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written by reader Pre ipo SPAC codes Jeff Brown Blank Check Spec.

By pimpstar2, January 13, 2021

Anyone watch the pre ipo SPAC codes – Jeff Brown . He talked about how you can get in on a SPAC company before they ipo with the code (ticker symbol) that would allow a person to buy in at the beginning even before there ipo public day. If this is possible then im thinking what are the codes . Anyone have any of the pre ipo codes in his 3 special reports he would send out? I would like to try and see if it really was true. If it is i would definitely pay the $2000 for his research for a yr.

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veretax
veretax
January 14, 2021 1:57 pm

I was on it last night, and I got a PDF that has a list of codes as a ‘free gift’. But so far most of the ones I spot checked have already IPOd. Unless I misunderstand how this works.

One thing I suspect is that these stocks all come in pairs. Ticker.U and ticker.W Someone correct me if I misunderstand.

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egumshoe
egumshoe
January 14, 2021 2:04 pm
Reply to  veretax

Thanks. Are you sure thats the correct spelling?

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spyd007
spyd007
January 14, 2021 6:26 pm
Reply to  veretax

Hi, yes, you are right, the SPACS stock you buy (before IPO) starts a 10$, and may rise a little before the IPO depending on the quality and expertise of the team holding the SPACS. Then, when the merge happen, the stock rise like crazy if the technologies is promoting, such that you can leverage your .U and .W shares to get the new stock. If you do not like the merge, you can always sell of your stock at 10$ or more …. this is the floor price, you can only lost what is above the 10$, so if you buy the SPACS code at 11.50$, and after IPO it’s bad, going to 13 and back to 10.50$, just sell back your share at 10.50$, and you just loose 0.50$ per share. The real benefits comes from the potential of huge upside of the merge …. where your .W share could be leverage multiple time. This is The part I do not master since I am novice in stock Market. I would love to get those Pre-IPO codes to see the real benefits, which I trust very much, but I just cannot afford to pay the 2000USD service of Jeff Brown. Hope someone could share this information if he/she can afford this spending. Let’s learn more all about SPACS and Pre-IPO Codes and stock processing after the buy, because I am pretty sure this is huge potential for a small clever person having private information ! Cheers all

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stolflyer
stolflyer
January 18, 2021 7:05 pm
Reply to  spyd007

I did join up with brownstone research after being taunted by his “Jeff’s” advertisements for the last three weeks , at first the join up subscription special fee was $ 49 bucks , but then they send you the next video to watch which is very convincing and he committed to give you even more information for the low price of $745 , and then on to the next rabbit hole! That rabbit hole was the best deal yet and very convincing at $2000 ! To be honest with you I gladly paid for the services Because around four years ago I did much the same and his advice paid off handsomely as I’m sure some of the stocks I purchased from his recent research will do the same!
But then the IPO videos started calling my name so I listened to his hour special and he did promise to give me the IPO list that he was talking about… But there is a catch he wants another $2000 to give you the three IPOs that will catch fire after their debut!
I have a problem with that because this last purchase I made with Jeff Brown roughly 3/4 of the stocks he suggests to purchase up to price are already way out of range like 200%! I feel I’ve been duped and maybe I am late to the game, but he should not advertise over half his stocks are over priced when we the unsuspecting purchasers of his program looks into it! I do not trust Jeff’s IPO advice if I were to purchase! I don’t even know The steps I would have to take to purchase the proper acquisition firm! I feel that it’s probably too late especially after the first initial purchase learning that 3/4 of his stock pics are much higher than his buy up to price!

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mike may
Member
mike may
February 17, 2021 10:42 pm
Reply to  spyd007

Couple ways to find pre ipo’s or Spac, webfuneder.com or crunchbase.com one website I use quite often stockmarketmba.com shows pre ipo tickers or freshly launched. you can research the investment company to find out how to invest or wait until talks of merger type in symbol
like current one I just cashed out of CCIV ticker symbol CCIV/ws or CCIV.ws warrants that you can buy through stock broker. get in to late not much to be made. I personally cash out before they complete the merger as you have to keep stock up to 30 days or more before you can sell or possibly be blocked for 1 year before you can buy any others. If you have researched the company and feel high regards for it by all means keep it as it could explode to great heights. y

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only6greens
January 15, 2021 3:34 am
Reply to  veretax

So what bonus codes are given? Thanks in advance

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todvon
todvon
January 14, 2021 1:59 pm

Nope, didnt buy, but did I watch Jeff’s PreIPO presentation, my issue was that the example he used for x,xxx% assumed buying units at >$1.00 per. I added each of the SPAC codes (bonus codes) to my personal watch list and every SPAC on the list was no less than $10.xx per share. I’m very interested in his service too, but I was hoping for the $0.xx per unit. not $10.xx+ per.

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tom
Guest
tom
January 14, 2021 5:34 pm
Reply to  todvon

what are the bonus codes?

maryxoxo
maryxoxo
January 16, 2021 5:31 pm
Reply to  todvon

I have an idea why don’t we pay $200 each one of us if we can get 10 people here and give it to to Travis then he buys Jeff’s 2k service and then we all get the info

E L Meier
E L Meier
January 14, 2021 3:35 pm

Hi, good to find you all here……I was on last night and it’s $2K for three years of being provided these pre-IPO codes. I totally agree with you, sounds amazing, I just don’t want to spend the $2k. I would do it for $1K though. If I end up doing it, I will keep you posted. And I wanted to say thank you, I love your articles and breakdowns. 😉

Last edited 3 years ago by emeier23
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kaizerzoze
Member
kaizerzoze
January 14, 2021 6:15 pm

I watched the show too but live in Norway and no investments bank or brokers offers where I can order PRE-IPO with only type in PRE-IPO code. I have also tried equityzen.com and sharespost.com/ who is specialists in IPO but bad luck. I appreciate if someone can give me name where I can create an account to use for order PRE-IPO with the code.

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Dino
Guest
Dino
January 14, 2021 8:43 pm
Reply to  kaizerzoze

This is from another forum from a few years back. “As an non US citizen I can only choose between Ameritrade, Just2trade and Speedtrader.“ I use TD ameritrade and really like. Did anyone get the 3 codes?

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r e land
Guest
r e land
June 17, 2021 11:47 pm
Reply to  kaizerzoze

ameritrade and i paid the 2000.00 and then another lifetime bonus and i did not do that and then hear come another one for 2000.00 and then another for 2000. and the list go on. i have not made a dine.
Rel

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know know on jeff brown blank check speculators
drschulz
Irregular
January 14, 2021 8:42 pm

Appreciate the helpful color team. So am I getting this right that this whole scheme is to give you tickers for SPACs that are about to go public? And the contention is you can buy them before they go public? On what an exchange? And SPACs are almost going to go public at $10/share no? If so what is advantage to ‘get in early’? Kindly correct where I am confused. Appreciate it!

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Susie
Susie
January 27, 2021 10:55 pm
Reply to  drschulz

drschulz: You buy SPAC’s wherever you buy stocks. Advantage of buying into a SPAC is: when the SPAC is formed, they state who formed the SPAC (management team)and what area (tech, bio, EV, banking etc) they will be looking for a company that they can take public. A recent example is: Kensington Capital SPAC started trading for $10 share. Months later they stated that the company they would take public was Quantumscape. From the time of the announcement until Quantumscape started trading as QS, the shares of Kensington Capital (KCAC) did fluctuate. But you could have bought at $10. QS debuted in November for $23.50 share, closed at $37.50 and was up 256% after a month. So you could have bought on open market, Nov. 27th for $23.50 or for $10.00 months before, thus the benefit of getting in early.

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Kevin M
Guest
Kevin M
January 14, 2021 9:37 pm

I’ve seen a bunch of the pre-ipo codes on Robinhood, but they’re all at like $10 or higher. Haven’t seen any lower than that.

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Martin
Guest
Martin
January 15, 2021 1:36 am

Folks, save your money.

Reddit alone will keep you busy for a while.

Do not rely on someone else.

reddit.com/search/?q=spac

Later.

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peppeurso
peppeurso
January 15, 2021 8:05 am

what are the pre ipo code?

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frank_n_steyn
Irregular
January 15, 2021 12:11 pm

Watched the Pre-IPO video. Over 90 minutes of blah blah blah sales pitchs, ending with… just send him $4,000 U.S. and he will make you a lot of money ! But Wait ! Because you are special, he will only charge you $2,000 today ! Yeee hah.

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stolflyer
stolflyer
January 19, 2021 1:32 am
Reply to  frank_n_steyn

Exactly!!

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kaizerzoze
Member
kaizerzoze
January 15, 2021 3:38 pm

Where you buy these PRE-IPO’s ?

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spyd007
spyd007
January 16, 2021 8:13 am
Reply to  kaizerzoze

I wish I had 2000$ available, I would buy it and share the codes to Stock Gum community

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dfarms
Member
dfarms
January 16, 2021 1:39 pm

I am also interested in Jeff Brown’s Pre-IPO codes…..

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bunion132
January 16, 2021 8:17 pm

After reading the different comments on this thread, I am of the impression that newer guests and members on this site are not aware that SPACs have been a hot Gumshoe topic for the last couple of months. Just typing “SPAC” on the Search Bar will uncover different threads wherein Gumshoers ask about specific pre-IPO companies pitched by various newsletters. Even better, some people have shared additional and actual, income-generating experiences with SPAC companies that have completed their mergers. Travis has, in various instances, explained the contractual nature of SPACs, including the ~$10 threshold they customarily have.

One Gumshoer provided website http://www.spactrax.com which I downloaded at the start of this year. It’s a HUGE 43-column spreadsheet containing 409 names of recently-formed SPACs, their status (i.e. Seeking Target, Target Announced, Merger Completed) plus details on description, units, warrants, sponsors & underwriters, you-name-it, for each of the 409 companies.

Sort the spreadsheet by “Stage” and then “Target Announced” to narrow down the list to around 50 SPAC companies and their symbols which have named the companies they intend to merge with but have not yet IPO’d.

So with 50 SPAC symbols to choose from to possibly speculate on –depending on the type of business or institutional backing of interest – why limit one’s choices to Jeff Brown’s 3 “codes” for a ridiculous fee? One just needs to do some homework.

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lydell54
lydell54
January 16, 2021 9:16 pm

I was on the IPO call with Jeff Brown, and I too found the discussion extremely frustrating because of my entire year of 2020 trading with SPACs. I understand much of what SPACs are about and probably traded 20 to 30 of them last year, with mostly success. It’s tough to own them all because there are so many; now there are so many more. There is a lot of teasing in their promotional discussions, that is for sure. I made my “own guesses” at what I thought he would have come up with. What I found frustrating and I spoke with their customer service several times about what were the “dates” JB would provide. My main concerns are there are three critical dates regarding SPACs, and I wanted to understand what I would be buying in the service. Date one is the date a SPAC is born; it begins trading as a Unit, period (about that $10 range, though there are exceptions like PSTH that came out at $20). Date two is the one when a target is identified and you know what you really are buying into. Date three is the actual vote-leading to an actual merger. So maybe there are really four dates. Each one represents a different buying opportunity, with the born on date being the least costly, and the merger date turning into the new ticker symbol being the no turning back date. In between all those dates are smaller pieces, where the unit turns into a separated but similar ticker without the warrant, the warrant trades under it’s own similar ticker, and of course the unit still exists as the complete item. Each trading piece has it’s pluses and minus’s.

If you track SPACs in a variety of methods, you have seen each of those dates and how the price action is affected. And yes, you can make some serious dollars with the right SPAC. So, to wrap this up, the date that Jeff’s service provides is the born on date + a few days or weeks, where they have analyzed the who and what of the SPACs managers, and they appear to be making the early call while the SPAC is still only available as a single unit whether it will be likely successful or not (never a guarantee). With as SPAC as it’s been discussed, if you don’t like the target you can vote against it and get your original stake back.

Of course, the longer it takes a manager to identify a target, the opportunity that is lost with your money does have a value. I do believe his service will pay for itself ten times over, for the record. My success with SPACs in 2020 was likely just being lucky, but fortunately with some homework I was lucky over a dozen times. Quantumscape, Draft Kings, Nikola, many of the other EV SPACs, big multiples are possible. When to get out and not get greedy will challenge your supply and demand skills. You are purchasing truly some concept companies, then along comes IPOE, Chamath’s SPAC that nabs SoFi, which on it’s own would have been an extremely exciting IPO the normal way to get in and have it explode; yet now any investor could have purchased it at $10 and even the day of the announcement, you could have bought it at $15 and now it’s still floating at around $20. There is a rhythm to SPACs like any stock that once you get the feel, you have to decide to sell for good, trade around, or hold for the long term.

My apologies for the length of this, but even with my success moderately taking positions led to many 3-6x gains. So I do believe if Jeff Brown can cut thru the volume of SPACs, you’ll get your fee back over the next 6 months, and continue to do well without all the learning that I went thru. Hope this helps someone.

In summary, SPACs are really an opportunity for investors and traders; follow the managers, understand the cycle of beginning, then the hype, the lulls, then the merger. Then you still have to watch the new investor interest after that. Jeff promises to help you thru each step as part of his program, not just giving you a ticker symbol (I really hate that IPO code crap designation). You can do it yourself or pay for the service initially of being led thru the process.

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Dave
Guest
Dave
January 18, 2021 10:43 am
Reply to  lydell54

Interesting Lydall54 …but what I don’t understand is JB was claiming in his presentation that some of these spacs pre IPO could have been purchased for a few cents but when I checked the history of the price of examples he gave, like DPHC, they were at least around $10 ….??

Thanks

Dave

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lydell54
lydell54
January 18, 2021 1:17 pm
Reply to  Dave

I understand your concern. The only way I can try to explain, but I don’t believe it’s true any longer, is that theoretically, the warrants could trade that low. And sometimes they can really trade for under $1.00. But, if you believe the management can snag a good company, in today’s investment environment, the warrants just take a crazy jump. So, you take the leap with everyone, or stay on the sidelines.

Take for example, currently the Hall of Fame Resort & Entertainment Co., (HOFV”, formerly Gordon Pointe Acquisition Corp (aka the SPAC), had warrants that traded for less than a dollar. The current warrants are HOFVW, and trade for $.50cents jan 16.2021. The common came out for the $10 price, but the deal didn’t catch on. It floundered, there were shares redeemed when the deal was announced, so the merger continued without proper funding. So the entire deal tried to move forward, but from the $10 entry, it sank, and sank and sank, to the point now that the original $10 common is selling for $1.79 today. I supposed because of the redemptions, they needed more money and had a secondary this fall for $1.40 to raise $25 million dollars. For, for those who didn’t redeem, their $10 investment became $1.40!

So, every SPAC doesn’t work out. But, you can still purchase those warrants for $.50.
Now, what to do. I personally still believe the original deal is great, so if you like the Hall of Fame story village concept, post covid, NFL theme with hotels, activities as a destination… then I wouldn’t purchase the warrant for .50c, I’d buy the common for $1.80. Of course, this is not some high tech deal, so let the buyer beware. I had “some” shares, and some warrants at the original prices. I have since averaged way down believing that the village will get built out, there are plenty of news updates that the hotel has been completed, more and more support going into the area, and it’s FOOTBALL. On the other side of this virus, I believe it will be a strong deal, just not obviously an overnight success.

Take IPOE, Chamath P deal, successful SPACs up to now. Once those warrants were released from the units, they automatically were bid up to over $2.00, so they never really sold cheap. Just because, no good reason except they were inDemand… so if you believe they could be worth $5, let the bidding begin. In fact, as you can see, the IPOE warrants are trading for $7.70. Why you ask, I say why not!.

Sofi stock will likely be a big deal (my opinion), and the common is selling now for $20, so as investors-traders, we have to decide deal, or no deal. Just because I believe the merger will bring $30-40 to fruition, I don’t guarantee anyone that’s going to happen. We all have to perform our due diligence and assume the risk of that belief. If it dips, which it most likely will with the volatility out there, and a lull in any news while the bean counters shuffle thru the reams of paper, I will likely add because of my beliefs. That’s what makes our markets.

Each SPAC out there will either be a Hall of Fame Village, or a Draft Kings-Nikola-Sofi. How do you decide? One way, HOFV wasn’t a Unicorn to start, Nikola wasn’t a unicorn to start… so you aren’t buying into some proven company, right. Then take any Unicorn that is going public via a SPAC… it’s been around for 10-15 years, it has lots of customers, maybe lots of sales, everything you want but it’s been private for so long, then one day, you get a chance to invest. Maybe that’s how you chose your SPACs. I paid up to find out what IPOE is to be, so what do I care to not get those warrants for pennies, the value was to buy them under $5.
Again, sorry for the long reply, but sometimes a yes or no won’t answer the question.

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stolflyer
stolflyer
January 18, 2021 10:20 pm
Reply to  lydell54

Thank you for bringing us some lite on the subject of Jeff Browns Research Discussions! But he just keeps on advertising as if though he just came out with this formula up until January 15 when I purchased the upper tier of brownstone research for $2000! 3/4 of the stock ticker’s were already 75% to 200% above his buy up to price! I think he should re-film and reset his buy up to prices otherwise he needs to update His buy up to prices and quit ripping people off!

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Jane
Member
Jane
January 17, 2021 10:26 pm

Hi thanks Lydall54 that was very helpful information. Can anyone share what they think would be a good SPAC to buy – or a couple. Thanks

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Dave
Guest
Dave
January 20, 2021 8:27 am
Reply to  pimpstar2

Interesting choice of Spacs pimpstar2 … any particular reasons for these purchases? I’m very new to spacs so would appreciate any info on how to choose in which to invest .. Thanks !

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jwoodson007
jwoodson007
January 31, 2021 7:59 pm
Reply to  pimpstar2

Great Article, I had not seen this one. Here is one a week later by the same woman. The VGAC one I am excited about, among others you mentioned. You gave me a few more to read up on!

https://investorplace.com/2021/01/top-spac-merger-news-this-week-cciv-stock-evgo-joby-aviation-and-7-more-hot-spacs/

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SPAC
Guest
SPAC
January 20, 2021 12:04 am

Pre-merger SPACS. Essentially these are bets on the management and specified target industries: AACQ, AONE, BTAQ, BTWN, CRHC, FAII, FTOC, FUSE, PCPL, PDAC, SFTW, SNPR. Reiterating advice from others, don’t be tempted to chase too far from NAV, the original opening price, usually around $10, but as SPACS get more popular the more established managed ones tend to open higher as soon as they become available. Remember, there will always be another big one around the corner. Maybe pick a set number you’re comfortable with and focus on limiting to that number, whether it be 3, 7, 10, or 12. It helps with the discipline.

For those starting out, maybe the easiest is to buy the Chamath Palihaptiya SPACS: IPOD, IPOE, IPOF, he’s going from the ending letter from A-Z. Just from reputation they’re marked up now but you probably won’t be losing money and you’ll learn the ropes on timing the buying and selling on rumors, news, merger, post-merger, etc.

I wouldn’t recommend chasing news since right now there is too much FOMO and prices are getting out of hand. Having said that, sometimes it pays to buy rumors. Right now the highly speculative play is CCIV and the rumors of Lucid. Just from rumors the price is around $18 but Lucid is a legit EV play with significant upside so this is an intriguing gamble. This is one example of a scenario where if you believed in the management you could’ve done well buying CCIV early around $10. I was in on CCIII, which turned out to be a dud, Multiplan, so I didn’t get in early on CCIV but this rumor was too tempting so I took a bite.

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crunchtime77
Member
crunchtime77
January 21, 2021 7:09 pm

I happened to watch it today and thought “Gee, how does Jeff uncover these codes?’ $2,000 is a lot of money, but not excessive if he practices what he preaches. In the short bit of time I had I looked to see if there were an scam articles about him, but ran out of time.

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