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“Linchpin Device… and the Next Tech Giant” — What’s Fessler’s “Hand You Up to 24 Times Your Money” 5G Stock?

Ads for Strategic Tech Investor say you must "Discover the Details Before a MAJOR December 10 February 24 Event That Could Send Shares Skyrocketing"

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, January 16, 2021


A different version of this article was originally published on September 25, 2019. The ad in question is still running, this time with a new “key date” of February 24 (it was December 10) and a different price ($7 from $5, to match the move up in the stock), but the main focus is the same… what follows has been updated, and the original reader comments from September are still attached at the bottom.

Today we’re looking at an ad from David Fessler, who’s pitching his Strategic Trends Investor ($49, renews at $79) with a spiel about a “major December 10 February 24 event” that will send a $5 $7 tech stock soaring… and, of course, (eventually) make you 24X your money. What’s not to like, right?

Have no fear, we’ll dig in and see if we can ID what’s real about this story and give you a start on your research, then you can think for yourself and decide if you see 2,400% gains around the corner. It all hinges, per the ad, on a “strange device” that they keep showing images of — a white cylinder that you apparently set down in your home, and which is going to become a “linchpin” behind the next great technological shift.

Here’s a taste:

“Take a look at this strange device.

“It can fit in the palm of your hand… weighs less than a can of soup… and uses less energy than a night light.

“But this little device is the linchpin of a potential $12.4 trillion revolution that will reshape America forever.

“Experts call the technology behind this revolution ‘the holy grail’… ‘the lifeblood of the new economy’… and ‘the mother of invention’… with ‘an impact similar to the introduction of electricity or the automobile.'”

So that’s obviously all in reference to 5G, the incoming wireless standard that is expected to be 100X faster than 4G/LTE, with low latency and the ability to connect all machines in the world together in real time. (As long as there are no walls in between them.)

More from the ad:

“… small companies that own the linchpins behind major technological shifts ALWAYS go gangbusters.”

Well, sure, in retrospect. Hard to ID those “linchpin” stocks in advance, though. Fessler uses examples like Skyworks, with its RF chips in the iPhone, Akamai and its position as an early content delivery network powering increases in traffic from video and social media, and Cree’s silicon carbide wafer for chips as the “linchpin” of the consumer electronics market. And those are all stocks that went up dramatically, though we should always be mindful of survivor bias — plenty of other chipmakers and content delivery networks did not generate fantastic returns for shareholders during those same time periods.

And, of course, the big returns for those stocks that he cites were over 10-15 years or more, and no newsletter wants to promise you a 20-year return… that’s not going to be enough to get you to turn over your credit card number…

“All of these companies needed DECADES to develop these fortune-making returns.

“But things move much faster these days.

“The Next Tech Giant is on track to hand investors substantial gains in a much smaller time frame.”

So who is it, you ask? Let’s get into the clues:

“I call this company ‘the Next Tech Giant’….

“The CEO is a 35-year veteran of the tech industry.

“Before he joined the Next Great Tech Giant, he helped turn another small company into a global powerhouse with $27 billion in sales.

“That’s bigger than Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Motorola and Activision… combined.

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“As the Next Tech Giant rolls out its new breakthrough 5G device, it’s already signed AT&T, Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile to its partner list.”

And some more about its customers and partners:

“The CEO has also created partnerships with big industry leaders like American Water Works, GE, Chevron, Cisco, IBM, Shell, Coca-Cola, Uber, Amazon, Barclays and Wells Fargo.

“It even counts the U.S. Army and the Department of Homeland Security as customers.”

What else?

“… this single device renders most current internet appliances obsolete….

“Our networks are so overloaded with users, we are running out of bandwidth to support them….

“The one device I’ve been telling you about will help solve the problem completely.

“The moment you install this device in your home…

“You can throw away your worthless router…

“And connect to any available 5G network instantly for speeds unlike anything we’ve experienced before.”

In the first version of the ad he made some wild health predictions, too… some of which veer into feeling a little like “gimme your credit card” elder abuse…

“For one, you’ll NEVER have to worry about being placed in a retirement home.

“Imagine taking a bad fall and fracturing your hip.

“It happens all the time. Falls kill 9,500 seniors a year.

“But imagine this: In a 5G-connected world, smart sensors built into the walls could immediately notify your healthcare provider – and paramedics would pull up to your house in minutes.

“What’s more, you’ll be able to access the services of the world’s top medical professionals… even if they’re thousands of miles away!

“5G-powered telemedicine will enable surgeons to operate on patients in different time zones.”

Thankfully, that segment isn’t in the ad anymore. Though yes, those kinds of services could be part of the “maybe this will all be possible” hope for 5G, particularly if you want to be surveilled in your home, but it’s going to take a long time… and really, there isn’t much that 5G could do to alert the authorities if you fall down that your Alexa or a more safety-specific device using your WiFI or boring old 4G can’t do right now if you want.

So… more hints?

“… the first 5G network is already live in New York City.

“But without devices like the one I showed you at the beginning of this presentation, none of it would be possible.

“It’s what I call a ‘linchpin’ technology.

“In short, none of the 5G systems will work without devices like these.

That’s an exaggeration, but partly true… but note that he didn’t say “this product,” or even “this company” … he said “devices like this.” Plenty of hopes and dreams have been dashed by believers in investment teaser ads who bought the big picture promise, in this case that 5G will be huge, and then skipped over a bunch of steps (with the help of some ad copywriters) to believe that the hugeness will naturally benefit just “one little company.”

More from Fessler:

“Incredibly, the company that manufactures these devices trades for just $7 a share.

“But that is poised to change very soon.

“It could hand you a retirement fortune, starting as early as February 24.

Other hints and inducements?

Bill Gates has staked $627 million in this wireless revolution.

“Jeff Bezos has invested $1.7 billion in companies that will benefit from 5G.

“And Warren Buffett has allocated an extraordinary $47.4 billion to a popular 5G play.

“Like me, these men built their fortunes on their ability to predict – and profit from – paradigm-shifting trends.

“I have no doubt that they sense the profits in the air – they KNOW that 5G will hand them enough money to last for CENTURIES…

“And they KNOW that if they fail to lock in a portion of the profits… they’ll regret it for the rest of their lives.

“It’s the same concern that faces you today.

“Do you take a chance on the $7 stock behind the device that will help power the 5G revolution?”

There’s some strong “fear of missing out” pitchwork, yeah? In case you’re curious, that $47.4 billion bet from Warren Buffett is, of course, Berkshire Hathaway’s massive investment in Apple shares… and of course, Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates are betting on wireless. Microsoft and Amazon depend on it, and it’s obviously still a huge growth area, 5G or no 5G. That doesn’t mean these three titans of industry have anything to do with the company being teased, that’s just some name-dropping to make you daydream about your own future billions.

What else?

“Vanguard, BlackRock, J.P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and others have all taken stakes valued at $180 million.

“Company insiders are loading up on shares as well.

“Its CFO recently purchased thousands of shares… making his position worth nearly $200,000.

“The CEO followed suit – but went bigger. His position in the company is now more than $775,000.

“And a fellow on the board of directors trumps them all –making trades that bring his holdings to 6,401,995 shares – worth approximately $31 million.

“In the past year, insiders have accumulated shares now valued at more than $55 million in the company.”

And…

“The Next Tech Giant is already seeing a big uptick in business as a result of the president’s punishment of China-based 5G companies.

“In a recently filed financial document, its CEO wrote that “that these restrictions caused an acceleration of global providers to direct business from such companies… and to [the Next Tech Giant.]”

And one final burst of hype for you:

“… the shift to 5G is coming hard and fast.

“AT&T has launched 5G Evolution, its 5G precursor, in dozens of markets…

“Verizon just flipped the switch on its 5G network in New York…

“Sprint’s 5G network is LIVE in New York and Los Angeles…

“And T-Mobile has implemented its 5G backbone in more than 1,000 cities.
The time to invest is NOW.

“And the stock to buy is not the telecom giant that’s been around since 1885… the chipmaker getting hammered by the trade war… or the patent holder entangled in multibillion-dollar lawsuits.

“The stock to buy is the $7 one set to reap the lion’s share of profits from 5G’s liftoff phase.”

So who is it? This is, once again, Inseego (INSG). There are a few companies who are trying to build market share in this first phase of 5G rollout in the US, which includes “fixed wireless” broadband — meaning not 5G service for mobile phones (though there are pockets of that, and it will eventually be much larger), but 5G broadband to the home that does not use cable or fiber connections.

That’s easier to build, because the technicians can visit your home and place the 5G antenna/router in a place where it gets the best signal, since 5G signals are far less robust than 4G and won’t penetrate walls or other obstacles easily, and they don’t have to worry about the fact that the challenges of genuinely mobile 5G service (wave forming, access through buildings, etc.) are still the subject of experiment. Step one is fixed wireless, and that’s Inseego’s business.

Why Inseego as the match? Well, the CEO details are a precise match — Dan Mondor is indeed a 35-year veteran of the tech industry, and he was working at Nortel Networks when that company became a $10 billion market share leader, per his company bio.

And they do make some routers that look much like the white cylinders teased by Fessler… though they have a variety of other products, and that one isn’t necessarily magical by itself. And that quote from the CEO about “restrictions” on China suppliers did indeed come from Dan Mordor, you can find it in their last annual report from about a year ago if you’re curious. The full text of that quote is:

“During 2018, the U.S. and other governments imposed import restrictions on products made by certain mainland China-based companies. These restrictions caused an acceleration of global service providers to direct business from such companies to Inseego. We are actively designing devices for use within such providers’ networks.”

They’ve also been moving some of their manufacturing to non-China factories, though they do still use contract manufacturers and presumably that just means they’ve been moving assembly to Taiwan or Vietnam or something.

And remember all those “insider trades” notes? I’ll refresh your memory…

“And a fellow on the board of directors trumps them all –making trades that bring his holdings to 6,401,995 shares – worth approximately $31 million.”

That’s Brian Miller, who heads up North Sound Partners and went onto the Inseego board in 2017, when his fund invested heavily into Inseego’s turnaround (at a steep discount, I might add). He does still hold those 6.4 million shares as of the latest filing, but that’s after selling 3.9 million shares at $4.80 back in July (a nice profit in a year, he invested at $1.63 in 2018 and also got warrants, with a strike price of $2.52, which dramatically upped his exposure). So yes, he did make trades that bring his holdings to the current level… but the most recent trades were “sells.”

The other ones? Insider buying is always a positive signal, so it’s worth checking the details…

“Its CFO recently purchased thousands of shares… making his position worth nearly $200,000.

“The CEO followed suit – but went bigger. His position in the company is now more than $775,000….

“In the past year, insiders have accumulated shares now valued at more than $55 million in the company.”

Not really… Stephen Smith is the CFO, and he hasn’t ever bought shares on the open market — his last large transaction was a grant of 19,160 shares in June, which was reduced by an accompanying sale to cover the payroll tax associated with that stock grant. He has also has bought a few shares from time to time, most recently in November, but he bought them at a discount as part of the employee stock purchase program.

Smith currently holds 24,823 shares, which would be worth about $200,000 at the moment.

CEO Dan Mondor, on the job for a year and a half or so as part of the Inseego turnaround attempt, did for a second have about $775,000 worth of shares thanks to a stock award of 54,000 or so shares in July that increased his stake by about 50%, but he didn’t buy them… and his share count, like Smith’s, was reduced by selling some of those shares to cover the tax liability of that stock award, so he actually now holds 140,867 shares, worth a little more than $1.1 million at the moment. He’s gotten more than two million stock options as part of his compensation over the past couple years on top of his $942K pay package, so his holding is meaningful but not a big “bet” that he chose to make — it’s mostly just part of his compensation.

And yes, insiders have “accumulated” shares over the past year that are now valued at over well $55 million… though most of those were bought very cheap in that rescue financing that Miller participated in during the summer of 2018 or were granted to board members and executives (we’re stretching “the past year” a bit, but teasers rarely include perfectly timely research)… nobody affiliated with the company seems to have actually bought shares at market prices at any point in the past year, or even several years, and insiders have been net sellers.

That’s true of many companies, of course, and it doesn’t mean they’re doomed… but it does mean that there is no “positive signal” from insider buying, regardless of what Fessler would like you to think. Insiders do own some shares, and therefore have some “skin in the game,” but none of the executives are buying shares beyond what they’ve been given as compensation, and they are not at all reluctant to take profits along the way.

Now, the absence of insider buying is not a strong negative… nor is insider selling. That has never been as strong a signal on the negative side as “real” insider buying is on the positive side — probably because insiders sell for lots of reasons (diversification, buying boats, putting kids through college, just love spending money), but they really only buy for one reason (they think the stock is going to to up).

(That’s not even true that insiders “buy for only one reason” anymore, actually, in this era of free and open access to information they also buy because they want people to notice that they’re buying, so that’s why you sometimes see token CEO purchases of stock of just a few shares here and there, they seem to be trying to get investors to see their “buy” signal without committing a lot of capital… but I won’t spend too much time down that rabbit hole.)

Does the Inseego router weigh less than a can of soup? Fit in the palm of your hand? I guess you could probably hold it in your palm, if you’re not a child, but the big white cylindrical one that they show images of weighs a bit over two pounds, so it would have to be a big can of soup. They do also have smaller 5G “MiFi” hotspots that are fairly small, similar in size to the 4G hotspots we’ve all seen or used over the past decade, though they’re still new products that are just rolling out in partnership with the big telecom companies.

And will it revolutionize 5G and rise 24X in value “soon?” For the first, I’d say no — there are other 5G routers available, and as the market grows there will be far more competition. Maybe they’ll win more than their competitors, maybe not, but selling this kind of equipment is not generally a high margin business so they’ll need remarkable volume to have huge profit surges. That’s possible, but far from guaranteed.

Inseego has been a tempting teaser target for the newsletter world, probably partly because it’s a recent “turnaround” story and is a small company, with a price right at that $5-10 sweet spot that investors seem to love, and it isn’t a brand name so it feels like a cool new idea… and partly because of real investment potential. It was teased as the $5 “next Cisco” by Jon Markman in June, and twice by Ian King, once as a play on “Spectrum” in July and, earlier, as a play on “Fluorescent Sand” starting back in May. The shares dropped during the China panic in August, probably partly because of some insider selling, but enthusiasm for all things 5G has picked up a bit and the shares are now at new multi-year highs, right around $8 a share.

My guess is that the likely upside potential is far less than “24X,” but that’s true of every stock… and occasionally a huge winner emerges. That depends in large part on whether this is a great company that can build a dominant position, which I’d say is a low-probability gamble at this point (that’s why it trades at $8, which is just 2-3X sales, if people thought it was a higher probability it would, naturally, be more expensive), and on what you mean by “soon.”

Analysts do have some hope for Inseego because of their 5G “MiFi” router and hotspot business, probably largely because of their sales pipeline through Verizon as that company’s fixed broadband service rolls out to more cities, but the expectation is still quite tepid compared to David Fessler’s forecasts — analysts see revenue growing about 20% next year, leading them to profitability (at $8, the stock trades at about 170X 2020 earnings expectations… but a more reasonable 30X 2021 earnings forecasts), with another 20%+ revenue burst after that (though there are only a few analysts making forecasts for this small cap company, and those earnings expectations have moved out by about a year since we first covered the stock last summer, so take that with a huge grain of salt).

If those forecasts turn out to be right, then there’s reason to think that $5 is a reasonable price to pay for the potential that Inseego’s 5G router business could have some strong growth for a couple years if they can grab a decent market share in an emerging business, like their predecessor Novatel Wireless did with 3G and 4G “hot spot” pucks using their MiFi brand 10-15 years ago. But I’d hesitate to assume any big picture 5G opportunity for Inseego beyond that point, there’s so much competition in 5G gear that will emerge, no one is sure what will be popular or successful, and I’d just be guessing at this point about who might “win.” Which makes the stock now, at $8, a lot more worrisome than it was last summer… particularly because the big earnings growth expected for 2020 at that time has now been pushed out to 2021.

There are, of course, other companies that make this stuff — and it’s not just Huawei or other verboten Chinese suppliers (though most of these companies use contract electronics manufacturers like Foxconn, which does a lot of its assembling in China). The most direct competitor right now is probably the larger Netgear (NTGR), whose Nighthawk routers and hotspots are similar to Inseego’s MiFi products (so far Netgear has partnered up most closely with AT&T, Inseego with Verizon) — Netgear is already profitable and has a broader line of business, but also had a huge drop in revenue in 2019 and is expected to grow revenue at less than 1% a year over the next couple years.

And does that February 24 date mean anything? Fessler says that’s when he expects the latest wave of FCC spectrum auctions to finish up, with announcements about who has won… and he thinks Inseego’s partners will be key winners, which could be a critical development for the stock. I don’t think spectrum is what’s holding back fixed-wireless expansion or router sales for Verizon, but I suppose it’s possible that this could have some impact… there’s certainly no reason for it to have an immediate or abrupt impact, so I imagine you’ve got time to think it over.

You could probably do worse, Inseego is a real company with a growing business, and I thought it was a reasonable speculation six months ago at five bucks… but it doesn’t look like it’s exactly poised for miraculous breakthroughs.

I expect the downside risk for INSG is probably limited to 60% or so at this point, since they do have a nearly guaranteed level of business coming right now from the early Verizon rollouts, even if that’s going slower than they initially expected, but their turnaround is still fairly new, management has been on board for only a year or so, and I personally don’t see a lot of potential for the stock to get much above $10-12 in the next couple years, unless fixed 5G broadband becomes a lot more popular than I’m guessing in the next year and the demand for their routers is dramatic and surprising. Which is definitely not impossible, I’m just skeptical.

That’s just what I see in the tea leaves, though — when it comes to your money, it’s your thinking that counts… so please do share that with us. See great things for Inseego? Other favorites for exposure to the 5G rollout? Do let us know with a comment below, and thanks for reading!

Disclosure: Among the stocks mentioned above I have equity and/or call option positions in Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, and Berkshire Hathaway. I will not trade in any covered stock for at least three days, per Stock Gumshoe’s trading rules.

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nor
Guest
nor
February 23, 2020 4:58 am

i tot its Sprint…..

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Dave B
Member
Dave B
February 23, 2020 8:30 am

Thank You so much for your website & info…

Roger
Guest
Roger
March 5, 2020 12:15 pm

I think this is a bunch of hype and if it isint why do you keep it such a secret is it so some people can make money trying. To make money off people who don’t have money to spend it’s like vouchers trying to pick the dead

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Coleen
March 7, 2020 10:05 am

Just want to say THANK YOU , so tired of all the BS.

Dave
Dave
March 7, 2020 11:23 am
Reply to  Coleen

Ditto, following these guys can make you pull your hair out.

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raymond prime
Guest
raymond prime
August 22, 2020 8:02 pm

I agree, you so spot on ! your collum must help a lot more people make more informed decisions, as you put it, than you imagine. doing a great job, Travis, your the real McCoy. thank you.

Frank
Member
Frank
August 14, 2021 1:17 pm

Always very useful and helpful information. Thank you!!

jtgrrg
Guest
jtgrrg
March 31, 2020 5:11 pm

what is the stock

gravinaut
Guest
gravinaut
April 22, 2020 8:33 pm

INSG closed today at $12.47. The only reason I know this is because of Stock Gumshoe, and receiving the hyped up spam emails. This is the third time these hype emails have led me here, but the first time one of their stocks have actually seen such an uptick. Another issue with these hype emails is the timeliness. They seem to recycle hypes which are months old. Things can happen fast, thus rendering them useless, or in this case, perhaps the ship has already sailed as in too late to buy?

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Paul Mikoll
Guest
Paul Mikoll
May 14, 2020 3:57 pm

Fessler is talking about 5k “Contracts”. What are they and what’s the risk?

Walter Stanton
Member
June 8, 2020 10:52 am

Hot spot 5G? Like Clear tried and failed? I don’t see fixed devices without the services being all that profitable.

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Paul Mikoll
Guest
Paul Mikoll
December 7, 2020 7:22 pm

Thank you! I’ve held Inseego since April 2020. I am also a member of the Oxford Club and hate that they always want you to upgrade to get the best advice. I thought I signed up for the best advice originally! I have received some great tips from Paul Mampilly. I am up more then 100% since May and most of my trades have come from my own research. All the best and make good trades. Check out PLTR, CRSR, and LAZR. Blessings.

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Susie
Susie
January 17, 2021 7:51 pm

Would you like torevisit INSG?

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The Dude
Guest
The Dude
May 10, 2021 9:11 am
Reply to  Susie

Would you like to revisit INSG?

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Paul
Guest
Paul
August 14, 2021 3:23 pm
Reply to  The Dude

Not now. I don’t know what to make of the market. Every stock I own, the companies numbers are through the roof growth but they are still going lower?! BIG money controls the board. I see corruption everywhere. I’ve turned to crypto

Paul
Guest
Paul
August 14, 2021 3:19 pm
Reply to  Susie

Everything is too volatile. I believe Energy, Space, and 5G/IoT, SAV, AR, VR… will be in the Trillion’s but I’ve moved most of my money into Crypto. STEM, SOFI, LORL (because of telsat), SPT, LPSN are stocks that will be 1,000% gainers but they are mostly long term holds. I truly believe BITCOIN will go past 100K as full awareness of what the Blockchain can do is spread to the masses. The truly huge gains will be in crypto but like I said, if you find the stocks of the future hold them regardless of short term volatility. All the best!

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Jacinta Coleman
Guest
Jacinta Coleman
February 6, 2021 9:08 pm

Thanks for your explanation. Great to break down the hype into meaningful discussion and analysis

John
Guest
John
June 28, 2021 2:08 pm

INSG is a very volatile stock, in March 2021 the price fell rapidly in 1 day. Earlier in the year it was at one point above $20, but now its around $10.40 or so. I think it is being over-hyped by some of these newsletters/adverts, the price movements are very unpredictable.

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lalgulab12
October 26, 2021 1:01 pm

Investing in STARTUPS is like investing in PENNY STOCKS. No one is going to make millions

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lalgulab12
October 26, 2021 1:05 pm

The only way to save your investment capital and make a comfortable profit is to invest in DOC’s ortfolio stocks

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Jeffrey D Merrill
Guest
Jeffrey D Merrill
January 16, 2022 11:21 am

So, I had subscribed to Marc Lichtenfelds deal for a $120+ dollars in order to get his book and stock tips to invest in…well, in order to do that…I have to buy this dude last name Green to get stock tips!!!
I bought into Motley Fool as well and turned out I was the fool!!! Neither one has helped me but I have helped them!!
I don’t have much money to do this B.S. if they would allow us to make some money first and then pay into their service would be awesome…the way they do it now… paying into their service first…then we don’t have enough money to put to stocks!!!
So for me your all scams!!! Just saying!

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P. Mikoll
Guest
P. Mikoll
January 20, 2022 9:04 pm

I feel your pain. You have to be very rich to invest in pre-IPO companies that will go 10-100+X and us “poor” folks looking to be wealthy will never be invited to that table. I found a private company called Atlis down near Phoenix who are making their own EV Truck and batteries. You can invest directly in the company, and I did (atlismotorvehicles.com). The needle always moves on Oxford and other investment advice so you will “upgrade”, and the upgrades never, end although they do get it right more than not in my experience. I still do my own research and the Blockchain is the best “IPO” type gains us normies can hope to make. ILIKF is being called “the Forever Battery” and I found them 2 years ago when they were $1.20. It’s going to take a decade for the EV future to be here and this is the time to get in early on every industry. The batteries that ILIKA (that’s the company) makes are currently being used in all sorts of IoT devices, wearables, medical devices and it has been working with Toyota for a decade to scale to EV’s. I think at $2/share it’s worth a strong look. SLDP, GWH, MRAAY, QS and other EV battery companies are all backed by the BIG car companies. The Industry is using the shotgun approach to investing hoping one of them will finally get the “Forever” battery and hit the jackpot. Lichtenfeld’s Dividend approach will work but I’m a broke 62-year-old and I don’t have 20 years. I was ripped apart in a divorce 10 years ago and I’m still trying to crawl out. Be smart and safe everyone and best to all in your investment journey. Thank you so much to our Host!

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Ace Bogart
Member
Ace Bogart
January 20, 2022 10:06 am

Well here it is 2 years later and Fessler is rekindling the same pitch for the “Lynchpin stock behind the 5G revolution” with this $5 stock and a big announcement on or about Mar 31, 2022

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P. Mikoll
Guest
P. Mikoll
March 12, 2022 7:46 pm

Isn’t this three years old?
If you would have bought INSG in March 2020 you might have made some money. There is a Taiwanese company that is at the forefront of the new modems, but you have to buy it with an overseas Broker on the TWSE.
Our Host mentioned something very telling about investors who like stocks under $10. I understand the attraction but look at CLFD, MXL, KEYS or MRVL if you want to take advantage of 5G. Yes, they are more expensive, and you will not be able to buy as many shares, but they move higher and quicker than penny stocks and you will do better even if it means fewer shares. I did really well with AVNW and CMBM when I bought in 2020 and sold high last year. These two infrastructure stocks may come back with the 5G build out.
The BIG concern, what does 5G radiation do to the human body? They did studies in Finland when cell phones came out in the 90’s and studies showed rat bones in their brains fell apart from early cell radiation, what do you think this new and more powerful radiation will do? Big business does NOT care if your head crumbles. Time for the aluminum foil helmet. Blessings

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frank_n_steyn
Irregular
March 22, 2022 3:13 pm

INSG is back down to $4.32 today, down from $19.80 or so, about a year ago. EPS is around minus -0.5070, so there is no P/E ratio. Just to let you know.

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