Editor's Note: Former tech executive Jeff Brown picked Nvidia in 2016. It's up 25,155% since. He recommended Bitcoin at $240. It's up 31,219% since. And he's been ahead of the curve on Elon Musk's businesses for over a decade. In fact, he was one of the first to predict SpaceX's IPO. But today, he says this goes beyond SpaceX. Elon is building something even bigger. And you can get in right now, on the ground floor. Click here for the details or read more below.
Dear Reader,
Have you tried Elon Musk’s new AI agent?
It’s the most powerful AI ever created.
Musk himself thinks it could make investors 70 times their money.
In a few short years…
I expect an announcement from Musk by the end of this month…
That will make this AI agent available to every American.
But you can get in right now…
Click here and I’ll give you a live demo of this amazing AI agent — for free.
Plus, I’ll show you how to get in right away, on the ground floor.
My name is Jeff Brown. And I’ve been ahead of the crowd when it comes to Elon Musk for over a decade.
I’ve inspected his facilities across the country, including the Colossus data center.
I was one of the first to correctly predict the SpaceX IPO.
And when the so-called experts were writing Tesla’s death warrant, I doubled down.
The stock is up 1,510% since.
Now, I believe he’s created the most powerful AI agent in the world.
And it’s capable of making 70 times your money.
Click here to watch the live demo.
Regards,
Jeff Brown
Founder & CEO, Brownstone Research
Authored by Chris Markoch. Article Published: 6/10/2026.
A key reason earnings reports matter so much is their ability to turn anecdotes into evidence. When a company performs well, it is usually a sign that it is growing and retaining its customer base. The opposite is true when a company underperforms. In short, earnings reports matter because they translate customer behavior into hard numbers—and it is those customers who show investors what is really going on.
That brings us to Palantir Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ: PLTR). The company held its 10th AIPCon event in early June, and the event was highlighted by several of Palantir's customers testifying about how the company's AIP platform is helping their businesses. It is the kind of free advertising companies love to get, and it explains why Palantir's strong earnings reports are not a mirage.
After being invited to the SpaceX launch headquarters in Cape Canaveral from one of Elon's top lobbyists… Hall of Fame Trader Jon Najarian now says EVERYONE is missing an even bigger story about the SpaceX IPO… That it's just the start of an Elon Musk $44 trillion "Superconvergence…" An event that could kick off as soon as June 12th.
Click here now to watch hall of fame trader Jon Najarian's full prediction.AIPCon delivered customer testimonies that support Palantir’s long-term growth story.
Kirkland & Ellis, one of the world's top law firms, launched an AI-powered platform for private equity fundraising built on AIP—freeing attorneys from administrative work and redirecting their focus toward high-value judgment calls.
McCarthy Building is using AIP to encode more than a century of construction expertise into real-time decision support for project managers in the field.
GNP Seguros, Mexico's largest insurer, has gone enterprise-wide, reporting the ability to act on data at a scale and speed that simply wasn't possible before.
Beyond the customer stage, Palantir is now available on Google Cloud Marketplace with full integration across Google's platforms. That distribution broadens the company's commercial reach significantly. And for investors concerned about the lack of international growth, Palantir landed a £9 million (approximately $12 million) 10-year contract to replace England and Wales's entire firearms licensing database, covering all 43 police forces.
Skeptics, of which there are many, will point out that despite the bullish tone of AIPCon, PLTR is trading lower. That is not a particularly new story. PLTR is down about 25% in 2026 and approximately 35% below the all-time high it reached in November 2025.
Of course, the most common explanation is valuation. But that is starting to feel like a hammer looking for a nail. Investors waiting for Palantir to grow into its valuation before investing are likely to miss the strongest gains. In any event, it is not clear how well traditional valuation metrics apply to enterprise software companies whose value is embedded in platform stickiness rather than hard assets.
Before dismissing that as a “this time it’s different” argument, consider that Palantir has no debt and does not face the CapEx overhang that other technology stocks are dealing with.
The more likely reason PLTR has fallen so sharply is twofold. First, many investors are looking to raise capital for the SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) IPO. That means they are trimming profits in winners, and Palantir is a direct target.
A secondary reason is that investors' dollars in the tech space are rotating back to chip stocks. That is a fair point, as semiconductor refresh cycles are getting shorter and shorter.
PLTR is approaching the $120–$125 support zone, a level it has tested three times in 2026—in early February, late April, and late May—without breaking down, forming what looks like a triple bottom. That is a constructive pattern, and each successive test that holds above support adds credibility to the thesis that a floor is forming.
That said, the technicals are still messy. The current price sits well below both the 50-day SMA ($140.42) and the 200-day SMA ($160.84), meaning any meaningful recovery has significant overhead resistance to clear.
The 50-day moving average crossing below the 200-day earlier this spring confirmed a bearish structure that a potential triple bottom alone won't reverse. Investors should want to see a clean reclaim of $140 on volume before reading too much into the pattern. Until then, expect the stock to chop through the summer, with earnings in August as the next real directional catalyst.
If investors are looking for reasons to sell PLTR, they do not have to look far. The immediate gratification phase of this story is over, for now. But viewed with a wider lens, the outlook for Palantir continues to be bullish.
For example, on June 5, Rosenblatt Securities and Wedbush reiterated their bullish ratings on PLTR with price targets of $225 and $230, respectively. Keep in mind that both targets are about 20% higher than the consensus price target of $192.76, which itself is 50% above recent prices.
That is important to consider at a time when many technology stocks are under pressure. It is also a reminder to investors that for every seller, there will be buyers. Most likely, those buyers are institutions looking to capture as much upside as possible from a stock that many missed on its initial run higher. AIPCon was a reminder that, for all its skeptics, Palantir’s customers are bullish—and the customer is always right.
Written by Ryan Hasson. Publication Date: 6/18/2026.
Rocket Lab (NASDAQ: RKLB) has had a milestone few weeks, even as the stock has pulled back meaningfully from its highs.
On June 11, the company was announced as one of five new additions to the Nasdaq-100 Index, with the change taking effect before the market opens on Monday, June 22.
After being invited to the SpaceX launch headquarters in Cape Canaveral from one of Elon's top lobbyists… Hall of Fame Trader Jon Najarian now says EVERYONE is missing an even bigger story about the SpaceX IPO… That it's just the start of an Elon Musk $44 trillion "Superconvergence…" An event that could kick off as soon as June 12th.
Click here now to watch hall of fame trader Jon Najarian's full prediction.For a company that was a small-cap launch provider not long ago, joining the 100 largest non-financial companies on the Nasdaq marks a significant milestone in the company’s growth. It may also be arriving at an interesting moment for the stock.
Rocket Lab joins the Nasdaq-100 alongside four other AI-linked names, including Nebius (NASDAQ: NBIS). The inclusion is more than just a symbolic milestone. When a stock joins a major index, the passive funds and ETFs that track that index are required to buy shares, creating a source of structural demand that did not exist before.
With Rocket Lab entering one of the most widely tracked benchmarks in the world, forced buying from index funds could provide a steady tailwind for the stock over time, while also broadening the institutional coverage and liquidity it receives.
The index news has been accompanied by a series of bullish analyst moves. Most recently, on June 15, KeyCorp upgraded Rocket Lab to Overweight from Sector Weight, setting a $135 price target that implies meaningful upside from recent levels. Analyst Michael Leshock framed the recent sell-off in space stocks as unwarranted, citing Rocket Lab's strong fundamentals, its vertically integrated model mirroring SpaceX's (NASDAQ: SPCX) long-term trajectory, and a structural shortage of launch capacity expected to leave the market undersupplied for more than a decade.
KeyCorp was not alone. Earlier in June, Clear Street raised its price target to $129 from $98, citing accelerating growth through 2030 supported by industry-wide launch undersupply and noting that Rocket Lab's core business is nearing profitability. Stifel also recently lifted its target to $132, maintaining a Buy rating on the back of strong revenue momentum and an expanding backlog. The consensus rating is Moderate Buy, with price targets as high as $150.
The reason Rocket Lab pulled back in the first place is somewhat counterintuitive. SpaceX made its historic Nasdaq debut on June 12 in the largest IPO in history, an event that officially made Elon Musk the world's first trillionaire. Rather than lifting all space stocks, the listing triggered a wave of profit-taking and rotation out of the smaller space names that had run up in anticipation of it. Rocket Lab, despite being widely viewed as the clear number two in the commercial space sector behind SpaceX, fell with the group and now trades roughly 28% below its 52-week high.
That dynamic is exactly what KeyBanc flagged as a buying opportunity. A selloff driven by asset rotation rather than any deterioration in the underlying business often creates a more attractive entry point for long-term investors. And the underlying business has not slowed. Q1 2026 revenue came in at a record $200.35 million, up 63.4% year over year. The backlog stands at a record $2.2 billion, and the Neutron rocket remains on track for its debut launch later this year.
The pullback has also created an intriguing technical setup for the stock. Shares of Rocket Lab have spent close to one week building a base above $100, attempting to turn that level into new support. If the bulls regain control and the stock takes out the previous week’s high near $118, a higher low will be confirmed. The $100 level, which also coincides with the 50-day SMA, will be the key level for bulls to watch going forward.
The setup heading into the June 22 index inclusion is interesting. The stock has pulled back sharply from its highs, but the decline was driven by sector-wide rotation around the SpaceX listing rather than anything specific to Rocket Lab. The fundamental story remains firmly intact, with record revenue, a record backlog, Neutron approaching its first flight, and an expanding national security pipeline.
The analyst community has responded to the weakness not with downgrades but with a wave of upgrades and raised price targets, even as the stock, now up almost 54% year to date, trades just above the consensus target.
For investors, the combination of a pullback that looks technical rather than fundamental, accelerating analyst conviction, and a major index inclusion arriving in the same window makes this a moment worth watching closely.