written by reader Ian Cooper’s Trading Tips site has teased a new (Miracle Metal) $7.00 SUPERSTOCK ready to gain 4,500% soon.

by julesjohnson333 | September 9, 2018 12:53 am

What Company owns 46 patents and the Miracle Metal that is strong and firm yet able to shape shift, liquify, and be fused solid again. It is a new Metal unlike anything else on earth. MIT has been researching this Metal. Cooper says this metal will replace silicon wafers for semi conductors and make silicon obsolete. It will drastically advance military, space, medical science, and technology rapidly. Cooper calls this a Superstock. Does anyone know what company this is? Is it a good investment?

Source URL: https://www.stockgumshoe.com/2018/09/microblog-ian-coopers-trading-tips-site-has-teased-a-new-miracle-metal-7-00-superstock-ready-to-gain-4500-soon/


6 responses to “written by reader Ian Cooper’s Trading Tips site has teased a new (Miracle Metal) $7.00 SUPERSTOCK ready to gain 4,500% soon.”

  1. cpcutx says:

    The compound in the photo is Gallium or Gallium arsenide. Here’s a quote from http://www.britannica.com “Though widely distributed at Earth’s surface, gallium does not occur free or concentrated in independent minerals, except for gallite, CuGaS2, rare and economically insignificant. It is extracted as a by-product from zinc blende, iron pyrites, bauxite, and germanite.

    https://www.britannica.com/science/gallium

    So, it’s widespread on earth and a by-product of other widely used, and plentiful minerals … sounds like this is one to pass on; however, if you can identify the company, they may be worth looking at if they have a process to convert this to energy. If you read the entire Britannica write up Gallium can be supercooled in a liquid form to o degrees celcius and remains a liquid at temperatures as high as 2,000 degrees celcius; thus it has tremendous potential for use in cooling rods for nuclear reactors.

    When dissolved in acids, such as HCl (what we put in swimming pools), it produces hydrogren. So, if you believe in the effacacy of hydrogen power plants and hydrogen cars, this could take off like a rocket. Again, we need to find out what the company is doing to make this determination.

  2. cpcutx says:

    One more comment. While the photo suggests the metal is Gallium, the article references the New Intel chip. If it is talking about the The Skylake Xeon chip introducted at the end of 2017, then according to ARS Technica: “The new chips also bring with them a new set of precious metal-based branding, with four metals—Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum—used to denote processor capabilities.” Right now, we are talking about chips that cost $10,000-$13,000 each.

    A February 2018 article in WikiChip indicates Intel’s 10nm chip is using Cobalt (here is the website: https://fuse.wikichip.org/news/525/iedm-2017-isscc-2018-intels-10nm-switching-to-cobalt-interconnects/). Ian’s article talks about the 7nm; however, I can’t imagine there is much difference. So, while the compound could be Cobalt, if you look at a photo of Cobalt, it does not look like the photo in the article. The photo in Ian’s article is definitely Gallium. Anyway, Cobalt is a chemical element (Co), and it is in the Earth’s crust; however, it is not a stand alone element. It is found in a chemically combined form unless it is with meteoric iron.

    So, sorry … I can’t find the company; however, I’m pretty good with the chemistry.

  3. cpcutx says:

    The company is AXTI. Please see this Gumshoe post:

    https://www.stockgumshoe.com/reviews/radical-technology-profits/solved-robinsons-shape-shifting-smart-metal-tease-for-4000-gains/

    This is an old article, but there is something to Gallium. You may want to read: http://www.eenewspower.com/news/top-four-companies-dominate-gan-market-booms.

    The market for gallium nitride (GaN) semiconductors basically has four major players:
    Efficient Power Conversion (EPC); NXP Semiconductors; GaN Systems; and Cree. These three account for a 65% market share. Moreover, it is expected that the market will grow from today’s $1.2B to about $4.5B by 2025. Solid growth, but nothing approaching the number thrown about by some that this will be a $20B+ market. It may be, but not anytime soon.

    The market is heavily dependent upon military, space and aircraft use, and there are growing inroads to the healthcare industry. These are not semiconductors that are affordable to the general market, at least not yet, but in 10 years, maybe we’ll see them. GaN is supposed to be environmentally friendly, so that’s also a plus.

  4. garydjerome says:

    I’m curious about this also. I just read about it in a teaser email.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.