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Solving Mampilly’s “Tech Industry Set to Surge 76,000% (And the One Stock You Must Buy Today to Cash In)”

What's being teased as "This Tech Stock Could Triple Your Money in 2020" by the latest Profits Unlimited ads?

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, October 28, 2019

This article was originally published on Halloween, 2018, but we’re getting a ton of new questions about it so they must be running the ad heavily again. The ad has NOT been updated in any meaningful way, but some significant things have changed for this stock over the past year (though the stock price is right around where it was a year ago), so I’ll go through and add a few updates here and there as warranted.

Paul Mampilly is pitching his Profits Unlimited newsletter with a long spiel about artificial intelligence (AI), which seems to mostly be a tease from a presentation he recently made on stage at a Banyan Hill “Total Wealth Symposium” in Las Vegas (well, in September of 2018 — so it was “recent” when the ad started running).

And we like to think for ourselves, of course, so I thought I’d dig into the clues he drops and see if we can name that stock for you — maybe you’d love his newsletter, maybe you’d hate it, but if you subscribe to a newsletter just to find out about a secret stock… well, odds are pretty bad that you’ll be able to think rationally and independently about that stock afterward. Lots of biases get in the way, including: We all have a tendency to justify purchases, so you’ll probably want to love that newsletter because you just paid for it… and most investors end up being very strongly influenced by the first piece of information they receive about a particular stock, so if you buy into this “76,000% gains!” pitch without any context, you’re setting yourself up for disappointment.

So with that said, what’s the story? Mampilly here is pitching us on the huge growth in artificial intelligence… here’s a little taste of the ad:

“Major consulting firms predict this technology will create 2.3 million jobs in the next two years and give businesses the chance to raise profits, across the board, by nearly 50%.

“Which is why the big money is piling in.

“Microsoft has dedicated $12 billion to this technology.

“IBM is investing $15 billion.

“Google is spending $30 billion.

“Intel has already put up $32 billion to acquire multiple startups in this space, for the single goal of pushing this technology forward.”

And the 76,000% number that he throws out as red meat for us is just pulled from a big picture speculation:

“At $20 billion, this technology is tiny compared to the internet, smartphones and computers.

“However, the world’s leading researchers estimate it will explode into a $15.7 trillion industry in the next five years, growing bigger than all of these — COMBINED.

“That’s a 76,000% growth.”

You can throw around pretty much any numbers you want for that kind of big picture stuff, they won’t mean anything. Yes, we concede the artificial intelligence is a massive focus of most big tech firms, and is making its way into every part of the economy… but it’s almost impossible to even rationally guess at what the size of the “A.I. market” might be now, let alone what it might become, and we don’t even know what those numbers mean — Sales? Market capitalization? Profits? I have no idea. For context, the United States annual economic output, as measured by GDP, is just shy of $20 trillion. The world’s GDP (or GWP) is closing in on $90 trillion. Will AI, however you describe it, account for 20% of global economic activity?

But anyway, yes, we know that AI is big, and that tech companies and manufacturers and advertisers and product developers and pretty much everyone is trying to use artificial intelligence to make smarter decisions more quickly.

Man, maybe I should get me some of that AI. I do everything slowly, and am rarely as smart as I hope.

So how is one to make money from this idea? Mampilly says he’s identified a catalyst that will bring this technology forward… much like the assembly line was for the automobile, or miniaturization for the computer, or email for the internet. Something that turns a developing technology into a huge economic force.

What is it? Well, let’s see what he says:

“…. this company has developed THE catalyst that will cause the most important technology in the world to reach mass adoption.

“just like people doubted the use of the automobile, computer and internet, people have doubted this technology too!

“That’s because it’s been stuck in this range for the last 30 years.

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“But they’re not focusing on the ONE catalyst set to usher in this breakthrough any day now.

“Nor have they zoned in on the one, little-known Midwestern company that holds THE KEY.”

He runs through a bunch of examples of big potential in medicine (diagnosing disease), law (document review), retail (inventory planning), self-driving cars, etc. And then we get more on this catalyst…

“AI Just Got Its BIG Catalyst….

“You see, in order for AI to work, it has to also be able to learn — and ‘retain’ — all the information it gathers and apply this knowledge to new tasks.

“To do that, it needs one thing … A LOT of memory.

“That’s really why AI has been stuck in this range for the last several decades.

“Over the last 30 years, computing power has risen exponentially, as much as a trillion-fold. And the number of internet users has increased 25,000% since 1995, generating quadrillions of bits of data.

“The company that can create a new class of memory — that will power artificial intelligence — will stand to become the most valuable company in the world … because that new class of memory will be the catalyst for AI launching it into mass adoption.

“And today, one company in America’s Midwest has done just that.”

Aha! Now we begin to get some specifics…

“This company is the undisputed leader in memory technology. Their memory chips have been described as ‘the crude oil of the 21st century.’

“… artificial intelligence will soon begin solving major world problems like pollution, disease and hunger. It will also give every business the chance to increase earnings by nearly 50%.

“Which is why I am convinced this Midwestern company is the No. 1 stock you should buy, as AI ignites a $15.7 trillion revolution, surging 76,000%.”

And we get a few clues about large investors in the company:

David Tepper, the highest paid money manager on Wall Street, has dumped 20% of his portfolio into this one stock — a $1.9 billion investment.

“It is the top holding in Vanguard’s popular Selected Value Fund, to the tune of $4.4 billion.”

And some big partners and financial details to throw into the mix:

“This company has already signed a $2.5 billion deal with Apple and an $8 billion deal with Intel. With this latest innovation, it expects its memory business to quickly grow to $62 billion.

“This stock trades at just five times earnings….

“Best of all, you can buy a stake in this company for as little as $50….

“Company earnings are up 94% over the past year. And they’re heading higher.”

While the Thinkolator chugs away on those clues, we’ll note this bit of Mampilly’s opinion for posterity:

“This stock is an absolute bargain at today’s prices.

“If you’re going to invest in any one company the next decade, this company should be it.

“It will be like buying Ford, Microsoft, and AOL … before they surged 250,000%, 105,000%, and 70,000%.”

And…

“Buying this stock today will be like buying Netflix 10 years ago — setting you up for gains of 14,000% or more.”

So who is it? Well, I confess that this was a pretty easy one just going by the clues that were dropped along the way, though after chewing on the Thinkolator’s results for a little while I did waste some time trying to match the photo that Mampilly showed in his demonstration to illustrate that “midwestern company,” just as a bit of final confirmation.

But, the joke’s on me — he apparently just bought a stock photo of a generic suburban office building and used that… maybe it has some relation to the company he’s teasing, but I doubt it. Here’s the image, by the way, I use a stock photo service, too, so I bought a copy of the same photo. I even left the handy canned caption attached. This doesn’t mean anything, but I bought the photo and didn’t want to waste it.

Typical suburban office building, of the type used by high tech companies.

So who is this mysterious company that’s going to be vaulted higher by the rise in demand for memory as the artificial intelligence revolution marches forward? Thinkolator says your initial guess was right, dear friend, this is Micron Technologies (MU), the company that has been among the cheapest mega-chip stocks for a long time now.

Yes, the clues all fit — other than that building photo, which is not a picture of Micron’s headquarters in Boise or any of their other meaningful “midwestern” locations (I’d say Idaho is more western, but Mampilly also teased a Utah company as “midwestern”… so he clearly uses a pretty loose definition of that geographical term.

And I should say that the clues used to fit — they don’t anymore, since the ad hasn’t been updated to reflect changes in reality. David Tepper’s Appaloosa fund did indeed own a ton of Micron shares, worth a bit more than $2 billion, and that was indeed a huge bet — Tepper built this stake over more than two years, and it was about a quarter of his reported 13F portfolio at the peak (hedge funds and other institutional investors don’t have to report the full details of their portfolios, just the US-listed equities). He had just as much trouble picking the right price to pay as the rest of the world, given that he added most quarters from mid-2016 to early 2019 and he almost certainly bought some shares in the teens as well as some in the $50s.

But what has changed since? Tepper sold 95% of his Micron position sometime between April 1 and June 30 of 2019. Presumably at prices somewhere in the $35-40 range. So if it’s his signal you’re following, then you’re not buying here at $48 (I don’t know what his rationale was in selling). And in case you’re curious, that Vanguard mutual fund also sold a bunch of shares — though it’s still a top ten holding of Vanguard Selected Value (a fund that has lagged the market pretty significantly for the past two years).

Chip stocks tend to be prone to big swings of over-investment and supply gluts and technological obsolescence that requires constant, massive capital investment, particularly those who produce a lot of somewhat “standard” or commoditized chips like Micron… so add that together with some freaking out about Chinese tariffs and the stock is now well south of $50 a share and trades at eight times earnings (it was an even more ludicrous 3X earnings a year ago, but earnings have fallen considerably and the price has risen).

So you can pick up Micron shares for about $48 now if you’d like to, which is up pretty nicely from the $35 you would have paid last Halloween when this ad first ran, and analysts are predicting decent profits for the next couple years…. though the predictions now are far lower than analysts had been forecasting in the fall of 2018. At the time the forecast was for roughly $9 a share each year going forward, but analysts now think that earnings, which peaked at $12 a share in 2018 and dropped to $5.67 in the year just completed (their fiscal year ends in August), will be down to $2.50 in this current fiscal year (the one that just started) and rise to $5.35 in 2021 and $7.53 in 2022.

So if the analysts are right that is, indeed, still a compelling valuation — about 20X current earnings and 9X forward earnings… though history tells us that analysts are pretty terrible at forecasting Micron’s earnings (which isn’t their fault, the company is pretty bad at it, too — as you’d expect for a “price taker” company that historically has relied on sales of commodity memory chips).

The overarching concern has been that Micron is at or near the top of the cycle in memory chips, and that looming oversupply is creating another crash in prices… perhaps like the one that saw Micron’s share price fall by about 2/3 from 2014 to 2016, when revenues fell 20% or so. Of course, back then the PE ratio only got down to about five or six, so perhaps we bottomed out last year?

I have no idea, of course. I left my crystal ball in my other pants.

The analysts don’t know, either, even on the top-line stuff — they are supposed to be the experts on the industry and the best at predicting where things will go (stop laughing!) — and in Micron’s case, last year they were predicting stable revenue of between $30-31 billion for the next several years, roughly the same as the company reported in its best four quarters ending in early 2018. Now, those same analysts are predicting that after last year’s disappointing revenue of $23 billion it will fall further still to $21 billion this year, before rising back up to $25 and $28 billion in 2021 and 2022.

It’s worth noting that Micron has no net debt, so there’s no imminent risk of a cash crisis even if earnings fall… so what on earth is it that people don’t like? Is it really just the fear of a cyclical peak, concern about Chinese tariff wars that cause supply chain headaches in the chip sector, or a rising glut in memory chips? Probably mostly the latter, but it’s hard to see inside the head of other investors.

There’s a “Micron has peaked” article from Investorplace here if you’d like a different perspective, and there’s a Motley Fool piece about the recent Intel/Micron divorce in their next-generation memory business and the impact that might have on Micron’s finances (incidentally, that next-generation 3D XPoint memory is what has led some other newsletters to pitch Micron in the past as well… it was even teased as a cryptocurrency play last year).

And yes, artificial intelligence plays heavily into Micron’s future growth plans — like everyone else, they’re aware that faster processing and more storage and faster memory access will increase the demand for artificial intelligence processing in all kinds of devices and industries… and particularly that we’ll need a lot more processing power and memory in more data centers as more of this AI processing moves to the cloud. Though that doesn’t guarantee that the newer, better, stronger memory chips they develop will be adopted fast enough to make up for competitive pressure or falling margins in their core “commodity” memory chip business (supplying DRAM for computer processing memory, NAND chips to replace disk drives for memory storage), but there doesn’t seem to be any reason to expect revenues to crash or the market for memory to disappear… it’s just possible that it will become less profitable as pricing pressure settles in.

Where do I come down? Well, I can’t claim to have any insight into whether the market for commoditized memory chips will rise or fall this year, but everything I read indicates that pricing is falling and estimates are falling for Micron as well as for other memory makers like Seagate (STX) and Western Digital (WDC)… and going from a partnership with Intel to possible competition with Intel over the next year or two doesn’t make your tummy feel great.

But still, a market-dominating company that trades at 3X earnings is soooo cheap that I was somewhat tempted a year ago, and as long as this year is really an earnings trough and they can recover then a forward PE of 9 or so is also pretty compelling… and it’s possible that they can both buy back stock and continue to fight for leadership in next generation memory technologies. Sometimes we underestimate the biggest companies, and Micron is indeed big… their competitors are large, too, from Samsung to the Chinese state-backed emerging giants to Intel, but most of their competitors are huge and diversified… they don’t have any listed competitors who are as tightly focused on memory chips as Micron, and sometimes being big is enough to guarantee survival through the downward cycle in the sector and leadership the next time the cycle turns.

That said, yes, it can obviously still fail — I would have said the same thing in mid-2018 when the stock was near $50 with a P/E ratio of 5, and that would not have stopped the stock from going down 30%. Cheap stocks can get cheaper, because people have a tendency to want to pay for future earnings, not past earnings.

Last year I noted that there were a couple dozen relatively big tech stocks that traded at single-digit P/E ratios and with Price/Sales ratios below 1.5 or so, evidence of the cycle of destruction that comes down on this sector with some regularity as competition and innovation and commodification of products bring down former darlings… AU Optronics and Fujitsu and Hitachi and Seagate and Tower Semiconductor all looked awfully cheap, too, among others… but none of those other important (or formerly important) billion-dollar industry leaders were even close to as cheap as Micron when it comes to earnings multiples, even as the fact that many of them are much, much cheaper when it comes to price/sales measures provides some room for worry about falling margins.

There was an interview with Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra in the Silicon Valley Business Journal around the time this article was originally published, and he summed up the strategy pretty well in this Q&A:

“How do you plan to lead the company’s strategy in areas that may not be as strong? The CPU shortage caused PC makers and customers to pull back a little bit in recent quarters, which was reflected in a weaker outlook by Micron. How do you plan on keeping that strength in areas like that?

“We plan to continue to focus on innovation, in terms of advancing our technology roadmap. Bringing new technologies, new products to market. We really want to continue to strengthen our cost competitiveness, with respect to those products, manufacturing cost structure, as well as continue to evolve our portfolio of solutions toward higher value solutions.

“Whether you look at data centers or you look at autonomous driven vehicles of the future, or you look at the growing needs of mobile, or smartphones — all of these applications are requiring more memory and more storage. All of these applications are also being touched by artificial intelligence and machine learning in one way or another. Artificial intelligence and machine learning are in very, very early stages. We have barely seen the tip of the iceberg there. Fast memory and fast storage, is really the heart of that artificial intelligence evolution and these are the kind of products that Micron makes and will continue to make.”

So sure, I can see why Paul Mampilly was tempted a year ago, and could still be interested today… but I can also see why a lot of people wouldn’t have the stomach to speculate on this one. I’d probably still lean more on the “decent companies with a PE below 5 are probably worth a gamble” side, particularly when the company’s balance sheet looks pretty solid, like Micron’s does… but I don’t have any particular confidence that the stock will recover quickly, or that their next-generation memory products will benefit meaningfully from AI investments in the next year, so I haven’t bought.

Cheap is good, but cheap stocks often test both your stomach and your patience. Micron isn’t likely to generate any big news soon — sentiment can shift anytime, of course, but their next actual earnings release isn’t until December 18… and most of the bellwether semiconductor stocks have already reported for this quarter, so you’ll have to get to big picture guessing if you want to predict how Micron ends this year. Last quarter, Micron disappointed and dropped by 10% in September… but the improved outlook from Intel last week and the more optimistic chatter about the China trade war have probably had a lot to do with it recovering from that drop.

That’s just my thinking, though, and I don’t think I’ve ever owned Micron stock… I certainly haven’t scoured their detailed filings in recent years. Perhaps you’re more informed than I am, or have a perspective to share — if so, I’m sure we’d all be delighted to hear what you think, just share your thoughts with a comment below. We don’t bite.

P.S. Paul Mampilly has definitely had some fans hereabouts in past years, thanks in large part to his teaser pitches for ST Microelectronics in 2016 and Foundation Medicine in 2017, both of which did very well — but opinions change pretty quickly and our readers do always want to hear more, so if you’ve tried out Profits Unlimited, please click here to share your experience with your fellow investors. Thank you!

Disclosure: I own shares and/or call options on Alphabet, Apple and Intel among the companies mentioned above. I will not trade in any covered stock for at least three days, per Stock Gumshoe’s trading rules.

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Shaun
Irregular
October 31, 2018 5:42 pm

If AI continues to grow quickly which companies offer the lowest risk to reward ratio? Is it the usual suspects Google and Apple who already seem to be investing heavily or are there specific technology funds that specialise in AI stocks that will spread the risk and include companies such as Micron?

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klyczek9050
Member
klyczek9050
October 31, 2018 6:10 pm

Tradespoon’s Stockforcaster has this as a looser over the short term (10 days) and the long term (6 mos.) dropping another 10%, for what it’s worth.

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Ken
Member
Ken
October 31, 2018 11:49 pm

I have PU and somehow missed this recommendation so thanks! Just bought it today for less than the recommended price. I am starting to think that it’s best to wait some days or a week before buying a recommendation from Paul as I;m guessing the PU subscribers number high enough to push the stock up in the hours or days after recommendation. Anyway, Paul has been very good about posting updates via video and he really does seem trustworthy in his track suit, or at least looks like somebody who is on your side even if his decisions are not always correct. Even with the big correction I am well ahead thanks to Paul, but then I’ve been a member for about 18 months so many of the stocks I still held were up over 50% and now are up a lot less! If you just got in this year you won’t be doing as well

tina
Guest
tina
January 18, 2019 8:53 pm
Reply to  Ken

That’s been my observation with other large subscriber based newsletters. I’ve seen prices jump dramatically after recommendations, only to drop shortly thereafter on some stocks. This leads to wondering if the writer’s are driving prices up deliberately, at least the ones that hold the stock themselves. Supposedly some don’t hold, but it’s a strange happenstance; maybe their friends, family etc do hold. It’s so annoying to hear how well they did when I didn’t get their price. I decided against investing on their recommendations after I got burnt on the first try. Now I just use them as a research shortcut to my own efforts.

This site is priceless, by the way, and saves me a lot of research time. Also searching key phrases from those newsletter emails in search engines.

I like to dollar cost average and DRIP so I feel like I’m containing prices. That’s on long term. Swing and day trades I’m still practicing, so I avoid recommendations like the plague. I have a lot of watchlists, organized by sector and trade types.

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barnkb
October 31, 2018 11:54 pm

MU is my largest holding, I’ve been buying since it was about $15/share in 2015, avg cost now is $31. They have some way exciting new memory tech that “IF” delivered as promised, it will make them a killing. Intel at Open World just bragged BIG time about it (phase change memory) that stays on when the power of the machine goes down. They present a very impressive demonstration where this new memory (Optane – developed in their Joint Partnership with MU that MU is exercising it’s option to buy out Intel) improves performance 10,000% in one measure (if I remember correctly) and 6.5X in a different measure. Anyway, Intel was very excited about it and MU holds the cards on it. William Tidwell and Electric Phred on Seeking Alpha have been pushing MU for a long time and are excellent resources. Stephen Breezy has some very interesting stuff on this other-worldly tech that MU owns that has some very exciting possibilities but there are lots of ifs involved. Even without the tinfoil hat ifs, I believe this company will be an incredible investment in 3 to 5 years but lots of volatility.

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daniel
Member
daniel
November 1, 2018 4:43 am

what a delightful article! the trick sleuthing of the photo was impressive, i bought 200 shares of largo resources and if i can get the three hundred dollars out of it for your subscription, it’s yours:)

Tim Carpenter
Member
Tim Carpenter
November 1, 2018 7:15 am

I have been in and out of MU quite a bit over the last 3 years. I am currently long with a decent sized stake. My buy price is $50 so I hope MU sees a rebound. Everytime I have exited MU in the past they rocketed upward. I work as sales rep in the tech sector and I see MU used ALOT. I sell a competitive line but respect MU immensely. Fundamentals looks good, and I think analysts are wrong. By the way the last time I felt this strongly about a stock was NVDA when it was an $11 stock. I saw it’s potential then. I even posted something on Fool’s NVDA forum. Did I put my money where my mouth was, though? Nope and I have regretted it ever since.

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barnkb
November 1, 2018 9:18 am
Reply to  Tim Carpenter

Just my opinion but I think there might be traders who are savvy enough to take advantage of the volatility. Maybe. Not me. I’m not a trader. I’m in MU for the long haul. I think it’s future looks very bright and I’m not smart enough to know how to get in and get out so I’ll just keep trying to buy when I think it’s cheap. Right now looks pretty good.

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Gary Anderson
Gary Anderson
November 2, 2018 3:59 pm

Travis, I appreciate your debunking of the extravagant “teases” wee routinely see. As a large holder of MU stock, I can confirm that I believe the likely outcome of fiscal year’ 2019 memory sales is highly profitable for MU and in 2020, when 3DXPoint begins to generate revenue, profitability will be further enhanced. Thus I believe that David Tepper is right to be “very long MU” though Mampilly’s numbers are merely a tease to suck in the greedy and generate letter sales.

Thanks for all your good work. It is a pleasure to be part of your “irregulars” group.

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Doug Nearing
Guest
November 18, 2018 2:26 pm
Reply to  Gary Anderson

Gary
Im not a wealthy guy. Have mostly Cannibis stocks. Have amd and only have a $1,000 to invest in either more AMD or 25 shares of MU. Please gtive me your feedback. Real curious.

Doug

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MIKE
Guest
MIKE
November 4, 2018 12:19 pm

I THINK ITS GOOD TO BUY MU AND INTEL AS WELL AS ALL OTHER SEMI CONDUCTORS LIKE AMD AND OTHERS , AND BE DIVERSE SINCE IN ANOTHER 2 TO 3 YEARS EVERYTHING WILL HAVE AI

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Rick
Guest
Rick
November 4, 2018 3:23 pm

Is there any chance his article is teasing Foxconn symbol HNHAF, with their future Wisconsin plant in the works, puts them in the Midwest? Selling for less than $3.00 a share has a lot of upside potential.

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Doug Nearing
Guest
November 18, 2018 2:29 pm
Reply to  Rick

Rick.
I had the wrong tic r that I paid under $3 for and found out wrong tic-r TRY hnhpd.
It was hnhpf but changed. This is $4.88 a share

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backoffice
Irregular
November 4, 2018 8:40 pm

Is he still riding #STM, and $AMD also? I keep seeing ads for the Dime and also for the warehouses

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scotte
scotte
November 5, 2018 2:08 am

United States puts Idaho chipmaker at the center of its fight with China
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/united-states-puts-idaho-chipmaker-at-the-center-of-its-fight-with-china/ar-BBPkivy?li=BBnbfcN

Saw above article this morning, might have some effect.

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TROY WILSON
TROY WILSON
November 12, 2018 3:47 pm

So what is the symbol of this possible 76000% stock

kiaramar
Member
kiaramar
November 14, 2018 11:03 am

just got this from Paul Mampilly These Warehouses Hold the Key to a $3.1 Trillion Dollar Revolution…
Early investors could reap huge profits
as this brand new industry surges up to 77,400%
Stock is $10? Any info on this?

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Stef
Guest
Stef
November 15, 2018 4:23 pm

Yep, AMD here’s the info on his PDF
http://thbun.com/PUPCorrespondence/Buy%20AMD.pdf

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Toad
Guest
Toad
November 20, 2018 2:55 pm

After watching his video I don’t think it’s MU. He mentions the company is based in california, which points to AMD.

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Steve the Guest
Member
Steve the Guest
November 24, 2018 10:34 am

Thanks Travis for you insight.

Lorns Leyymsn
Member
Lorns Leyymsn
November 28, 2018 6:37 pm

And what is Mampilly’s “Disruptive Blockchain Breakthrough technology company, based in California, and at the center of the blockchain revolution”?

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R M
Member
R M
December 28, 2018 7:23 pm
Reply to  Lorns Leyymsn

I believe that is AMD. As Travis said, a separate inquiry/advertisement.

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guest
Member
December 2, 2018 2:25 am

comment image&exph=667&expw=1000&q=Chip+Paul+Mampilly&simid=608051339030563114&selectedIndex=0&ajaxhist=0

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guest
Member
December 2, 2018 2:33 am
Reply to  guest

Article of chip Paul Mampilly comment image&exph=667&expw=1000&q=Chip+Paul+Mampilly&simid=608051339030563114&selectedIndex=0&ajaxhist=0

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guest
Member
December 2, 2018 3:40 am
Reply to  guest

Current Holdings for :: VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF as of Dec 2, 2018 Symbol, $INTC, $TSM, $NVDA,$AVGO, $ASML, $TXN, $ADI, $NXPI, $LRCX, $AMAT, $QCOM, $XLNT, $AMD, $MCHP, $KLAC, $SWKS, $CDNS, $MXIM, $STM, $MRLV, $ ON, $ORVO, $TER, $OLED, $MU

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guest
Member
December 2, 2018 4:38 am
Reply to  guest

Only one stock IPO from Paul Mampilly from, VanEck Semiconductor ETF OUT OF 25 are from a midwestern state. And is $MU Micron Technology, Inc.

8000 S FEDERAL WAY

BOISE, ID 83716

Phone: 208-368-4000

Fax: 208-368-4435

Web: http://www.micron.com

Email: investorrelations@micron.com

Industry Semiconductor Memory
Sector Computer and Technology
Fiscal Year End August
Last Reported Quarter 8/31/2018

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Richard A Date
Member
Richard A Date
December 9, 2018 3:34 am

What to do with old MU?
Three times E how can that be?
Fear compels me not to buy!
So sell some puts and breath a sigh
If MU declines, that’s where I will buy!
If not the puts will be my pie!

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Edward Mack
Guest
Edward Mack
December 19, 2018 7:01 pm
Reply to  Richard A Date

Nice pie, if you held those puts today.

Ronn Woolley
Member
Ronn Woolley
December 23, 2018 12:10 am

Does MU have most of the Greatest Memory-AI Design Engineering Innovators now ?! If not, I don’t see how their going to dominate this near-future Market sector !! An actually poor Tech. Stock (Dot.com Burst player) Focuser….

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Ben
Member
Ben
December 23, 2018 6:32 pm
Reply to  Ronn Woolley

Am loosing to much/sold all positions 2 weeks ago!

polowojo
January 4, 2019 5:19 pm

Paul’s most recent shift has focus on simple warehouses. Inside, folks are working on the blockchain to encase the whole world in a new form of living technically. Any clues as to the$3 stock he now touts in these warehouses developing the future for all of US? Are we prepared to be chained down?

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wilenius
wilenius
January 12, 2019 12:11 pm

I recently, last week, purchased 300 MU shares
and I believe MU has a bright future for the next 3-5 years.
I have been subscribing with profit unlimited since Jan 2018
and own 5 different stocks for a long term investment in the profit unlimited portfolio , this 5 investment have so fare increased with a total profit of 56%
The cost for the service he supply is very little and for the most time correct
I must say, I am happy with the service he supply.

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