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  • πŸ“‰ You can't buy SpaceX yet. Buy these instead.

πŸ“‰ You can't buy SpaceX yet. Buy these instead.

Dear Investor,

SpaceX goes public in June. But unless you're a hedge fund or a sovereign wealth fund, you probably won't get IPO allocation.

So the real question is: which publicly traded space stocks benefit most when SpaceX sets a $1.5 trillion benchmark for the sector?

We answered that question in a free report.

7 Space Stocks to Own Before SpaceX Goes Public in June
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Seven names. Real revenue. Real catalysts. Real upside tied to the biggest IPO of the decade.

This is how regular investors play the SpaceX moment.

πŸ‘‰οΈ Download the Free Report
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Regards,

The Trading Tips Research Team

BREAKING NEWS

πŸ‘– Levi's Just Beat The Street. The Stock Finally Agreed.

Wall Street has been staring at $LEVI for months wondering why a brand that sells the world's most iconic pair of jeans couldn't get its stock to act like it. Analyst price target: $26.80. Stock price before earnings: $18.95. That is a gap you could drive a truck through.

Last night, Levi's gave the market a reason to close it.

  • Adjusted EPS came in at $0.42 against estimates of $0.37.

  • Revenue hit $1.74 billion against estimates of $1.65 billion.

  • That is a clean beat on both lines. The stock ripped 5.9% to $20.90 immediately after reporting.

For context: this follows Q4 2025, where Levi beat on both EPS and revenue, then watched the stock drop 3% after hours because the 2026 guidance spooked everyone. Classic Levi's. Win the battle, confuse the market.

Not this time. Management raised full-year 2026 guidance on sales, margin, and adjusted EPS. The market noticed.

πŸ“ˆ The Bull Case:

  • DTC now represents 52% of total revenue, keeping gross margins healthy even as tariffs bite.

  • Levi's completed the sale of Dockers in February 2026, sharpening focus on its core denim lifestyle pivot.

  • US website traffic up 8%, European sites up 11%, and US Google searches for the brand up 13% year over year.

πŸ“‰ The Bear Case:

  • If consumers front-ran tariffs and loaded up on jeans in Q1, Q2 could face a serious hangover.

  • Operating margin dipped to 11.4% from 12.5% as tariff pressure and heavier advertising spend ate into the gains.

  • Consumer discretionary is not where you want to be when oil is elevated and geopolitical risk is real.

What Buffett Would Say: Levi's has been selling the same product for 150 years. The brand survived two world wars, disco, and athleisure. Buffett would love that. He would not love the tariff exposure on Asian manufacturing, the mid-single-digit organic growth, and a CEO who keeps having to explain why the guidance is conservative. He would pour a Cherry Coke and wait.

The Munch Take: My wife has owned the same pair of Levi's since 2019. They still fit. That is brand loyalty you cannot manufacture with a Super Bowl ad. The stock popped 5.9% last night and guidance went up. The gap between $20 and $26.80 is still real, but for the first time in a while, it feels like the market and the analysts are at least looking at the same pair of jeans.

This Trade Could 80x If Elon Is Right (Ad)

Serial entrepreneur and tech visionary, Elon Musk, just shared an idea he predicts could turn just $200 into $16,000.

That would equal an 80X return in a single move.

But I must warn you… this is a time sensitive, fast-moving situation. Just weeks from now, it could be too late to take advantage of Elon's idea.

That's why I'm urging you to check out the full details while you can.

Sincerely,
Tim Bohen

STOCK OF THE DAY

πŸͺΆ Cathie Wood Just Bought $13 Million Of Robinhood. Here's Why The Stock Is Down 52%.

Robinhood has shed 52% over the past six months and the reason is not complicated. Crypto retail trading volumes have fallen off a cliff, net interest revenue is shrinking, and five analyst firms cut their price targets in the first week of April alone. The business that prints money when everyone is gambling has a problem when people stop gambling.

So naturally, Cathie Wood bought $13 million of it yesterday.

πŸ“ˆ The Bull Case:

  • Robinhood just won the contract to run Trump Accounts. Four million kids. Government-backed deposits. That is a pipeline of new customers who didn't choose a competitor.

  • The company launched a $1.5 billion share repurchase program. They are buying the dip on themselves.

  • Revenue grew 52% year over year. The stock fell 52%. Someone's math is wrong.

πŸ“‰ The Bear Case:

  • The business runs on trading activity. No volatility, no revenue.

  • Analysts are trimming estimates for 2026 and 2027 on declining volumes and weaker net interest income.

  • Schwab is coming for the crypto market, fueling competition.

The Munch Take: Cathie Wood buying $HOOD is either a genius contrarian call or performance art. Revenue up 52%, stock down 52%. Long-term, we think it might be a good buy.

πŸͺ Munchy Memes

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