the same time we basically shrugged because we are not attached the only way that we are attached to the to the to the entire world universe of natural gas is because we export a bunch of natural gas and LG from Shaneer and from everybody else, but we have so much more natural gas to be able to produce than we even export. Um, and so if we're going to have to build more pipelines to get it where it needs to go, including exporting, including here in the United States, that means more demand for Kodiak and everything else. But yeah, I mean the natural gas story is such a story of the US going from strength to strength that we have this really embedded competitive advantage to anybody else because we're not dependent and our natural gas our price to get it out of the ground. It's like EQT largest natural gas producer in the United States. Its cost to get natural gas out of the ground $1 per BTU of natural gas. To put in perspective, the current going rate is $5. And so that just shows you we've got so much cheap natural gas here in the United States and we could ramp it up even more if we wanted to once we actually get the demand which is clearly coming from these data centers. >> Yeah. And those are the kinds of names other names that you'll find in their special report from Alimemetry on dark energy more natural gas names other different ways of looking at energy that are the up and cominging solutions where investors could see a lot of growth stories still ahead in this energy field. So, if you want to check out that report again, you can scan the QR code or click the link in the description to get that special offer and that full report on dark energy from Rob and his team at Ultimate Research. All right, Rob. Now, on to the important last couple of stocks to talk about and these are the energy stocks that you would not be investing in right now. What's that first one to avoid? >> Yeah, the first one is Next Era Energy, right? NE is the ticker here. And so, this one you'd say, well, hold on. This is the largest utility company in the world. And also in theory if you listen to what the hyperscalers pay lip service to it should be perfectly positioned because the fact that next era is huge in renewable energy solar and wind basically anywhere to be lowcarbon energy they are front and center. That's how they became the largest utility in the world and all the hyperscalers are saying hey we want to have carbon light power and all this other stuff. Well, the issue that Nexa has is if you're going to run a data center, data centers need what's called base load power. And what base load power means is power that can be on 247 because a data center is demand actually doesn't drop um in the in the uh at night just like it just like normal power does for us all of us humans who interact with things. And so because of that, the issue is wind and solar, they don't work 24/7. And when you talk about battery backup, anybody who's worth their salt and knows this space will tell you in terms of utilities will tell you battery backup is a bit of a misnomer because it's just more about battery extension. When you have a huge set of batteries, that can basically take your your solar and your wind like 2 hours longer than it would have otherwise. But that other 8 to 10 to 12 hours when there's no sun and no wind, guess what? You don't have that power. And so because of that, the data centers actually aren't interested in leveraging next era's power as much as you would think that they are. And so next era is one of those ones who's actually going to be left out in the cold as players, you know, some of these bigger players that have natural gas and nuclear exposure are going to be big big winners. >> Interesting. I'm curious to see are there any stocks in that clean energy space that you think have potential or would that concept about next era energy apply to a lot of stocks that are in that clean energy, solar, wind space? Solar and battery backup are going to be part of the portfolio for all of these. But the thing is they are not the viable primary solution. And so anybody who's hoping that you know the data centers might ride to the to the savior of solar stocks or something like that just the math doesn't work. They they're going to benefit a little bit but just they are not going to benefit nearly as much as good old natural gas and then eventually when we get around to it being able to build nuclear. >> Very interesting. Of course nuclear is always a part of the story too. Let's get to that second stock that you are avoiding when you're looking at energy stocks in this current market. >> Yeah. And this is ACOM. ACM. So ACOM is a construction and engineering firm. And with everything that we just talked about in terms of how we are seeing a boom in construction of data centers, of power plants, of everything else. You would think that a rising tide lifts all boats, right? I mean, assume that ACOM is actually going to also really benefit from this too. you're going to see a ton of spending and investment and everything else. Well, this is where it's actually the issue for ACOM comes in because they've, if you look at the stock chart, they've gotten beaten down since November. The reason why is just quite simply, it's not exposed to the right places. It's exposed to places like transportation and wastewater and not power and telecom and data center construction. And so, well, you might think, and this comes back to Bridget, the conversation we were talking about before when you asked about Genova and Bloom, you might think, well, maybe I can, you know, dumpster dive or bottom feed on ACOM here because it's going to benefit with all of these other players that are going to be lifting up. This is a time to listen to the market. The market's telling you this one isn't going to benefit like somebody like a Primorous or a Masc., so don't pay attention to this one. look at some of those other alternatives because this one is going to continue to struggle to execute just cuz demand is not flowing to where they do and they don't have the core competency to do the stuff that people really are investing in right now. >> Pay attention to the strength and what the market is telling you. A great lesson for investors to remember when they are looking at the market, especially in the kind of explosive growth season that we are seeing right now. If you want to hear more about energy from Rob and Joel from Alimemetry Research, make sure to check out last month's conversation when Joel was at the Sero Week convention all about energy. It's another really great conversation with three other stocks to buy and two to avoid, all in the energy sector. You can watch that video