Become a Member

What’s that “God Chip” Company Pitched by Jimmy Mengel?

Looking into a Crow's Nest pitch that "Next-Gen Tech Developed With MIT and DARPA Could Make You 12,795%"

This article was originally published on May 21, 2021. We are getting many questions about this ad again this week, so we’re re-floating it to the top — the ad is still in circulation and does not appear to have changed in any meaningful way, and what follows has not been updated or revised since it was first published. The company being teased is, coincidentally enough, trading for about the same price as it was none months ago.

This ad about the next way to break through the limitations Moore’s law has sent a bunch of questions my way recently, so I’m revisiting our answer from January and updating the piece we published about this “God Chip” company on January 27. The ad is essentially unchanged but is being circulated anew these days, so I’ve made a few updates to our original story below.

The pitch comes from Jimmy Mengel for his The Crow’s Nest newsletter ($99/yr), which is his “entry level” letter that we see promoted pretty regularly. The hook is that “Moore’s law is dead” — microchips have gotten so small, with the control gates down to 5nm now in wide use even a bit smaller, 3nm or even 1nm in the lab and in specialized situations, that they really can’t shrink much more, at least not if they’re built with silicon. New materials are needed if we’re going to make smaller and smaller transistors, and making smaller and smaller transistors is the way to cram more transistors onto a small chip.

There are plenty of ways to make advancements, of course, we’ve heard tell of special coatings that can speed things up, in the pitches about Atomera, for example, and about several different kinds of materials that might replace silicon… but this time, it’s about carbon nanotubes as a possible replacement.

Here’s some more from Mengel’s ad:

“… silicon-based microprocessors can’t become much faster than they are today.

“It’s the end of an era.

“And it’s why the Defense Department’s research wing initiated a $1.5 billion project. Its goal is to develop microprocessors that overcome silicon’s limitations.

“This project is called the Electronics Resurgence Initiative.

“It’s run by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA).”

Everybody loves to drop DARPA’s name in a teaser pitch, of course, because we’ve all heard stories about how DARPA funding was key to developing technologies as basic as the Internet, GPS, and the graphical user interface (and mouse). We can all dream about getting in early on a technology like that, right?

Of course, they’ve also blown billions on stuff that didn’t ever go anywhere — that’s the nature of basic research, after all.

But moving on…

“One little-known company is at the heart of DARPA’s latest project. It’s figured out a completely new way to manufacture microprocessors.

“Getting in on this company could generate a 950% gain in the next few months…

“That’s 10x your money on a single stock.”

Now that’s what we’re looking for! Bring on the solid gold bathtubs!

More from the spiel…

“Semiconductor companies such as Intel could be facing ruin soon…

“But one little-known company is expected to be the big winner.

“Because it discovered a way to overcome the death of Moore’s law…

“All thanks to what I call ‘God Chip’ technology.”

Are you getting our free Daily Update
"reveal" emails? If not,
just click here...


Why “God Chip?” He doesn’t really say. People try to make all kinds of things seem omnipresent or holy, of course, so we’ve seen pitches about a God Switch and God’s Gold and a God Key and, well, I’m sure there’s more I’m forgetting.

The potential gains are shown off with plenty of impressive-looking diagrams, here’s what Mengel dangles by way of future profit potential…

“Let’s assume this little-known company captures only Intel’s earnings in the near future…

“That would mean its stock could rise by 950%.

“That’s enough to turn every $10,000 invested into $105,000….

“Of course, this still leaves the business from Intel’s competitors to be absorbed as well…

“And with the global microprocessor market to reach $112.7 billion by 2025, a 950% win is a highly conservative estimate.”

Ah, so just “taking Intel’s business” is the conservative estimate? Seriously? Do we get any timeframe on that?

“Intel, Nvidia, and AMD are among the biggest employers in Silicon Valley…

“But their past successes relied on silicon.

“This is why their downfall could be just months away…

“And with these companies going down, Silicon Valley is outright doomed.

“However, this won’t be the end of America’s incredible tech success story…

“Progress will carry on — only without Silicon Valley.

“And it’s all because of the company DARPA joined forces with.”

What the what? Intel’s downfall just months away? Certainly Wall Street is forecasting a long period of “blah” from Intel, with the expectation that revenues will be essentially flat for the next few years, though that’s not because silicon is going away anytime soon — it’s mostly because Taiwan Semiconductor has been eating their lunch for years.

But lets not get too far ahead of ourselves… back to the tease…

“Not only did it discover how to prevent electron leakage with its ‘God Chip’ technology…

“It also found out how to make microprocessors 10 times more energy-efficient.”

And he talks up the big spending on 5G, with the implication that this secret company with its “God Chip” will benefit from that spending…

“… long-term projection reported by CNBC of $12.3 trillion for 5G over the next 15 years and you’re looking at $17.4 trillion in new wealth waiting to be unlocked…

“If this company from Massachusetts captures 0.5% of all this cash, it’s stock could rise by 6,893% within 12 months.

“That’s enough to turn a small $500 stake into $34,965…

“And a slightly bolder investment of $5,000 into a whopping $349,650….

“Make no mistake, 0.5% is a ridiculously low estimate. This is a very conservative projection.”

I’m not sure how that math works, but sure, I guess we can say that some folks are estimating the total “new wealth” created by upgrading to 5G networks will be $17 trillion, and one half of one percent of that would be about $85 billion, right? This is all made up, so I guess the math doesn’t matter… but still, that’s right in the neighborhood for Intel’s annual revenue, just for some context. If this company is one twelfth of Intel’s size in some way (which is another clue dropped in the ad), I don’t see how that could bring us to a 6,893% gain for the stock.

Particularly because, of course, all this happening in one year is cloud cuckoo land talk.

So we’ll skip ahead here to make sure we can just get to answer and start thinking rationally for a minute…

“I’m talking about graphene….

“The off-radar company I’m talking about found a way to manufacture microprocessors with these one-atom-thick graphene tubes.

“It’s extremely difficult to pull this off…

“Billions of tiny 1-nanometer tubes have to be aligned perfectly across a 200-millimeter wafer….

“As one scientist explains, ‘It’s like trying to cover the entire state of New Hampshire in perfectly oriented dry spaghetti.”’

“The method they use for depositing the graphene tubes is called incubation….

“… recently the research team achieved a major breakthrough.

“They were able to reduce the incubation time from 48 hours to 150 seconds.

“That’s why the mass production of ‘God Chips’ is around the corner.”

The best thing about phrases like “around the corner,” as far as marketers and pundits are concerned? It doesn’t really have a legal meaning, but it does conjure up immediacy in the brain of those of us who read the hype… you can imply that something is happening in, well, two shakes of a lamb’s tail… but it might actually be 2,000 shakes, and the lawyers will probably still sign off on “around the corner.”

What else do we learn about this graphene chip breakthrough?

“… silicon-based transistors are made at very high temperatures.

“I’m talking about 900 degrees Fahrenheit.

“But the ‘God Chip’ can be manufactured at near-room temperature.

“This is a huge game-changer…

“Layers of circuits on top of previously fabricated layers are now possible…

“This way, three-dimensional chips can be created.

“This can’t be done with silicon-based technology. Existing layers would melt at 900 degrees.”

OK, I’m no expert but it sounds logical that going more three dimensional would also help to push through and keep Moore’s law going, and I can see how temperature would make that easier. Fine. Any more clues?

“This Company Surged by 932% Already… but this is just the beginning…

“Like I said, the company behind the “God Chip” teamed up with MIT…

“Yet I estimate not one in 100,000 Americans knows its name.

“Make no mistake — I’m not talking about an unproven penny stock. This company has customers across countless sectors…

“Including aerospace, defense, automotive, health care, and energy…

“It’s a supplier to Apple, Dell, Raytheon, Lockheed, Cisco, and HP…

“And its technology is protected by an astonishing 14,000 patents.

“So it’s no wonder its stock soared by 932% in recent years…

“That’s right, this company could’ve made you 10 times your money already.

“But since it’s more than 12 times smaller than Intel, there’s still huge room for growth.

“And with the ‘God Chip’ hitting the market soon, I expect it to shoot to the moon.”

We often hear references to the number of patents a company holds, and that can be a rough measure of their relative strength in R&D-intensive areas… but, of course, the quality and value of a patent are not set in advance. Each one is different, so whether you have 14,000 patents like this large company being teased, or more than 40,000 like Texas Semiconductor or Intel, doesn’t necessarily matter when it comes to one specific technology. What matters is who has the best patents… and sadly, there’s no way I can figure that out in advance, or figure out who’s going to win the key patent lawsuits over carbon nanotubes in ten years, so I tend to not waste too much time on those kinds of numbers.

But anyway… what’s the stock? Can we finally get our freakin’ answer?

Just one more little group of clues… we’ll get there, I promise.

He also goes on for a bit about how he expects their technology to dominate in lithium ion batteries, too, thanks to their ability to mass-scale “graphene tubes” production, so he throws another few thousand percent in there…

“According to Wintergreen Research, the global battery market is projected to reach $1 trillion by 2026.

“And if this company captures 10% of this market, its stock could rise by 5,902%…

“That’s on top of the 6,893% I told you about earlier.

“We’re looking at a total potential gain of 12,795% within a few short years.

“Enough to turn a small $500 stake into $64,475…”

And when is this “carbon nanotubes chip” news coming out? Here’s what Mengel says:

“I expect a huge announcement from this company very soon.

“When this happens, investors will rush into this stock in droves.”

Sheesh, I kinda guess they already have — it is, after all, up 932% over some undefined time period.

And one last bit of hype for you:

“The first transistor built with graphene tubes was developed in 1998…

“And in 2019, this off-radar company figured out how to build a microprocessor with 14,400 transistors…

“As a result, we’re looking at an increase in the transistor count of 1,439,900%

“That’s a nearly 1.5 MILLION percent increase in 21 years.

“And an annualized increase in the number of transistors of 68,566%.

“We have every reason to assume that progress will continue at this pace…

“Remember, incubation time has just been slashed from 48 hours down to 150 seconds.

“That’s a 1,152x increase in production speed…

“The number of transistors on the “God Chip” keeps rising as we speak.

“According to my calculations, it could surpass the best Intel microprocessor very soon…

“When this happens, it will replace every silicon-based microprocessor on Earth.

“The ‘God Chip’ will be faster, consume less energy, and put off less heat than any silicon-based chip.

“This off-radar company will dominate the semiconductor market.

“It could happen as early as tomorrow.”

Again, I dare you to misprove “could” … another term the lawyers love… but what is our “God Chip” company?

This must be, sez the Thinkolator, giant chip pioneer Analog Devices (ADI).

Yes, it’s a Massachusetts company… yes, it’s about a twelfth the size of Intel (in revenue terms, at least — in terms of market cap, at around $58 billion it’s only about a fourth the size of Intel).

There are other cool companies doing a lot of work in carbon nanotubes, though much of it is also happening in academic labs or in the bowels of Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor, I’m sure — Nantero is one of the clear leaders in developing actual carbon nanotube products, focused on their NRAM technology that is denser and as fast as DRAM, and they are a Massachusetts company, too, but they’re not actually public — they’ve gotten venture funding and partnership funding from several public companies, including On Semiconductor, Cisco, Dell and a few others… including ADI’s founder (and still Chairman), Ray Stata.

So where do our connections to this “God Chip” lie? Mostly in the fact that this work being led by MIT has been funded by and partnered with Analog Devices for years, and uses one of ADI’s foundries. And yes, those carbon nanotube chips are coming, and have made some big advances to get to the realm of something useful, but it’s early days yet — they are showing good signs of energy efficiency so far, but also are nowhere near as precise as current silicon technology (while most leading edge chips use 7nm gates these days, the gate length for these chips produced last summer was 130nm).

So yes, ADI has always prided itself on being out ahead of the current technology, and working on stuff that their customers don’t even need yet, and this effort to make chips using carbon nanotubes that they’ve participated in has been in process for decades and is genuinely impressive… but it’s not going to show up on ADI’s income statement anytime soon, and they’re not going to announce commercial production tomorrow.

I don’t have any problem with buying ADI shares, it’s a little pricey but is a company that’s very well suited for the current pricing dynamics in industrial and automotive chips, with shortages from COVID helping to drive up prices, and it’s been a steady performer with investor-friendly management for a long time… but I wouldn’t buy it because you think it’s going to rise by 5,000% in the next year. If you need gains like that, you’ve got to either give it a few decades to play out, or start out with a much smaller and riskier investment than Analog Devices.

But again, it’s not the wild promises of 5,000-10,000% returns we have to evaluate — that’s obviously idiotic. What we have to look at is the company, think about the price it trades at now and whether there’s potential for growth… maybe even some surprise growth from carbon nanotubes in five or ten years… and decide whether we want to buy a piece today.

Right now, ADI trades at about $160 a share, riding the past year’s surge in pretty much all semiconductor stocks (OK, except Intel), but it has also lagged behind the booming semiconductor stocks over the past two or three years to some degree — partly that’s because it doesn’t grow as fast as some of the darlings like like NVIDIA or AMD, but it has also lagged some closer-to-peer companies like Texas Instruments (TXN). The stock has returned 932%, as teased, if you count dividends — but that’s going back to the lows of March, 2009.

If you want to look forward to any surprise gains, then that could come from increasing demand from their key industrial and automotive sectors, dosed with a lot of strength in communications chips that, yes, are in demand as 5G continues to be adopted. Lots of chip companies have exposure to similar industry trends and economic cyclicality, though, so if you want to bet on them outpacing the sector, the most reasonable reason for that is probably their pending takeover of Maxim Integrated Products (MXIM), which will give them some potential for improving efficiency, broaden the array of products in which they have a technology lead or possibly resilient margins and significantly boost their 5G-related business, and create a larger competitor for Texas Instruments (MXIM is roughly a $25 billion company, and it’s an all-stock deal so we’ll end up with roughly a $75 billion company).

The best sum-up I’ve seen of that rationale was in Barron’s a couple months ago, with the RBC Capital analyst predicting that the company will “run lean” going into the closing of the Maxim deal in the next few months, and will also be well-positioned to benefit from investment in space exploration and satellites and car manufacturing as the year progresses, all while they’re also getting the promised cost savings out of their merger deal. He also said he expects the next quarter to be strong, and put a $150 price target on the stock… so that tells you just about everything you need to know about the stock market today: Everyone loves it, everyone has it rated a “buy”, but even the biggest fans are having to up their price targets… between November and January, that same analyst raised his target again (it had been $135, it went to $150 in November, and earlier this year he ramped it up to $174). Those targets don’t really mean anything, of course, but it’s an indicator of sentiment.

In terms of actual numbers and forecasts, here’s where we are: ADI finished its last fiscal year with $4.91 in earnings per share and $5.6 billion in revenue, and we’re about halfway through their 2021 fiscal year. The shares are now trading at about 27X (adjusted) trailing earnings… and the forecast for this current fiscal year is now for about 28% earnings growth (up from 20% a few months ago), slowing to 10% or so for the next couple years. The forward PE is about 25, so if you think there’s any chance at all of them beating those expectations, either because of the Maxim acquisition or just because the industrial economy recovers more quickly than the analysts are forecasting, then you can still argue that the price is pretty fair. At least, compared to the rest of the stock market (which is an important caveat, of course — the S&P 500 trades at a trailing PE of about 30 right now, and a forward PE of 21, down from the highs of February but still pretty close to as expensive as the index has ever gotten on those metrics).

ADI has been a very strong company for a very long time, and it’s reasonably valued… but it’s also a large company and is not nearly as sexy as the hotter tech names or the red-hot chip stocks that went crazy over the past six months or so, so the downside is probably limited, too, but we should keep our “upside” expectations somewhat muted. This is the two-year stock chart comparing ADI (blue) with the average semiconductor stock (the PHLX semiconductor index, red) and the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ, orange):

ADI Total Return Level Chart

ADI reported on Wednesday after the market close, with analysts raising expectations going into that quarter and with a pop of 5% or so on the strong results yesterday. That “beat” is mostly because automotive and industrial chip demand has surged, and certainly the chip market demand is enormous and will remain enormous, with a lot of demand for MXIM’s communications chips coming later this year, too, so they are pretty well positioned. And ADI is not crazy expensive, so I could see nibbling some on the stock as we’ve seen it drift down a bit with the tech sector’s decline in the last month, or perhaps if the market tumbles again and the stock dips. I don’t own the shares now, and I don’t have much semi exposure in my portfolio — they’re not going to double overnight, for sure, but it’s a large and relatively strong company with a good dividend growth history and a potential catalyst in the pending merger.

I wouldn’t think twice about carbon nanotubes as a reason to invest in ADI, though, that’s an R&D project and a deep future potential. I’m sure the team of folks working on that at ADI have great dreams about that, and I wish them well, but that project doesn’t even rise to the level of generating press releases for a huge company like Analog Devices.

That’s just what I think, though, and when it comes to your money it’s your opinion that matters — so are you jazzed up about carbon nanotube chips? Think that’s the future, and that ADI might lead in that area? Otherwise excited about a large and relatively pricey leading analog chipmaker in the era of 5G and continuing industrial and automotive automation? Let us know with a comment below (I’ve left the comments attached from our original article in January, in case those other reader contributions and opinions are helpful).

P.S. When we first covered this idea back in January, the shares of ADI’s acquisition target Maxim Integrated Products (MXIM, the deal was agreed to last year), were trading at about a 5% discount to the deal price and seemed to be pricing in a little bit of risk that the deal might not go through quickly — that’s no longer true, MXIM is trading without much of a discount, as if the deal will close, and the major approval that’s still pending is from China. There is growing speculation that China will not be a roadblock for this deal, since there haven’t been major public objections and the EU and South Korea and some other major regulators have rubber-stamped the merger, but I don’t have any outside info on when or whether the deal will be consummated.

Irregulars Quick Take

Paid members get a quick summary of the stocks teased and our thoughts here. Join as a Stock Gumshoe Irregular today (already a member? Log in)
guest

12345

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

38 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
cloud09
cloud09
January 27, 2021 5:38 pm

Thanks Travis for what you do !! It seems that Chips market will be booming by 2025 when 5G is at the full bloom and so many candidates to consider. This was something new and will certainly buy some position in ADI

Add a Topic
6265
Add a Topic
11173
Add a Topic
2916
👍 5
Jeanne
Member
Jeanne
January 28, 2021 2:43 pm

Thanks for your invaluable input! Always much appreciated.

Frank S Federico
Guest
Frank S Federico
January 28, 2021 5:32 pm

Palm Beach Ventures – Teeka Tiwari

IPO – Blue Print Path vs. Hype Hole Path

Invest in pre IPO .50 cent Tech Stock. Must join the newsletter for $2500 @ 50% discount of regular price of $5000. What’s the company?

Add a Topic
370
Add a Topic
4280
Add a Topic
636
Fiona Jackson
Member
Fiona Jackson
January 30, 2021 6:58 am

How do you get the pre ipo wothout joining and paying thousand or is it all Hype?

Add a Topic
636
buckeyenation1965
Member
buckeyenation1965
February 1, 2021 3:35 pm

Pre-IPO – Teeka’s Blueprint – Newest 50 cent tech stock . I was searching for the same info Frank. Anyone have any idea about the Silicone Valley tech stock for the Pre-IPO at 50cents?

👍 5
buckeyenation1965
Member
buckeyenation1965
February 1, 2021 3:37 pm

Frank: I was searching for the same info. Anyone have any idea about the Silicone Valley tech stock for the Pre-IPO at 50cents?

👍 5
frankw17
February 1, 2021 3:44 pm

buckeyenation1965, no offense but that is “Silicon Valley” not Silicone. I would attribute that to Hollywood.
Regards,
Frank

Cabron
Cabron
May 18, 2021 8:10 am
Reply to  frankw17

The San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles is referred to as Silicone Valley because there is a big porn industry there 🙂

Add a Topic
824
👍 93
outsider
February 6, 2021 7:34 pm

The reay play here seems to be Skywater, which is owned by Oxbow, neither of which is public. Go back to GAN :p

Add a Topic
10151
👍 148
bourkey
bourkey
February 11, 2021 5:15 pm

Try Aussie Stock Strategic Elements (SOR) $0.60. Printable brain inspired computer hardware combines data storage and processing abilities

👍 1
moneyfool
May 18, 2021 8:37 am
Reply to  bourkey

Bourkey, interesting, thank you. In the meantime SE’s shares are trading for much less than $ 0,60. Today it closed at $ 0,287.
This is how they describe themselves:

“Strategic Elements operates as a venture builder where it generates ventures and projects from combining teams of leading scientists or innovators in the technology or resources sectors.
Strategic Elements operates as a registered Pooled Development Fund (PDF) on the Australian Stock Exchange under the code ‘SOR’.
Under the Federal Government PDF program our investors pay no tax on capital gains or dividends to compensate for the higher risk of investing in small and medium sized companies.”

Although, in my humble opinion, it is not the company we are looking for, it is intruiging. So, I think I’ll buy a few hundred shares of it as a gamble.

Add a Topic
152
👍 71
timcoahran
Irregular
May 18, 2021 12:35 am

Do any of the other Engineering folk out here have a take on the carbon nanotube chip idea? I haven’t studied that one myself yet.
(Re the stock ADI, my Dad bought some a good while back. You lose some, you win some!):

Add a Topic
2916
👍 461
mattex810
mattex810
May 21, 2021 10:53 am
Reply to  timcoahran

In my humble opinion.. its hard enough to design and reliably manufacture silicon based transistors which we’ve been at for 50 years now. All semi companies have teams of people dedicated to Failure Analysis of yield issues and customer returns of which there are many. Remember if you are putting millions and sometimes billions of transistors on a chip they all have to work for the system to work. A few bad ones and you’re chip doesn’t pass final test and gets scrapped. Worse yet, it passes your test but eventually fails with the end customer. In order to give Silicon based chips a run for their money they need to reliable. From what I’ve read that doesn’t seem to be the case yet.

👍 4
Cabron
Cabron
May 18, 2021 8:19 am

The kind of claims made by these newsletters make the authors lose all credibility.

👍 93
srizzle
Member
srizzle
May 21, 2021 9:54 am

Hi Travis. do you know what Stephen McBride is touting for the pre-IPO computer vision disruptor stock? Here’s the ad: https://www.riskhedge.com/order/plan/21113101,21113102

Add a Topic
9270
Add a Topic
6589
👍 2
Tom M
Member
Tom M
May 21, 2021 10:09 am

Hoping it’s a new bacon, maple, cinnamon flavored potato chip. Heavenly, for sure!

Add a Topic
4226
BarryY
BarryY
May 21, 2021 10:31 am

I worked at Intel from 1975-1979. At Intel’s 10th anniversary party in 1978, I had a nice chat with Dr. Gordon Moore, co-founder of Intel, and, of course, the man behind “Moore’s Law.” I asked Gordon when he thought Moore’s Law would bump up against fundamental physical limits. He said to me, “Barry, people have been asking me that question for a while already. And every time we think we’re up against a fundamental limit, some young whippersnapper comes along with a clever workaround. Since I don’t see us running out of clever young whippersnappers any time soon, I think it will a long time before we run out of gas.”

Well, we’re now 56 years since he formulated “Moore’s Law,” and there’s still gas in the tank! Gordon was, and is, a true gem of a person. And a genius.

Add a Topic
2390
👍 6
👍 21718
timcoahran
Irregular
May 21, 2021 4:02 pm

Strongly agreed!

👍 461
Ida Cal
Ida Cal
May 21, 2021 10:39 am

I’m waiting for two things to take place when it comes to microchips.

1. China takes control of Taiwan simply for the global chip industry there.

2. The rest of the free world gets really pissed and/or scared and does something about it.

If & when those things happen I’ll pull cash out and by MU – AMD – INTC not necessarily in that order.

My guess is that the compromised Biden administration won’t say squat if their handlers seize Taiwan but I’ll bet the rest of the free world will.

Buckle up! It’s going to be an interesting ride.

Add a Topic
3963
Add a Topic
5059
Add a Topic
2390
👍 21718
WorldlyView
WorldlyView
May 21, 2021 5:42 pm

I see a rare bit of excessive alarmism by Travis. Assuming the Chinese don’t conquer or destroy Taiwan in the next 2 years, a catastrophic chip shortage won’t burst forth. TSMC has begun, or is about to begin, construction of a chip foundry in Arizona. There are unconfirmed reports that they plan to construct up to five additional chip making facilities. In addition, Samsung recently announced plans to build a $17 billion foundry in the U.S. The construction of these plants certainly has been encouraged by mounting concerns about the security of international supply chains writ large, and also the threat to Taiwan. The previous comment about a “compromised” Biden administration presumably ignores the likelihood that the Federal government will provide economic incentives to encourage construction of foreign-owned, U.S.-based foundries. Hopefully, the Chinese government will confine themselves to psychological warfare.

👍 21718
Wombat
Guest
Wombat
May 22, 2021 9:41 am
Reply to  Ida Cal

Ida cal, this is what happens when people inject politics into stock picking.
Even if some of your fear of China ruling the world(chips) is warranted, your should just avoid the chip space all together. You blame Biden, and probably the Dems, that will not bode well for your investing.
Keep politics out of this website. Head over to Fox or Newsmax if you want to rant…

sandydog
Irregular
May 21, 2021 11:03 am

Any interest in comparing AMD and the recent recommendation by the Gilder Report of ASML?

Add a Topic
5059
👍 11
Jack
Jack
May 21, 2021 11:11 am

A pure play in manufacture of graphene, carbon nanotubules and fullerenes is Nano-C, a private company to come public in 2-4 years. It too is linked to MIT by founders and IP licensing. It is astonishingly promising because of it’s IP and acceptance by four major industries.

It is no longer especially difficult to manufacture these things, but the process takes enormous amounts of energy–for everyone but Nano-C which patented a process that is exothermic once it’s up and running (self sustaining.) A major cost advantage once the industry goes from current pilot programs to scale.

Intel is now building two $250 million machines that will add a specialy carbon layer from Nano-C to silicon chips at production volumes. Why? Because they’ve done proof of concept work that shows a big leap in chip speeds and simultaneous decrease in electrical resistance (damaging heat.)

Likewise, proof of concept work has been done that say significant leaps in efficiency of touchscreens, solar cells, electronics. Which is all to say, as with most newsletter come-ons, there’s nothing to do today, but your Watch List should be as well maintained as any garden.

Add a Topic
2576
Add a Topic
carbon nanotubules
Add a Topic
fullerenes
Brian Hutcheson
Member
Brian Hutcheson
May 21, 2021 12:51 pm

Run a 5 yr chart comparing AMD to ADI to see how much ADI has to run to catch up to AMD .
If ADI is the correct company and IF it is as great as he claims then it will make sense.
My background along with my twin brother has been in both Tech hardware and Software and e have followed AMD for 25 years , made a lot in the dotcom runup,
Then in June 2018 I recommended buying 2 yr expiry call options and anyone who followed that advice hit the jackpot as it had its greatest 2 yr run in its history.
Conclusion ADI could be a repeat of AMD BUT this Market bubble is run by the public as much as the FED since ETFs have been so overused that have turned what seemed a safer way of investing into the most dangerous bubble in the DOW ever

Add a Topic
5059
Add a Topic
2390
outsider
May 21, 2021 1:39 pm

of course there’s IBM’s definition of god chip
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/05/ibm-creates-the-worlds-first-2-nm-chip/#:~:text

What bodes well for IBM bodes well for PLTR

Last edited 2 years ago by outsider
👍 148
Lisa Witt
Lisa Witt
May 21, 2021 3:08 pm

Me too

art
Member
art
May 21, 2021 4:45 pm

Navitas is an interesting semiconductor company in the GaN sector. It looks like they are about to go public thru a SPAC. Check it out and share your thoughts. Happy Friday .Salud!!

Add a Topic
10151
cabaoke
Member
cabaoke
May 21, 2021 10:30 pm

I have to admit that I am a little confused. Their very name is “Analog” devices. Personally I love analog. My truck is a 1990 and doesn’t have a single computer on it and it starts and does what I tell it every day. Many guys I work with that own new $300K trucks break down at least once a week. But I digress. Is it just me or shouldn’t they change their name?

👍 363
👍 21718
Michaele M Davidson
Member
Michaele M Davidson
May 26, 2021 10:41 am
Reply to  cabaoke

Thanks for asking this question cabaoke!
I had the same reaction about their name.
Analog = OLD in my mind!
As always, Travis is keeping us correctly informed.

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies.

More Info  
34
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x