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What’s Going On with Palm Beach and MarketWise?

Teeka Tiwari fired, a bunch of newsletters getting canceled... what's the story?

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, February 14, 2024


This isn’t really about a new teaser pitch, but I’ve had lots of readers ask what’s going on with the flurry of changes at Palm Beach Research and MarketWise recently… so if you’re interested in that bit of publisher crisis, stick with me for a few minutes and I’ll share my perspective, a little back story, and some opinion.

If that sounds miserably boring, you’re probably right… and there’s no Quick Take this time, sorry, it’s all a little too complicated for me to summarize in a paragraph… but have no fear, we’ll be back to covering stocks before you know it.

Every year or two, we get another reminder of how shady some of the folks in the newsletter and “investment advice” industry are — sometimes even the high profile folks who REALLY should know better, and were good enough at selling themselves to investors and building their personal brands that they probably could have made tons of money just by continuing to do their coloring inside the lines… but couldn’t resist grabbing for those extra dollars.

Here’s the first part of the press release from the Department of Justice that got this all rolling last week

Feb. 5: “LOS ANGELES – Federal criminal charges were filed today against an analyst for a newsletter promoting unregistered securities and over-the-counter stocks, his money-laundering associate, and the CEO of a Beverly Hills company, all of whom participated in a bribery scheme in which leaders of various companies paid more than $4.2 million in undisclosed compensation to have their stocks touted by the newsletter.”

There were several folks named in that press release, but the one who really catches the eye if you’re a newsletter follower was Jonathan William Mikula, because he was an analyst for Palm Beach Research and worked with Teeka Tiwari on Palm Beach Venture, a newsletter whose over-the-top promotions of unlisted investments we covered from time to time.

Here’s a little more from the press release:

“From December 2019 to August 2022, in exchange for Mikula touting certain securities issuances through ‘Palm Beach Venture,’ Beri and others provided Mikula and Fernandez with both cash payments as well as undisclosed, indirect compensation, including lavish meals, beverages, and other illicit entertainment….

“The conspiracy allowed some of its participants to raise tens of millions of dollars in investor funds through securities offerings described and promoted by ‘Palm Beach Venture’ without required disclosures that such promotions had been obtained via direct and indirect payments to Mikula.

“For example, in March 2020, Mikula caused to be published an article in ‘Palm Beach Venture’ entitled, “Curing Incurable Diseases and Giving Us Over 4,900% Potential Gains.” The article touted Emerald Health Pharmaceuticals (EHP), a San Diego-based life sciences company and falsely stated that neither the newsletter nor its affiliates had received compensation and that ‘as publishers of financial information, we make general recommendations based on our own analysis.’ In fact, negotiations were underway between EHP, Beri, Mikula, and Fernandez toward concealed payments in exchange for the article.

“In total, Mikula, Fernandez, Beri and others received more than $4.2 million in undisclosed and misrepresented payments as well as hundreds of thousands of dollars of compensation in the form of undisclosed entertainment and illicit services.”

And the somewhat more legalese-y summary in the docket:

“According to the allegations in the charges, and knowing that placement within and promotion by an investor newsletter called Palm Beach Venture permitted securities issuers to reach additional investors and raise additional funds, and knowing that Palm Beach Venture would make the materially misleading representation that neither it “nor its affiliates receive compensation for bringing this deal to you,” defendant Mikula agreed with his codefendants and others to write and place articles and other promotional pieces regarding the securities of specific issuers on the understanding and agreement that such issuers and their associates would pay undisclosed direct and indirect compensation to him, defendants Fernandez and Beri, and others.”

This isn’t really a new scandal, but the criminal part and the Department of Justice are clearly a bigger deal than the SEC enforcement action against these same folks, for roughly the same behavior, over the past couple years.  We’ve talked a little about that SEC action over the past year, and Emerald Health specifically was under the microscope before that, but it’s good to see these kickbacks and bribery scams come further into the light.  Here’s what I said in a Friday File back in May, when the SEC charges were getting attention:

That strikes me as a huge black eye for Palm Beach, part of the MarketWise group, though many of the publishing houses have experienced similar black eyes… and it’s a flashback to the bad old days of newsletters (which are still with us, though to a more limited extent), when those who sold newsletters also rented out their own name as a spokesperson for shady penny stocks, particularly when their “real” newsletters died on the vine but they still had a “name brand” reputation among investors that they could use for promotions.

This time around it’s private company fundraising deals, which are always a little murky, but it certainly looks ugly for on-camera spokespeople like Teeka Tiwari and others, who like to think they’re above such things, that the pundits and researchers and analysts at Palm Beach might have been taking kickbacks for pushing half-informed newsletter subscribers into terrible deals to invest in private companies. And really, maybe the named principals that we’re familiar with, like Tiwari, should catch more blame than he has this time — the fact that Palm Beach was involved with Mikula at all, given his past run-ins with the SEC, and that apparently Tiwari relied on him to identify private investments is pretty ridiculous, and reminds us to be cynical of pitchmen in general. It is hard to believe that Teeka didn’t realize how shady these private companies and their promoters were, though, to be fair, I don’t really know how involved he was, or if he knew about the kickbacks, and he isn’t named in the complaint. Hopefully he has at least made some personal apologies to any Palm Beach Venture folks who got sucked into some terrible private fundraisings over the past few years.

I don’t know whether such apologies were made, but I’d guess not.  So many of the “buy into this private pre-IPO deal” promos over the past few years were so light on facts, and so misleading, that I wonder how many more of them might have been genuinely criminal, especially in those first years of Reg A deals when “little folks” could get in on these private “pre-IPO” placements and similar deals through crowdvesting platforms.  One thing that “private investing” and “crowdvesting” and cryptocurrencies have in common is that they’re much more lightly followed and overseen by regulators (and other entities, like the stock exchange and large brokerage houses) than “regular” investments in equities and bonds, and therefore it has probably been a lot easier to scam people with “too good to be true” promotions without getting noticed…  though bribes and kickbacks and “pump and dump” schemes have certainly surfaced in listed securities many times over the years, too.

This is what I said about the deal that the Justice Department mentions as an example of their misconduct, as part of my coverage of that teaser for Emerald Health Pharmaceuticals from Teeka Tiwari back in September of 2020…

“I thought I’d delve a little bit into Teeka Tiwari’s goofy ‘Pre-IPO’ pitch for you today — he promoted a ‘Set For Life Summit’ teleconference this week that was an infomercial for his Palm Beach Venture newsletter ($2,500/yr, no refunds), and in that ‘presentation’ he talked up the whole idea of private pre-IPO investing and, more specifically, the first biotech stock that he is recommending as a private pre-IPO buy, which must be Emerald Health Pharmaceuticals.

“I don’t get the appeal, frankly — yes, there is the marginal hope for some moonshot potential, but they don’t have any human efficacy data at all yet for their drugs, and raising money from small investors before they get that data seems pretty sketchy. I don’t speculate on early-stage biotechs in general, personally, but if I did I would generally avoid those that are attached to Avtar Dhillon. (And in many ways, frankly, the small private companies that are trying hardest to raise money from individual investors… are often the ones that are least appealing as investments.)”

It seemed to be a crappy deal even if the newsletter and the company weren’t colluding to scam investors, though we didn’t yet know about the bribes and kickbacks at the time… or about the reports of Teeka Tiwari having a “consulting deal” on the side that meant he received compensation from other entities which owned the stocks (or cryptocurrencies) he was covering four times, according to Porter’s letter to MarketWise employees this week.

And that was an eye-opening bit of news, since it had previously seemed like Teeka was spared that legal attention that fell on others following those initial SEC investigations in 2021 and 2022, and maybe he wasn’t part of the criminal behavior, but he has now at least been clearly and publicly tarred by his (now former) employer for that “conflict of interest” over recommendations he made to subscribers (Porter didn’t say which recommendations were conflicted).   The shadiness of those deals emerged fairly slowly, given the rotational velocity of the wheels of justice, but within a year or so after that Emerald Health promo was running, Avtar Dhillon was charged by the SEC for his role in a “pump and dump” scheme related to a company that Tiwari and Mikula had apparently recommended, and the SEC charged Dhillon and these same folks (Mikula et al, but not Teeka Tiwari) for behavior around some of those same deals another year after that.

And while Porter’s letter says that J. William Mikula was fired by Palm Beach/MarketWise before the SEC charges were brought in 2022, as a result of concerns raised by other employees, he was an analyst and writer for Palm Beach for years (it looks like he was working for them starting in 2014 or so, which is also roughly when Teeka Tiwari started working with that publisher, through at least most of 2021), and for some time he was, in Porter Stansberry’s words, “surreptitiously receiving large payments for recommending low-quality stocks to subscribers of Palm Beach Venture, while claiming falsely that his work was independent.”  And that was all many years after Mikula was accused by the SEC of running Ponzi scheme in 2007, then being a “recidivist securities law violator” in 2008, so somebody didn’t do much of a background check when he was hired… or didn’t care about the violations.

Being blocked from working in regulated financial roles does not keep you out of the financial newsletter business, which Tiwari also knows — he started his professional life as a stockbroker, and worked at a dozen little brokerage firms over the course of a decade or so before being barred by FINRA from acting as a broker or associating with a broker-dealer (a couple of those little brokerage firms he worked for, usually for 6-9 months at a time, also got shut down over the years).   Ironically, the FINRA allegations were somewhat similar to what Porter said he did at Palm Beach, conflict-of-interest side deals… in this case, soliciting customers to buy private securities outside of his brokerage firm’s oversight and not telling the firm.  Tiwari did not admit or deny the allegations, he just consented to the sanctions in 2005, and I guess not long after that he started working in newsletters, first at Tycoon Publishing, which eventually merged into Agora, and then later with Stansberry veteran Tom Dyson at Common Sense Publishing, which started publishing the Palm Beach Letter around 2011 and later became Palm Beach Research Group.

I don’t know a lot about Mikula, other than seeing his past SEC transgressions and noting that his byline popped up in Palm Beach emails from time to time, but he did have a pretty high profile for a while at that publisher — he certainly penned some promotional articles about Teeka’s other “private deals,” including the one that Teeka (and Mikula) did on location in Brazil to promote potash/" class="tagifier-term-link" data-for-term-id="12890" >Brazil Potash.  I don’t know if that deal involved bribes and kickbacks to get them to sell the idea to their Palm Beach Venture subscribers or not, that particular name has not come up in charges that I’ve seen, but I wouldn’t blame you for being a bit suspicious. Brazil Potash still exists as a company, by the way, and they’re still trying to get their potential mine permitted, though the folks who participated in that private fundraising that Teeka championed are still just essentially locked into their shares for the foreseeable future, and Brazil Potash is again trying to raise money through another private placement now… there’s no obvious sign of the company going public or getting bought out anytime soon. [Correction: that’s not true, I mixed up Sky Quarry, which is again trying to raise money, with Brazil Potash, which is not currently raising money, apologies… I mention Sky Quarry a little further down in this article]

Given the amount of lousy and scummy behavior you can legally get up to in the world of investment publishing, as long as you disclose how scummy you’re being and don’t care about your subscribers, I’m always still a little surprised (naively, perhaps) when people push it this far.  And yes, I know that we’re not talking about a conviction here for Mikula… maybe nobody’s actually guilty of anything criminal (other than the guilt they’ve already admitted to the SEC), but it sure sounds terrible, and looks bad.  Which is probably at least part of the reason why Porter and the rest of MarketWise management are burning it down.

Here’s a little more from Porter’s letter to MarketWise employees (which was released in an 8-K, since MarketWise is a public company and the closure of Legacy Research, which was home to roughly 1/5th of MarketWise employees, is clearly “material”):

“Following the SEC’s charges against Mikula, the company learned that Teeka Tiwari had a consulting agreement with DeFi Technologies Inc, a company owned in part by a Canadian merchant bank, which was also involved in Mikula’s activities. Whether Tiwari knew of Mikula’s fraudulent actions or not, it was a violation of Tiwari’s contract and of company policy for him to receive compensation from anyone that owned shares in companies Tiwari was recommending to Legacy Research’s subscribers – something that happened on four occasions.

“Unfortunately, even after learning of Tiwari’s violations, Legacy Research’s senior managers neither terminated him nor took any steps to alert Legacy’s subscribers about this very serious breach of our company’s most important ethical standard.”

So apparently being under the auspices of the largest financial publisher around, and a publicly traded one at that, wasn’t enough to keep all the Palm Beach folks on the straight and narrow — Palm Beach Venture stopped being promoted a while ago, perhaps in connection to this Mikula stuff, though it was mentioned in the “annual report card” grades given out last week by Palm Beach’s parent, Legacy Research Group, so I guess it still existed in some fashion, at least before Legacy Research is wound down over the next few months.  The last Palm Beach Venture promo I covered was in the Spring of 2022, when Tiwari was pitching a pretty silly-sounding company called Sky Quarry that he said was as an oil company which could challenge Russia’s dominance — no sign that Mikula was involved in that one (Legacy Research Report Card here: Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3, if you want to see the details — seems a bit of a shame that they did all that “grading” work just before starting to shut down operations.)

After skimming through those report cards, one might also conclude that closing down Legacy Research and most of its publications isn’t all that much of a hardship for the parent — it looks like performance was pretty weak for many of the larger Legacy/Rogue/Palm Beach products, even though they made the unusual move of starting the “grading period” for their self-evaluation at the market lows in 2022 (newsletters are typically levered to the market, in my experience — the “growth and hype” letters, which is where most of the entry-level interest usually is, probably outperform in great years and underperform in terrible years).   And as a financial matter, it sounds like the Legacy Research division didn’t make much money for MarketWise in 2023, either, though I’m sure they raked it in back in 2021.  (Porter’s letter says Legacy had about $9 million in net income in the second half of 2023 — we don’t have MKTW financials for the full year yet, and it was likely declining in the second half of last year anyway, but the trailing twelve months net income for the full company was about $80 million as of September).

It’s hard to consistently pick good stocks, of course, and to manage risk for subscribers if you take on that task, so everyone who does so publicly ends up with poor performance at least some of the time, if you’re using fair yardsticks… I’ve certainly had plenty of terrible investments in the past, too, and some bad years. But I will confess that I experience a little shiver of schadenfreude whenever I see the newsletter guys start getting snippy with each other. We’ve seen the first salvos of that this time around, and the very public PR disaster for the biggest publisher will probably lead to more of that… maybe time to start making that popcorn.

Matt McCall was dropped by Stansberry Research several months ago (after previously being hired away from Investorplace, which Stansberry had previously acquired — this was before MarketWise was born and the company went public in its SPAC merger, the conglomerate had a couple different names along the way), and you can read between the lines to find the “why” of McCall’s departure if you check out one of the letters that Porter Stansberry wrote to MarketWise and its shareholders last year, when he was very publicly criticizing many things about the folks who he thought stole his company from him as part of the awful SPAC merger that took MKTW public… here’s what he said about McCall then:

“Matt McCall’s MegaTrend Investor has a win rate of 5% — that is, 95% of the time investors taking his advice lost money. His annualized return was just shy of negative 60%. Virtually every investment he recommended lost almost all of the investors’ money. Did any of you see his flying car promo? McCall thought that flying cars were such a good idea for investors that he led a promotion with the idea. What happens when you lose money for your readers 70% of the time? They cancel and they never buy from you again.”

And he was equally critical of McCall on Twitter at that time, too…

(Porter previously wrote a letter to MarketWise in January of 2023, highlighting some of the other missteps the company had made since he left… including buying out the firm of another Agora Financial guy who had been fined by the FTC for defrauding investors.)

But I do love the back and forth, even when they’re a little subtle about it… McCall is planning to launch his own publishing house, looks like he’ll call it NXT Wave Research, and this was his smirky response to the DOJ press release this week:

If that criteria, “don’t publish anything we don’t fully believe in,” is going to stand for all of the MarketWise publications, not just the stuff which is attached to the Stansberry name specifically and carries his brand, like McCall’s letters which were published by Stansberry Research, then perhaps we’ll see Porter use this restructuring as another reason to swing the axe more aggressively.  We know that Legacy Research division is being shut down, but don’t know yet if any of the pundits will be kept on under different imprints.

If you’re wondering whether this will hit any subscriptions you’ve had, they published a lot of less-promoted stuff, and there are some trading services under the Legacy Research name, but for the most part Legacy Research Group is made up of three subsidiaries:  Rogue Economics; Palm Beach Research, and Brownstone Research.  That’s more than a dozen fairly high-profile newsletters which will either be moved, absorbed into some existing MarketWise product, or just disappeared.

Kris Sayce is the guy in charge at Legacy Research at the moment, and has been an Agora newsletter guy for a long time, initially helming a bunch of Australian newsletters for them (we covered a few of his Aussie teasers from 2009-2014, and he got in trouble with Aussie regulators at least once, too, according to this 2020 story).  He has been Editor-in-Chief of Legacy Research since 2019 and calls himself “Publisher” now, this is how he described the situation it in his email to Palm Beach subscribers this week (if he’s held that “Publisher” title since 2019, then maybe he’s on his way out now, too, for not cracking down on Teeka earlier — or perhaps he was a battlefield promotion this week and is expected to be part of the solution, I guess we’ll find out in due time):

“This is the most serious breach of the trust you and your fellow subscribers place in us.

“For these reasons, we parted ways with Teeka and are working on finding an alternative to the publications you’ve been receiving.”

None of this is really new, this has always been an “easy come, easy go” industry where the failing letters or pundits are quietly canned and the publishers often forget about the “lifetime” promises they made and just scooch paid subscribers over to products that they hadn’t chosen (many publishers like to sell “lifetime” subscriptions as if they’re attached to a prominent name they’ve built up as the world’s best investor, and those lifetime or package deals are the most profitable things MarketWise sells, that’s the ultimate target of the marketing funnel into which every email address is poured… but in reality most of those subscriptions are to a title, or to a publisher, with no promises made about who will write those publications… and they tend to stick to their “no refunds” policies, though hopefully MarketWise will do right by all the Palm Beach and other subscribers who are impacted in the coming months). Turnover is constant in newsletters, and prominent pundits are fired or quit every year, with subscribers shifted around to try to keep people reasonably happy, but is certainly unusual to see this much turnover, this fast, at the biggest publisher.

And like I said, business was already pretty rough at a lot of publishers… so some of this was probably already coming, frankly, with Porter Stansberry back at the helm, even if Teeka Tiwari hadn’t been caught breaking the rules and his bosses hadn’t fumbled their response.  Porter was always pretty decisive in shutting down unsuccessful products in the past (like Matt McCall and Empire Financial last year, or Frank Curzio a few years before that, and many more over the past 20 years — and for the most part “unsuccessful” probably means “can’t recruit enough subscribers,” not “has a poor stock-picking performance”)… but this Palm Beach Venture scandal seems to have turned the regular culling of underperformers into a St. Valentine’s Day massacre in Baltimore and Delray Beach.

So… who’s on the way out?  We don’t know for sure, but some folks we write about quite a bit are published by that Legacy Research division of MarketWise…

The headliner at Rogue Economics is Nomi Prins, though they did also just bring on Chris Weber, who has run a newsletter independently for decades and was briefly pretty well known as a whiz-kid investor in the mid-2000s, and a year or so ago they brought on Brad Thomas, who had a SeekingAlpha following as a REIT guru, and promoted his income-focused investments quite aggressively.   Rogue certainly promoted the heck out of Prins’ entry-level newsletter over the past few years, too, but given the grade Legacy Research gave her, I doubt many of her new subscribers were very impressed.  She’s still got a brand name as an economist and author, and as a bit of a libertarian touchstone among the folks who love to hate the Federal Reserve, so perhaps they can continue to sell her using politics, much like Paradigm Press does with James Rickards, but she probably wasn’t making the stock picks herself, anyway (just as Rickards probably isn’t), so I don’t imagine we’ll see the analysts who worked under her becoming newsletter stars anytime soon.

I don’t know anything about the other folks at Rogue… and the folks who I think Prins might fit in best with, like Rickards, James Altucher and Ray Blanco over at Paradigm Press, don’t seem to be directly connected to MarketWise (though Paradigm used to be called Agora Financial, and Bill Bonner’s massive Agora network of financial publishers launched Stansberry Research 20 years ago and owned part of it).  No official word yet on whether any of those Rogue letters or pundits will continue to be published by MarketWise under a different imprint or title, and the website hasn’t changed yet.

Palm Beach was already down to being mostly Teeka Tiwari, whose name has already been erased from their website with this belated firing, and my impression is that publisher had become pretty overwhelmingly focused on cryptocurrencies in recent years.  Some of their other analysts have been around for long enough that I recognize their names, like Sam Volkering, but I’d say the Palm Beach brand is really all about Teeka and cryptos… so given Porter’s statements, it would be a little surprising if many of the Palm Beach pundits and analysts stay with MarketWise, but we’ll see.  The only publication that has so far disappeared from the Palm Beach website is Palm Beach Venture, though that happened well before this latest Department of Justice announcement.   Teeka’s byline pretty much stopped appearing in the free publications at Palm Beach on February 1, though I don’t know if his paid newsletters have been going out over the past couple weeks or not.  I would guess that the Palm Beach subscribers will be moved to existing Stansberry or Investorplace products (Luke Lango, Whitney Tilson, Eric Wade’s crypto stuff, etc.), but those subscribers will probably find out before I do.

Brownstone Research used to be made up of Jeff Brown’s newsletters, he was a hot ticket tech-stock guru for a few years, but after a terrible year of performance in 2022, Brown and Brownstone had an “amicable parting,” and when he left it essentially became the Colin Tedards show… no idea whether those tech-focused letters will survive, or if Tedards will move to another nameplate, that probably depends on whether or not the Brownstone letters were making money for MarketWise, but the two main letters, Exponential Tech Investor and The Near Future Report, did OK during the tech boom of the past year or so, not keeping up with the Nasdaq 100 but not terrible.  Not a peep out of Brownstone yet about what will happen to their subscribers.

I imagine the “trading” services under Legacy Research, from Larry Benedict and Jack Clark, will probably survive in some fashion if they were selling OK, they got good grades by the publisher… but those are generally short-term trading and options trading services that I don’t write much about, and I don’t know how they benchmark those or how real-world subscribers would have done.

MarketWise Founder and CEO Porter Stansberry didn’t immediately speak publicly about this at the beginning of the week, beyond his letter to MarketWise employees (and indirectly, investors) that was filed with the SEC.  Should be an interesting time, I wonder if he knew what he was getting himself into when he fought his way back into leadership to try to fix the company and protect his brand and rescue the value of his shares.  Might be a heavy lift from him for a while, but I do at least admire him for finally doing the right thing with Teeka Tiwari and trying to follow that up by clearing out the other folks who created that culture of accepting impropriety from a headliner, even if the company acted way too slowly… and even if this probably made a lot of Teeka fans and subscribers angry, though hopefully the publisher will do right for all those subscribers.

And yes, Tiwari’s promotions were always absurd… but I’m sure that Teeka’s actual newsletters were probably a lot more sober than his marketing pieces — I haven’t seen those letters, but that’s true of most newsletter guys.  And I’m sure he had a lot of real fans among his subscribers, who may well not care about his conflict-of-interest consulting deals, since as a mostly-crypto guy he probably had some hugely successful recommendations (and some terrible ones too, of course… I don’t know his track record, but he did recommend Ethereum and Bitcoin back in 2016 for Palm Beach Letter subscribers, so those were massive winners for anyone who held on, and anyone who has been active in recommending cryptocurrencies over the past five years should have a bunch of 1,000% gains that would have pleased at least some of their subscribers).

I’m guessing that Stansberry’s return to MarketWise as CEO hasn’t been as fun as the work he did last year with his much smaller Porter & Co. Dealing with closing down several publications and re-homing or firing 100+ employees can’t be fun, let alone facing the ire of other shareholders as the MKTW stock price drops, and I’m sure this will lead to a lot of annoying long meetings with lawyers, too.  Maybe that makes you smile… I know plenty of people hate Porter, who seems to cultivate a controversial persona as part of his brand, and people often tell me that Porter was essentially convicted by Netflix of killing one of his friends. I’ve been quite critical of many of his over-the-top promotional pitches over the years (he was the pioneer behind those interminable “presentation” videos, for which I’m not sure we can ever forgive him, even if he is a great storyteller when he gets into financial history)… but I actually mostly like the guy and think he’s pretty genuine in person, I haven’t watched the Netflix show about his friend’s death, I thought the SEC overstepped in its case against Porter 20 years ago (as did many other publishers and first amendment advocates, including the AP and the NY Times), and I often find his investment recommendations interesting and rational when I write about them.  Your opinion may well differ, of course.

(My Disclosures? I’ve only communicated with Porter a few times in person, and went to Baltimore to meet with him once about 15 years ago, but that’s more than I’ve interacted with most newsletter folks on a personal level — and to be clear about my conflict of interest, I ended up on the Stansberry Research Christmas list for a brief while and he sent me a couple good bottles of wine about ten years ago, which I drank and enjoyed, to the best of my recollection. I’m sure Stansberry Research and other MarketWise publications have advertised on Stock Gumshoe from time to time, too, though that’s probably true of many of the newsletter publishers we write about — we outsource the ad management for our website and email newsletter to a broker and to Google, to avoid dealing directly with publishers or implying that we pick and choose among them when it comes to our ad space).

The merry-go-round never seems to really stop in financial publishing, and probably Teeka Tiwari and any other targets of this culling will find a place to land eventually, too — Tiwari has been mostly selling crypto ideas in recent years, an audience that is probably used to conflicts of interest and doesn’t seem bothered by it in the search for lottery ticket winnings, and he continues to be fairly active on Twitter, and already has his own website that will undoubtedly become a home for whatever publications he decides to sell in the future.  Salesmen always end up selling, and people who cultivate a personal brand in the financial world always seem to land on their feet eventually.

If you’ve subscribed to any of those Legacy Research letters and have been told what will happen to your subscription, feel free to share any details in the comments below… we’ll try to keep track of the ongoing reorganization, and which pundits we’ve followed end up with new homes.

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thewerd
February 14, 2024 6:18 pm

South Florida = a sunny place for shady people.

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Barry G Schlecht
February 14, 2024 6:38 pm

I was interested in Tika’s service some time ago, but never fell for the high priced stuff. I canceled everything I had with him, and will NEVER listen to him again.
I no longer subscribe to Stansbury as well.
Are there any legitimate publishers that you or others recommend?
I’m just sick of the bullshiters!

sct2ali
February 14, 2024 7:38 pm

Barry: depends some on your time horizon for investing. If long-term, however you define that, I would highly recommend the Oxford Club Communique. I’ve been following the Oxford Club for many years, and I think Alex Green has a very logical and rational approach – in the Communique, that is. (Just don’t get sucked into Oxford Club’s highly-hyped high-priced “services.”) A Communique subscription can be had for $49/year (Google “oxford club communique” for special offer), renewal for $79/year, with a “365-day 100% money-back guarantee.” Certainly worth a look, I would strongly suggest. Green offers several different model portfolios (one of stocks, one of mutual funds, etc), so different types of investing, but I think his long-term results are quite good.

Don’t just take my word for it: guy named Mark Hulbert in 1980 launched “Hulbert Financial Digest,” a publication that tracked the performance of investment newsletters from the perspective of actual subscribers, including the timing and specificity of the buy/sell information published in such newsletters. Strictly neutral statistics-based, with no bias or hype. He was analyzing the performance of as many as 125 newsletters before closing down in 2016. Anyhow, for the last several years, as I recall, Hulbert ranked the Oxford Club Communique as one of the top-performing newsletters among 125. Green has not always been right in his picks in the Communique (no one is always right in this business), but he has a logical, consistent approach and, what seems to me, far more long-term winners and only a few that haven’t performed well – and uses a 25% trailing stop to limit losses.

Not for you if you want quick turn-around trading with the possibility of high rewards fairly quickly, but definitely no hype or BS in the Communique itself, ‘cuz he’s not trying to sell a high-priced service.

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Richard VEDDER
February 14, 2024 9:09 pm

Bonner Private Research. They have done well for me.

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Renate
February 14, 2024 7:12 pm

Thank you so much, Travis, for writing this valuable piece.

Here is a part that I feel is not discussed enough when it comes to who is signing up for these services: It is not necessarily “stupid” people, but folks who have no mind for business and investing and could hardly participate in the market on their own, save for buying an index fund. Despite the fact that I have a PhD in a social science, I too, feel utterly incompetent when it comes to investing. And here comes the scary part: When I talk to most other people about finances and the market, I often cannot shake the feeling that I have a better grasp than many, regardless of their level of education.

Because of my utter lack of ability and perhaps inclination, I also have signed up for several services of Marketwise. However, until I read your excellent piece today I had no idea that they were all connected under the same umbrella. When you start reading all these different newsletters and listening to the different presentations, you have no idea who is the most trustworthy and accomplished. It may take some years and a lot of money to figure it all out!

And here is my confessional:
I am a lifetime member of Dr. David Eifrig’s Income Trader and I love it! I feel that he knows what he is doing and is an extremely smart and ethical person.
I used to love to read Steve Sjuggerud’s emails, but haven’t heard from him in quite a while. Not sure what happened to him.
I also love all of Porter Stansberry’s writings and analyses and I read everything of his religiously. I also feel that he is a trustworthy and ethical individual.
Until today I had no idea that he essentially is the boss of Palm Beach Research as well and I can only hope and trust that he does the right thing.

And here my confessional continues with my walk of shame:
I was a member of Teeka’s Palm Beach Venture and invested in Emerald Health. Not only that, I also invested in his other recommendations at the time: Intellivision-Amico, HighTimes, Cloudastructure and Flora Growth. Last time I checked, I believe none of them were worth anywhere close to their pre-IPO share price.
And the walk of shame continues:
Not enough having been burnt by Teeka on this, my FOMO on crypto made me buy a lifetime membership of his crypto investment service in the latter part of last year. This was about $4,000 and what got me was the promise that he made it so easy to invest in cryptos that he was able to teach it to many grandmothers. Well, I am not a grandmother, but surely, I thought, if they could be taught, so could I!!
And to bury my head further into my hands, I have to admit, I have not dared to invest in cryptos yet. It isn’t as easy as he claimed and it is overwhelming to think of all the different wallets and websites and keys I have to keep track of to keep and/or stake the individual cryptos!

All in all, I would say, I am out close to $15,000 in those two services and in the pre-IPO deals I invested in. Any advice?

Richard VEDDER
February 14, 2024 9:14 pm
Reply to  Renate

Bonner Private Research.

Member
Renate
February 15, 2024 12:14 am
Reply to  Richard VEDDER

Richard, is that the research group you recommend?

btwind423
February 14, 2024 9:49 pm
Reply to  Renate

I suppose I narrowly missed the flames from Teeka’s crypto scheme. I did sit through his pow-wow with Whitney Tilson and got the “freebie” of Ethereum as his top crypto pick. It was already one of the 5 coins I was invested in at that time (now just 3), and after a little more research and brain-picking of a pretty reliable crypto-investor friend, I went in just a bit more on ETH. It’s been on the rise lately, and hopefully will bolster a generally tepid crypto portfolio. My advice? As I learned, stick with Stock Gumshoe for some wise (and often entertaining) takes on these teaser newsletters, and then follow Travis’s Real Money Portfolio and $100k Lock Box!

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Andy
February 15, 2024 1:16 am
Reply to  Renate

Maybe, in order not to lose any further money, abstain from sinking your USD into a newsletter service. What about following free YouTube advice? Personally, I like the Coin Bureau channel and Invest Answers, among thers.

Also, if you search on Stock Gumshoe, Kaz opens the door to an email group of people sharing / receiving newsletter infos for free.

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Dave
February 15, 2024 9:47 pm
Reply to  Renate

Porter wasn’t in charge of Marketwise while any of this stuff was happening. Though the research services are under an umbrella company, they’re all run very differently – and with different levels of ethics.

Member
Drew VanKrevelen
February 15, 2024 11:54 pm
Reply to  Renate

Buying crypto with Coinbase is at least as easy as using a brokerage account for stocks. Install the app on your phone, connect to your bank account for funding (and, eventually, cashing out), and you’re ready to invest in and/or trade crypto. Now’s a great time to start.

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Renate
February 26, 2024 5:08 pm

Thank you Drew< I will!

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skiphansen
February 14, 2024 7:19 pm

I’m not a fan of Porter Stansberry. And I was very disappointed when Whitney Tilson merged into Stansberry Research shortly after Whitney sold me on a “junior partnership” with a non-refundable $4000 fee. How could I have been so stupid? I am wondering if this new news might provide some leverage on getting as refund on my “junior partnership”. Any thoughts?

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Janis Lappin
February 14, 2024 7:36 pm

I wonder if we could start a class action lawsuit against Teeka Tiwari & Palm Beach Venture. I have lost thousands of dollars in paid subscriptions & also recommendations that proved worthless. Teeka took advantage of many people with his smooth talk & none of our investments were ever profitable.

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onefellswoop
February 14, 2024 8:13 pm

I took up an offer a couple of years ago to subscribe to several of the Palm Beach publications (Confidential, Infinity, Letter, Income and now Pioneer) for $2500 with an annual retainer of roughly $200 if memory serves. Up to this point I have considered this very good value for money.

I totally agree that the persona Teeka displays in the 2hr videos, which are basically there to get more people signed up to the newsletters and are pure box-office at times is quite a lot different from the Teeka who appears in the regular written and video updates.

Regarding Brazil Potash…that was heavily plugged, I went for the minimum number of shares. I also seem to remember a reference to Brazil Potash in some Defi Technologies literature.

What I also seem to recall was that in some of the Palm Street publications alongside a very small number of the coin recommendations there was a note that said that Teeka was an advisor for Defi Technologies and that they also held these coins… it was made pretty explicit.

Maybe one of the conflicts of interest was to do with Brazil Potash ?

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Geoffrey Peter Ballard
February 14, 2024 8:29 pm

I only took up one of Teeka’s recommendations and that was in response to the hard sell/ promotion on Brazil Potash (BP). However I have never received an annual report, despite two email requests (I live in Australia). BP is still seemingly alive but luckily, I only took up the minimum subscription, so all is not lost.
Thank you for a rather illuminating article.

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Joe
February 14, 2024 9:47 pm

Here is an email I received earlier today

Palm Beach Research Group
NOTICE
Important Message Regarding Your Palm Beach Research Subscription

Hello. My name is Brian Hunt.

You may not know me, but I’m a friend and colleague of many of the people doing good work at Palm Beach Research Group.

I helped build Stansberry & Associates, a sister company of Palm Beach Research Group. And I’m a significant shareholder in MarketWise, the ultimate holding company of Palm Beach.

To say I’m passionate about seeing Palm Beach Research’s customers well served and delighted is an understatement. And I’m working around the clock with my colleagues at Palm Beach Research to make those things happen.

By now, I’m sure you’ve heard the upsetting news.

Palm Beach Research Group had to part ways with Teeka Tiwari. Teeka violated critically important policies that ensure the research you receive is 100% independent and free of hidden conflicts.

I’m writing today to let you know that I’m working closely with MarketWise’s CEO Porter Stansberry to fulfill Palm Beach Research Group’s obligations to you. We will go above and beyond to deserve your business now and in the future. We will go above and beyond to serve your interests and needs.

Right now, we are working very hard on a plan to ensure as much continuity as possible with the research services you’ve paid for and are receiving.

We are working to ensure you receive world-class coverage of growth stocks, technology, cryptocurrencies, and other areas of opportunity currently provided at Palm Beach Research… and that you continue to receive research on every trend, every security, and every trade issued and currently covered by the Palm Beach Research publications.

Over the course of the next month, we will deliver a concrete plan that provides tremendous value to you. We will go above and beyond to fulfill the commitments Palm Beach Research Group made to you.

This plan may include providing you with ongoing coverage of current Palm Beach recommendations through its sister companies, issuing a MarketWise “credit” for similar publications, and/or honoring key subscription terms.

I’m sorry we are going through this difficult time. But please know that fulfilling Palm Beach Research Group’s obligations to you is our highest priority. We will move heaven and earth to do so.

Over the next month, I’ll send several messages with updates on our efforts. In the meantime, Palm Beach Research Group’s analyst team (who you know well) will ensure you’re kept up to date with top investment ideas.

One last thing…

Although MarketWise is a large organization, it’s owned and operated by individuals who care deeply about its ultimate customers. If you have any concerns or questions, please write me and my colleagues directly at palmbeachfeedback@marketwise.com.

We will read every letter and listen to every concern. We will work with every single individual who has been affected by this situation. We will work with you to make things right and deserve your business.

Regards,

Brian Hunt

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btwind423
February 14, 2024 11:00 pm

I guess it’s nice to see the SEC taking down shysters a few deserved pegs. Am I hoping against hope that they might listen to voices (comments) of reason when it comes to ill-considered rule change proposals such as SR-OCC-2024-001 34-99393? This is aka by the mouthful title “Proposed Rule Change by The Options Clearing Corporation Concerning Its Process for Adjusting Certain Parameters in Its Proprietary System for Calculating Margin Requirements During Periods When the Products It Clears and the Markets It Serves Experience High Volatility”.

Quick Take From My Soapbox (boiled down from my comment letter): This is just more “Too Big To Fail-ism” and grossly unfair to retail investors. The OCC’s rule proposal ostensibly attempts to avoid triggering a systemic financial crisis by reducing margin requirements using “idiosyncratic” and “global” control settings. In fact, the OCC has made such “idiosyncratic” choices over 200 times in less than 4 years (December 2019 to August 2023). IMHO, waiving away margin calls for Clearing Members over 50 times a year is far too often to be idiosyncratic. Additionally, the OCC has chosen to implement “global” control settings in connection with long tail events, including the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the so-called “meme-stock” episode on January 27, 2021.

The OCC’s own rule for defaulting Clearing Members allocates losses to that firm’s pre-funded financial resources (aka “skin-in-the-game” per SR-OCC-2021-801 34-91491) before any deposits of non-defaulting firms. If this rule proposal is concerned with potential liquidity issues for non-defaulting Clearing Members as a result of charges to the Clearing Fund, then reducing margin requirements for at risk Clearing Members via idiosyncratic control settings is blatantly illogical and nonsensical. Curiously, increasing margin requirements is exactly what the OCC admits is predicted by their STANS model, which they allege is an overestimation and seeks to mitigate. If this rule proposal is approved, reducing margin requirements directly and negatively impacts the first line of protection for the OCC, being margin collateral from at risk Clearing Members.

I absolutely encourage anyone inclined to support a position against this rule change to submit a comment to rule-comments@sec.gov with SR-OCC-2024-001 34-99393 in the subject line.

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RCD
February 14, 2024 11:51 pm

“The merry-go-round never seems to really stop in financial publishing,” Travis Johnson.
Publishers have to keep their subscribers happy, or they will go out of business. The demise of Legacy Research is warranted.
There is a lot of juggling in the newsletter industry, and it may not necessarily be beneficial to the subscriber. There is quite a bit of changing the names of investment letters, quite a bit of changing the editors, relentless upsell to more expensive investment letters, and more upsell to a “complete group” of letters. I liked the advice of Chris Mayer, and I upgraded because of him to Bonner & Partners Founders Club and Bonner Private Portfolio in 2016. Mayer left at the end of 2018. Bonner & Partners joined with Casey Research, Palm Beach Research Group, and Jeff Clark to form the Legacy Research Group in early 2019. I was given Legacy Lifetime status, which in my opinion did not really make up for losing Chris Mayer’s investing advice, although it included “access to all 22 investment advisory newsletters published by Legacy Research” and “will also have access to all future products launched by Legacy Research”. Bonner & Partners is no longer part of Legacy Research Group and was replaced by Rogue Economics with Nomi Prins. Bill Bonner with Tom Dyson and Dan Denning left to form Bonner Private Research, which is independent of Legacy Research Group. I liked Bill, Dan, and Tom better than I like Nomi Prins. To top it all off, Legacy Research Group was not honoring access to all of their products. I did not have access to Earnings Trader, Jeff Clark Alliance, Palm Beach Venture, The Opportunistic Trader, and The S&P Trader. I rather doubt I would have used these extra publications, but it galls me that they did not have integrity. They twice denied that these were part of my subscription. I liked Jeff Brown who is now gone from the group, although his stock picks did not do well the last couple years. A few months ago, I stopped my yearly subscription fee to Legacy Research Group because it did not seem worth the money.

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Irregular
February 15, 2024 3:33 am

Teeka Tiwari – I was taken for a wild ride by Teeka Tiwari promotions a few times. Between the cost of the newsletter subscriptions and the investment in failed stocks it adds up to a sizeable amount of money. I would like to compile a list of stocks and crypto Teeka promoted. I think there was also pre IPO deals and 5 or 6 psychedelic stocks he promoted with some guy named
Sappy. Thinking back to his presentations and how he would bring up his story of growing up in a room with no heat it seems to me he was hitting on our emotions instead of providing accurate information. Your help is appreciated and if I can figure out how I can make a list available of the stocks, cryptos and pre IPO’s he was promoting for us to buy. No promises but I can try.

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Ripee
February 15, 2024 9:19 am
Reply to  Andy

For a full list of vehicles he promoted, you’d need to log in to the website and peruse each of the newsletters in in your subscriptions in order from the time you joined.

I know for a while all picks have been listed in a synopsis at the bottom.

But you’d better do it soon before the site is removed.

It was Zappy Zapolin, BTW.

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RontH
February 15, 2024 9:54 am

Thank you Travis, for your excellent work.
Just to add Two facts:

Fact 1. You wrote:
“Hopefully he has at least made some personal apologies to any Palm Beach Venture folks who got sucked into some terrible private fundraisings over the past few years.

I don’t know whether such apologies were made, but I’d guess not. ”

And here is what the subscribers received on Oct. 7, 2022:
“Important Message From Palm Beach Venture

Dear Palm Beach Research Group subscribers:

We are stunned, saddened and sickened by the news we have to share with you.

We recently became aware that the SEC has initiated legal proceedings against one of our former employees, Jonathan “William” Mikula. If what the SEC says is true, then he will have violated two of our cardinal rules.

Rule #1:

Going back decades to the creation of our organization, we’ve always asked our researchers, writers and analysts to imagine they are writing to their Mom or Dad. A loved one, a sister, a brother… a family member.

Why?

Because that is how we want to treat you. Like family. In fact, many of us have family members reading our research.

That’s rule number one: the golden rule of financial publishing. Treat your subscribers the way you’d want yourself or your loved one to be treated.

Rule #2:

We are an independent research firm. Anything that taints that image, or taints the objectivity of our research, we reject…

No hidden agendas – just unbiased research.

In fact, we prohibit analysts from accepting any form of compensation in exchange for recommending “deals” or securities to our readers.

These two rules have served as our north star ever since the founding of our company.

That’s why we were incredibly dismayed when we learned that the SEC charged Jonathan William Mikula, a former analyst with Palm Beach Venture, for his involvement in a fraudulent scheme to secretly accept compensation from companies in exchange for promoting their securities.

It is important for you to know that the SEC does not allege that Palm Beach Research Group was aware of or involved in this alleged scheme.

It’s been almost a year since we terminated Mr. Mikula and removed him from our organization. Until then, we had no idea he was an SEC offender.

And now because of the charges by the SEC against Mr. Mikula, we can’t trust his research.

Because of the information that has come to light based on the SEC’s complaint, we felt like we had to let you know about this information right away.

And we have to revisit all of the recommendations and take a fresh look at the analysis with a critical eye.

Doesn’t mean that the research is bad. But it does mean that we have a very good reason to believe the research is tainted (and now needs to be re-checked through a different filter).

(In this update, we give you our analysis of the 4 named deals. We will send our re-review of all deals piecemeal over the next week. We don’t want to rush the analysis, but we want you to get ALL of our thoughts as soon as possible.)

We don’t take this lightly….

We’d like to share with you the steps we’ve taken and the steps we’re going to take, so that we may keep our trust with you, which is of the utmost importance to us.

STEP #1: We brought in an experienced hand in the private investing space. Any research you’ve read over the past year has gone through this gentleman’s lens, and he takes an almost forensic approach to digging into these deals.

STEP #2: All private deals will be reviewed by a third party, a consultant whose main job is to provide an extra layer of scrutiny to these matters. This structure gives us the peace of mind we need to let you and our family members continue reading this work.

So, what should you expect now if you’re a Palm Beach Venture subscriber?

Well, we needed to do an inventory, ASAP. And we started with the four companies named in the SEC’s complaint that are in the Palm Beach Venture portfolio. We had our internal “heavy hitter” review them all.”

Fact 2:
Of the 46 crypto recommendations in the February 16, 2023 monthly issue of Palm Beach Confidential there were 7 with an asterisk, which said:
“* These digital assets are owned by Routemaster Capital, Inc. and/or its wholly owned subsidiary, Defi Technologies, Inc. Teeka Tiwari is the Executive Chairman of Routemaster Capital, Inc. Palm Beach Research Group, its parents and subsidiaries are not affiliated with Routemaster Capital, Inc. or Defi Technologies, Inc.”.
And this asterisk was the same in some other issues before and after this one.

Not a fact, but a question about Fact 2:
Was this “full disclosure”? I do not know. And even though this was made known, was it still against the contract and policy of the mother company? It seems so.
Thank you.

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onefellswoop
February 15, 2024 11:28 am

Hypothesising Travis, but this seems eminently plausible.

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Michelangelo
February 15, 2024 11:31 am

A lot of people in the financial space have stocks, bonds, crypto… You can’t just stop them from living!!!

Teeks had (has) a right to own the same stuff that we do!!!

He was clear and forthright!!!

What is the problem???

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Michelangelo
February 15, 2024 5:53 pm
Reply to  Michelangelo

Seems to me that the Teeka Drama has been blown way-out-of-proportion…

Why do I say this?

(1) Teeka fully-disclosed…
(2) Legacy accepted…

So, big deal if Legacy made an error in their acceptance…

Let us FORGIVE Legacy…

The Legacy Decision has NOTHING TO DO with Teeka…

It is Legacy’s responsibility to accept their mistake, not Teeka’s…

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Ripee
February 15, 2024 11:55 am

It still doesn’t make sense to me.

I did not go in for Palm Beach Venture because (thankfully) I would had been spread too thin with all the picks in the other newsletters. But I still received newsletters from Mikula, as his name was on one of the other newsletters at the time. Then all of a sudden his name disappeared from the newsletter and I started receiving emails from him that he and a partner had started a new business and I should sign up.

Why was there no disclosure to those of us who received non-Venture picks from Mikula?

Secondly, it was public knowledge (that a layperson like me did not know how to check) that Teeka had been barred from being a registered rep. So how could Legacy and Marketwise place him in such a powerful position?

It sounds a lot like that scene in Casablanca, shocked to find gambling in the casino.

I’m not complaining, as I am ahead and learned a lot from Teeka and some others there. Plus I never trust financial players (sorry). I “absorb what is useful and discard the rest” instead of not getting involved at all.

I just don’t believe they’re all lily white and all about the customers, including in the Mikula situation.

Hopefully within a month Porter Stansberry will prove me wrong. Hope for the best and plan for the worst.

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onefellswoop
February 15, 2024 11:26 am
Reply to  RontH

Thanks very much for this, I was unaware of the message from Palm Street Venture, it was before my time and I did not take that newsletter. Thanks also for confirming the coins with an asterisk in Palm Street Confidential that I alluded to in a previous post.

I should imagine the majority of subscribers are very sorry to see Teeka go. As I’ve previously said, there are two sides to him. There are a lot of analysts working at Palm Beach on the newsletters, so one of his jobs is to get as many people to take the newsletters as possible, hence the periodic ‘make generational wealth ‘, ‘biggest thing I’ve seen in my 25 years in crypto’ videos etc etc

In his other role, providing updates and encouragement , both written and spoken, to subscribers, he comes across as very likeable and honest. For example he has admitted when he’s got things wrong…. he said that he’d originally dismissed NFTs thinking they wouldn’t catch on and admitted he’s been wrong several months later, the timing of his thesis on Bitcoin miners was unfortunately too early and he repeatedly admitted that (and let’s not forget that in this group of picks was Voyager Digital, the demise of which I felt they were very slow to react to… but Voyager Digital, Luna, FTX… I guess a lot of people were).

His advisory role with Defi Technologies (whose shares I own incidentally and, NFA, a company I very much rate) was very much in the public eye…he did a series of ‘fireside chats’ with them on YouTube, went on to BitBoy’s show and did a very good job plugging the company in the interview. He was listed on the website as one of the 2 advisors (along with ‘Pomp’) for some considerable time.

Regarding Routemaster Capital… I need to find out…. I remember how enthusiastic he was when he first joined Defi Technologies / Valour…. it initially seemed that he was President (this must have been the Routemaster role), but I remember a lot of chopping and changing in those very early days) and his role for the most part seemed to be very much advisory…and PR (in which he excels lol).

As I’ve said before , I definitely saw Brazil Potash mentioned in some Defi Tech. document or presentation on the web, I’ll try and find the reference.

The ‘Special Opportunities’ newsletter with Zappy Zapolin was catastrophic, huge losses across the board. I put the minimum in for one of the recommendations ei.ventures which is at least sort of alive and kicking although under a holding company with two others. This and Brazil Potash were my only involvement outside crypto coins / companies.

‘William’ Mikula was still an analyst on Palm Beach Daily on 1st July 2021.

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onefellswoop
February 15, 2024 12:50 pm
Reply to  RontH

https://assets.ctfassets.net/cj4vy7rnkwxs/1yimCm5SoWDHxR54kYN4fH/ade28408d148d03035b218453234d31b/MDA_Sept_30__2021.pdf

“On February 18, 2021, the Company appointed Teeka Tiwari as executive chairman of advisory board
of the Company. Mr. Tiwari, as an investment analyst, is credited as being one of the first experts to
explore cryptocurrencies”

There’s also reference made to Brazil Potash and Flora Growth in the ‘Private Investments’ sector

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thxmuclax
February 15, 2024 1:06 pm

It’s incredible how many of you (not you, Travis) are so quick to dismiss Teeka’s newsletter universe as “scams” and his subscribers as “stupid” or “suckers.”

If you’re a subscriber yourself and that has been your personal experience, please tell us. But don’t just throw around damaging platitudes. Give us concrete examples of why it did not work out for you so we can all learn something useful.

If you’ve never read any of Teeka’s publications or seen any of his write-ups on various coins, perhaps it’s best to withhold criticism until you do.

We all know that the sales tactics of these newsletters are sleazy and, at times, misleading at best.
But as I said before, I have been very happy with Teeka’s crypto picks, guidance, and advice. It seemed completely sincere and a thousand times more substantive than anything you learn about Crypto on Twitter, YouTube, or various Crypoe news sites.

I can only assume that those who have to pile onto Palm Beach Research are secretly jealous that they did not get an 800% return on this coin or 1600% on another one and now have to talk themselves into this “I’ve known all along that this was a scam” narrative.

These success stories are not made up. They are real. But you couldn’t just drop in one day, pick a single recommendation, and expect a miracle within a few months. You had to follow his instructions meticulously and be patient for a long time. His message to subscribers was always about a long-term vision and small, equal-size positions.

Nobody else promotes investing in cryptos that way. So who’s the scammer here?

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Michelangelo
February 15, 2024 3:33 pm
Reply to  thxmuclax

Hi Thxmuclax… I AGREE… What do you think about my suggestions below?

I am a Lifetime Member of Palm Beach, Rogue, Brownstone, Casey & Legacy…

Therefore, I assume that I am a “majority shareholder” much like Porter for Marketwise…
I have made 10X my initial investment just as Teeka Tiwari, Jeff Brown, Doug Casey promised…

As long as I followed Teeka’s, Jeff’s, Doug’s recommendation to “asymmetrically invest” with only 1% of my total portfolio, and using equal amounts of $500 to $1000 in every recommendation…

Therefore, I am a “shareholder” that you should listen too very carefully…

Here are my suggestions (as the majority shareholder, lifetime member) of Legacy Research Group (Palm Beach, Brownstone, Casey, Rogue):

(1) Bring Jeff Brown back ASAP… He is a prophetic person which we need to predict the future… Remember that he is a Scientist…

(2) Do not sever your (our) ties with Teeka… He is (and has always been) brutally honest with us… Yes, he must be dramatic to wake-us-up bc we are asleep to the future of crypto and blockchain…

(3) Allow the “shareholders” of Legacy Research (all titles) to “vote” on whether-or-not to dismiss Teeka…

(3A) Why are we not involved?

(3B) What has Teeka said about “ DeFi Holdings, Inc”?

(3C) Why is he allowed to hold BTC and many other cryptos, but he is not allowed to consult?

(3D) As a Majority Shareholder, I want Teeka to own the same crypto and stocks and consulting firms that he recommends (so he has “skin-in-the-game”)… Thoughts?

(3E) I have never agreed with the Legacy Research attitude that, “Our analysts should not own the same stocks, crypto that they recommend”… This is absurd…

(3F) Of course, I want to own the same stocks, crypto’s as Teeka!!! That is the whole idea (to follow my Mentor)!!!

(3G) Why are you “parting ways” with Teeka without giving him the ability to speak with us??? We are his customers!!! We deserve his thoughts, ideas, defense!!!

(3H) You did the same with Jeff Brown!!! All of a sudden, Jeff is no good… Baloney!!! Everyone’s portfolio crashed!!! Everyone!!! And Jeff’s portfolio picks are excellent, high-level and/or early picks… Jeff has never lied!!! He always told us the truth!!! Everyone’s portfolio crashes, and you blamed Jeff? Absurd!!!

(3I) I am also a Lifetime Member of The Stansberry Investment Advisory Lifetime, so I — obviously — trust Porter, and his Crew!!!

(3J) Trust me… You have made a big error in “amicably” parting with Jeff Brown, and “parting” with Teeka Tiwari…

How do I know?

Because I am also a researcher and scientist, and I have researched every stock, and crypto reco by Jeff and Teeka, and they were (are) all legit (as best as could be — can be — expected with limited knowledge of blackswan events, i.e., the pandemic, FTX collapse, Luna collapse, etc.)…

Come on now…

In conclusion:

(3K) We (the shareholders), deserve to hear both Teeka’s and Jeff’s side-of-the-story…

(3L) We deserve to VOTE whether-or-not to “part ways with” Teeka and/or Jeff…
Porter… You trying to save Marketwise is NO DIFFERENT from us trying to save Legacy…
You are the Majority Shareholder in Marketwise…

I am the Majority Shareholder in Legacy (along with others, I assume)…

I really think that you need to allow Teeka and Jeff to:

(3M) Communicate with US…

(3N) Allow US to VOTE…

This is CRAZY that both Jeff and Teeka are “guilty until proven innocent”…

Whatever happened to “reasonable doubt”…
What is this “Legacy Research has decided” stuff…

We (your customers) are the “deciders”!!!
Come on… What gives???

BTW, there is NO WAY that Teeka would purposely have a “conflict-of-interest”…
This makes NO SENSE!!!

Why would he do such a stupid thing???

And if he did have a “side-consulting-gig”, then big deal!!!

Is Teeka not allowed to have a “side-gig”???
Porter, something is NOT RIGHT HERE!!!

BOTH Teeka and Jeff are the Legacy work-horses which have PROVEN themselves to tirelessly give us UPDATES, UPDATES, UPDATES…

There is NO DOUBT in my mind that BOTH Teeka and Jeff need to be kept on staff…

These “decisions” (to “part ways with” Teeka and Jeff) are absurd…

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VirtualJP
February 20, 2024 11:09 am
Reply to  Michelangelo

Nicely said!

Member
Michelangelo
February 15, 2024 4:44 pm

The more I read through this thread, the more I see that:

(1) Teeka fully-disclosed (way before)…
(2) Legacy accepted his disclosure (way before)…

So, who is at “fault”?

Not Teeka!

Guest
PalmBeachSubscriber
February 17, 2024 9:26 am
Reply to  Michelangelo

What’s more interesting and leads credibility to this line of thought that Teeka did disclose and that the publisher was aware of it were Teeka’s recent comments (post being fired) on Instagram where he said they had just renewed a contract with him, knew of these disclosures since 2022 and then rug pulled and fired him the day before a big payout was due him. Doesn’t seem very “coincidental” to me… As far as some of the other comments about Teeka here. Look I hate those infomercial style interview sales videos too, but Teeka’s crypto picks and analysis over the last several years have made me a LOT of money. And no one can claim otherwise (as someone did here in a post that his picks never made any money). I have made 1000% or more on numerous picks from Teeka over the years. A lot is coming out over this blow up, of course, like the fact that he was barred from being a financial advisor — I didn’t know that. What I do know is that the service he provided via Legacy was solid. I didn’t like the publisher or their marketing style. I didn’t like the infomercial videos. I didn’t like how my email was constantly sold to everyone under the sun. But the Palm Beach Confidential service was a great service. Unfortunately to make more money, they kept spinning off new services that were all basically a different version of the same thing. It was frustrating as a buyer of Palm Beach Confidential that I wouldn’t get certain Crypto picks unless I bought some other service. I know as a businessman why they did this. Because they sold high priced one-time products and thus had no ongoing income to support them. This is a failing of this style of marketing. A more productive solution would be to charge a monthly access fee but most financial companies don’t do this because they simply do not want to work that hard to earn people’s ongoing trust on a monthly basis and provide value on a monthly basis. It’s a shame… really, but it’s true. Honestly I’m not sad to see Palm Beach go away, I hated their style. But I am saddened to see Teeka’s Crypto insights go away with them because the whole thing just smells all the way to the top… the publisher…

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Michelangelo
February 15, 2024 5:37 pm

Furthermore, 1% mistake (if Teeka and/or Legacy did make a mistake or mis-oversight) does not invalidate 99% successes…

Something is fishy here with Teeka and Jeff getting the boots…

I do not believe the story…

Member
Michelangelo
February 15, 2024 5:39 pm

Teeka is not stupid…

Why would he compromise his reputation?

He would not…

He fully-disclosed…

Something is fishy with this whole story…

thxmuclax
February 17, 2024 8:38 am
Reply to  Michelangelo

Michelangelo,

The damage to Legacy’s and Palm Beach Researche’s reputation is done. The federal charges regarding the ex-employee (not Teeka) are real. The owner, MarketWise, and its CEO, Porter Stansberry, have to do something dramatic or risk running all their affiliated publications into the ground.

Why did they come down so hard on Teeka? It could be because of the above reasons; maybe it’s because of something else we’re not privy to. Money? We’ll never know.

What I do know and am concerned about is not losing access to my favorite crypto subscriptions. Your stake in this is even greater with lifetime access to Brownstone Research and beyond.

As we’ve seen in MarketWise’s outreach to subscribers, they do whatever they can to not worsen the situation. (Or so it seems.)

I have had a brief email exchange with Porter Stansberry, and he assured me that they were working on a transformative solution that would make subscribers happy – at least as far as the crypto newsletters are concerned.

He understands that Palm Beach Research’s Crypto publications are unique in the industry with their comprehensiveness, focus, and investment strategies. It’s actually an excellent opportunity to shake off the stuffy, old-fashioned “Palm Beach Private Club” image (which was always at odds with the cutting-edge world of crypto), keep the great content, and create something even better.

So, I choose to be optimistic. With or without Teeka, there are good people over there who’ve been doing most of the work anyway. This whole debacle may be a blessing in disguise for us subscribers.

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RJCinCT
February 17, 2024 11:57 am
Reply to  thxmuclax

Your post is encouraging. I paid a lot to be a Palm Beach “Infinity ” subscriber because of the crypto analyses and recommendations, which I have found overall to be solid and profitable. I agree with your sentiments, and hope Porter Stansberry can deliver on providing at least the same quality if not better cryptocurrency research and newsletter service.

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Jan
April 27, 2024 12:51 pm
Reply to  thxmuclax

I’ve been a Palm Beach Infinity subscriber since 2013.

Now that you’ve received your “replacement” subscriptions to Luke Lango’s Investor Place letters, are you happy? His crypto letters are ridiculously simple compared to what we received from Teeka.

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Member
garyb014
February 15, 2024 6:09 pm

I found this video about Elegance brand Sway energy drinks. I lost money on that pitch. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=stcZ2VvwmOo

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Janis Lappin
February 15, 2024 10:18 pm
Reply to  garyb014

me too !!!

Guest
Ken Grakauskas
February 15, 2024 6:37 pm

I bought into Teekas recommendations and bought them religiously for 3 to 4 years. After a thorough analysis of his recommendations, I discovered that had I of just bought Bitcoin instead of all the maybe picks, Id have made an additional 600,000 dollars.

Member
combine
February 15, 2024 11:07 pm

Palm Beach Daily sent now (Feb. 15) this, starting it’s way to become yellow press?

11 Simple Ways to Beat Record-High Gas Prices

By Palm Beach Research Group

Gasoline is a necessity… We hit gas stations on an as-needed basis. And even in today’s remote-work environment, we still need our cars to pick up groceries or run errands.

So if you’re willing to be open-minded and disciplined, here are 11 tips for saving gas money:

Buy gas early in the week. A GasBuddy study reports Monday is the best day of the week to buy gas. Since there’s variation across states, you can view GasBuddy’s Best and Worst Days to Buy gas early in the week Buy Gas, By State.

Download a free gas-price finder app. GasBuddy, Gas Guru, and Gas Prices by MapQuest are all top-rated apps. They are easy-to-use ways to find the cheapest gas station(s) in your area.

Pay in cash. Some gas stations offer lower prices if you pay by cash. They usually advertise it on their price boards, and the difference can be as much as 10 cents or more per gallon.

Use a credit card with max gas rewards. See NerdWallet’s Best Gas Credit Cards of February 2024. Make sure to pay off the charges each month to avoid paying interest.

Purchase discounted gas gift cards online. Sites like Gift Card Granny, CardCash, and Gift Card Place offer discounted gas gift cards.

Sign up for a gas station reward program. Most gas stations (ExxonMobil, Shell, Speedway, etc.) have them.

Take advantage of warehouse clubs. BJ’s, Costco, and Sam’s Club price gas cheaper as an extra membership incentive.

Keep your car in good shape. Maintain a clean air filter… keep tires properly inflated and aligned… stay on top of oil changes and use the recommended grade. Basically, stick to a regular maintenance schedule.

Drive sensibly. Speeding and jackrabbit starts and stops hurt fuel economy. Use cruise control when possible.

Use GPS. A navigation app like Google Maps or Apple Maps, will provide the most efficient route to a destination.

Consider alternative transportation. Carpool. Ride a bike. Or use public transportation.

Of course, similar to using coupons at the grocery store, these tips will only save you a few cents here and there on your gas prices. But every little bit counts… and over time, they’ll add up to a bundle.

Even better, these tips can help you save at the pump whether prices are up or down. So it’s a great way to turn spare change into a bigger bankroll.
Start Small, Save Big

With inflation still persistent, gas prices could stay where they’re at… or even go higher in the months ahead.

So if you don’t already do them, try a few tips from the list above for about a month. Then compare what you paid for gas this month versus the month before.

These tips above aren’t a silver bullet for rising gas prices… but saving a little bit here and there will add up over time.

Palm Beach Research Group

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exvestor
February 16, 2024 9:35 am
Reply to  combine

Where can I sign up to spend $15k for a lifetime of this crap?

thxmuclax
February 17, 2024 12:48 pm
Reply to  combine

Palm Beach Daily emails are NOT PART OF THEIR PAID SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE.

You can sign up for these emails and not pay a dime for Palm Beach Research. These emails have only one purpose: to keep future subscribers engaged with everyday stuff around money.

If you did subscribe to Palm Beach Daily (their ultra-low-cost entry-level subscription), why did you not opt out and keep the communication focused on investment advice?

The number of misinformed and misleading comments here is astonishing.

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Irregular
February 16, 2024 12:49 am

DYOR is what you should be doing with ALL newsletter recommendations. Teka made me a lot of money with his crypto recommendations, only after I studied all the facts I could get. Trading his Render recommendation made me 350K in one trade. AKT he recommended 18 months ago at 25 cents. I bought at 60 cents and am now sitting on a 280% profit, but have them staked and getting more each day. I didn’t follow his very sound advice of only taking small amounts of each coin. If you want to make money at crypto, DYOR and back yourself.
Stop blaming anyone else and toughen up. No one made you buy at a loss.
I followed his stock recommendations at a loss. with Brazil Potash and Sky Quarry not doing much so, have written them off as a possible loss. But they may come good.

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