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May 2024

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The Next No-Brainer Trade of the Decade

An important OPEC+ meeting takes place on Saturday, June 1. Most everyone anticipates that voluntary production cuts will remain steady. But there are two other scenarios that could unfold… Regardless, this leads to a no-brainer investment for the next decade.

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An Energy Crisis… an Investment Opportunity

After years of underinvestment (and lack of planning), exacerbated by major environmental, social, and governance (ESG) disincentives, we may be looking at a bona fide energy crisis ahead. But, as our Freeport Society friend John Pangere points out, this energy crisis is also a fantastic energy opportunity… if you know where to look.

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[Weekend Roundup] Sweeping the Chaos Under the Rug

A look at the markets would fool most people into believing that everything was rosy with the American economy… if they didn’t actually live in the real world. We are deep in the Age of Chaos… and only getting deeper… while the mainstream media and markets look the other way.

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Phase 2 of the AI Boom: The Next Trillion-Dollar Stock

Most investors believe they’ve missed out on the investment opportunities that arose during the AI Boom. They needed worry. What we’ve seen so far was only the first wave of AI. Now, we’re starting the second way, and investors have a new chance at investing profitably. Here’s how…

Special Report

The Coming Trump Boom: 5 Stocks to Buy Ahead of the November Election

The betting markets are projecting a Trump win if he’s squaring off against Joe Biden. It’s a protest vote. We want change. We’re tired of high inflation and tone-deaf leadership that seems unaware of the challenges faced by ordinary people. While the stock market is performing well, it could be just a preview of what’s to come. A new Republican administration will be vastly more business friendly. And its very first act could be rocket fuel for an already hot market.

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The Insidious Demise of Your Standard of Living

The average worker has to work about 20% longer to buy a Big Mac today than in the 1980s. And houses, education, and the basic necessities that used to define middle-class living are all vastly more expensive. What happened? More importantly, what happens next?