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Dear Reader, Over the past few weeks, I’ve been urging my readers to claim their stake in what I believe to be the biggest IPO of the decade. And I’m glad I did. Because over the last 21 days, three critical events happened in rapid succession: ✓ March 17th: SpaceX crossed 10,000 active satellites in orbit. The estimated threshold for offering full service to most of the globe. Two-thirds of every satellite circling Earth now belongs to ONE company. ✓ April 1st: Elon filed the confidential IPO paperwork with the SEC. The public filing could drop any day now. And when it does, the stampede begins. ✓ April 6th: Another rocket launched carrying 25 more satellites. Proving SpaceX isn't slowing down. They're accelerating. Building the network that will become the world's first global internet carrier. SpaceX just hit every technical milestone it needed to justify going public. Everything I predicted is happening... right on schedule. And there's still a small window to get in BEFORE the public can buy shares. But that window is closing fast. The moment the public filing drops, millions of investors will learn about this opportunity for the first time. You won't be early anymore. You'll be competing with the crowd. And your shot at early gains will be gone forever. See how to claim your stake in SpaceX before it’s too late. We have so much to look forward to, Jeff Brown Founder & CEO, Brownstone Research
Just For You Off-Grid Power Play: Electrifying Opportunity in PPSIBy Thomas Hughes. Article Posted: 4/14/2026. 
Key Points- Pioneer Power is in the midst of a business shift to focus on high-growth opportunities in data centers and residential power.
- Business is expected to accelerate and margins to widen in 2026.
- Analysts and institutions provide support and point to higher prices, but there are risks for investors.
- Special Report: Elon Unveils AI Passive Income Stream for Millions of Americans
Pioneer Power (NASDAQ: PPSI) is an emerging technology company with electrifying potential. Its core business focuses on remote charging for EVs, but the company is expanding into colocated power solutions. The newer segment centers on the PRYMUS platform, which enables off-grid, colocated power generation and storage. PRYMUS can run on multiple fuels — including natural gas and LP gas — and pairs with battery-storage systems to deliver reliable power for high-tech applications. One timely opportunity is the AI boom. PRYMUS systems range from 1 MW to 10 MW and can be expanded as demand grows. They can be deployed in months rather than years, offering a faster alternative to many large-scale solutions. The key question is whether Pioneer Power can ramp production and enter the market as a viable alternative for data centers and other power-hungry industries. Early progress indicates it may be able to do so. 2025 was a pivotal year as the company moved past 2024 divestitures and adopted a more aggressive growth strategy. Highlights include increased investments to bolster production and expand market exposure, with a focus on efficiency and high-growth sectors such as Edge AI, data centers, and residential. Colocated data-center power alone represented nearly a $100 billion market at the end of 2025 and is projected to grow at about a 15% compound annual growth rate over the next five to 10 years. Sell-Side Sentiment Warms in 2026: A Price Floor Is in PlacePioneer Power is a high-risk, start-up–quality stock that has attracted only limited sell-side coverage. The three analysts tracking PPSI rate it a Moderate Buy with a 67% Buy-side bias and a consensus price target implying more than 250% upside as of mid-April. There were no immediate target revisions after the recent fiscal Q4 2025 earnings report; commentators expressed concern about diminished business after the divestitures while noting the company’s longer-term potential. Data-center and residential demand are expanding faster than energy infrastructure can currently support. Institutional interest remains modest — about 10% as of mid-April — but institutions are accumulating. MarketBeat data show institutions as net buyers at roughly a 7.5:1 ratio on a trailing 12‑month basis, with activity ramping in Q1 2026. Q1 purchases totaled roughly $700,000 in shares, equal to about 2.65% of the company's market cap while the stock lingered at long-term lows. While a dramatic acceleration in institutional buying is unlikely, this steady accumulation indicates supportive demand at current prices. At the same time, short interest is minimal: below 1%, too small to meaningfully affect the market and unlikely to rise soon. The stock’s depressed price, analyst and institutional support, a generally positive outlook and a healthy balance sheet all discourage aggressive shorting. Cash burn remains a concern, but management’s investment-forward approach in 2025, guidance for reduced spending in 2026 and expectations for improving business help mitigate that risk. Pioneer Power Stock Price Trades at Rock BottomThe low short interest, combined with institutional and analyst support, is visible in recent price action. The market sold off after the subdued fiscal Q4 release but found support at an established level. That support, near $2.50 and first set in 2021, has been tested several times; each test produced a notable rebound, often delivering at least 100% upside. The downside risk is that peak prices have trended lower, implying the next peak may fall below $5 — possibly around $4.50 — unless a new catalyst appears. 
Potential catalysts for PPSI include broader rollouts of its EV-charging solutions in the EU and successful deployments of PRYMUS. Order flow and completed deployments would validate the technology and support larger-scale sales going forward. Management expects margins to improve as manufacturing investments scale and has guided toward eventual profitability; analysts currently forecast profits in 2027 with accelerated growth thereafter. Risks remain significant. High insider ownership is one: CEO and Chairman Nathan Mazurek holds nearly an 18% stake, which aligns his interests with shareholders but also creates potential conflicts of interest. Execution risk is another major concern. Competing against more established players in colocated power and data-center infrastructure is challenging; delays or weak end-market adoption could materially hurt the stock. Investors should expect volatility and possibly range-bound trading until there is clearer visibility into revenue and profitability — which could arrive with the fiscal Q1 2026 earnings release later this year. . |