Presented by Decentralized Masters: Tan Gera, CFA Charterholder and ex-Wall Street investment banker, took $57k and turned it into $1.87M using BlackRock's system. Learn the exact three-phase framework he reverse-engineered →

🔥 Good Morning from Top Tickers

This CPG Stock Just Jumped 10% Pre-Market

The market is drawing a sharp line this morning between companies in control of their own story and those losing the thread. Buyout interest, settled lawsuits, and analyst conviction are getting rewarded, while guidance cuts, dilutive raises, and acquisition bets are getting punished hard.

The throughline is risk appetite. In a jittery, risk-off tape, the premium goes to clarity and clean balance sheets, and the penalty falls fastest on anything that looks like an execution stumble or a question mark about what comes next.

🤝 Sponsored By Decentralized Masters

CFA: I Turned $57k Into $1.87M

Dear Reader,

I took $57,000 and turned it into $1.87 million in 18 months.

Not by trading. Not by luck.

By copying the three-phase system BlackRock uses to manage $14 trillion.

I'm Tan Gera, CFA Charterholder and ex-Wall Street investment banker.

The same framework that generates them $16.1 billion in fees annually.

This system wasn't built for retail investors. It required millions in capital. It required institutional access.

So I rebuilt it for digital assets:

Protection when markets crash.

Income whether they go up or down.

Access to opportunities before they go public.

Over 4,500 investors are using this system now.

It works in any market conditions.

Bill turned $100k into $932k in 18 months. Mark paid off his entire membership in 90 days. Jeff made six figures on a single opportunity.

I call it the ABN System…

BlackRock's three-phase framework adapted for everyday investors with $50k+.

If you already hold digital assets, this system could multiply what you're sitting on right now.

Watch how to copy BlackRock's $14 trillion playbook →

To your wealth,

Tan Gera, CFA Decentralized Masters

P.S. I took $57k and turned it into $1.87M using BlackRock's system. Learn the exact three-phase framework I reverse-engineered →

🚀 Pre-Market Movers

The Biggest Gainers, Ranked

Edgewell Personal Care (EPC): +10%

The maker of Schick razors and Banana Boat sunscreen is jumping after a Bloomberg report said it rejected a $30-a-share takeover offer from private equity firm Yellow Wood Partners. The board reportedly viewed the bid as too low, and the market reads a rejected offer as a signal that there could be a higher one coming.

Avis Budget Group (CAR): +4%

The car-rental company climbed after disclosing a $650 million cash settlement with Pentwater Capital. Removing a major legal overhang puts a hard number on the resolution, and investors are treating the clarity as a positive.

IBM (IBM): +4%

Big Blue was a rare bright spot in a broad tech selloff after JPMorgan upgraded it to overweight, pointing to software-driven gains in recurring revenue, margins, and cash flow. In a risk-off tape, a steady earner with improving fundamentals is exactly what gets rewarded.

📉 Pre-Market Movers

The Biggest Losers, Ranked

Primoris Services (PRIM): -37%

The specialty contractor cratered after cutting guidance on additional renewables cost overruns and delays, and announcing its COO is leaving. A guidance cut paired with an executive exit reads as a deeper execution problem, not a one-off, and the market is pricing it that way.

AMC Entertainment (AMC): -23%

The theater chain tumbled after agreeing to sell 95.3 million shares to institutional investors for roughly $200 million. A raise of that size is heavily dilutive, and existing shareholders are absorbing the hit.

Qualcomm (QCOM): -7%

The chipmaker slid on a Bloomberg report that it's in advanced talks to buy AI software firm Modular in a deal valued at around $4 billion. Investors often punish acquirers first, and a sizable cash outlay for an unproven software bet is drawing skepticism.

Oracle (ORCL): -3%

The software giant wasn't spared in the global tech selloff, slipping after a regulatory filing showed it cut 21,000 jobs, nearly 13% of its workforce, over the past year. A reduction of that size signals margin pressure or a strategic reset, and in a jittery tape, that's enough to send shares lower.

🤝 Sponsored By StockEarnings

Three under-$20 stocks passed our strict screen

Open your portfolio.

How much of it is in the same 5 stocks everyone owns?

In Q2 2026, that concentration risk is growing.

  • Leadership is shifting.

  • Volatility is widening.

  • And stock selection matters more than index exposure.

Meanwhile, most investors are still hiding in the same mega-caps.

That’s not an edge.

We screened the sub-$20 universe using three strict filters:

  • Institutional Buy ratings

  • Earnings beats + raised guidance

  • Real revenue growth

Only three stocks made the cut.

All fundamentally screened.

Not hype.

Not penny-stock gambling.

If market rotation accelerates, these are the types of names that historically benefit first.

👉 Access the free report here

👀 What We’re Watching

Here’s One Ticker That’s Trending Today

Carnival (CCL)

The cruise operator reports fiscal Q2 results today, and retail attention is building around one tension: Carnival heads in with nearly 85% of its 2026 sailings already booked at record prices, but the spike in oil tied to the Strait of Hormuz situation has traders on StockTwits debating whether fuel costs will eat into those gains. Sentiment has swung between bullish on demand and cautious on margins.

The stock is up only modestly year-to-date and has lagged peers, so the print carries weight. With management's full-year guidance and updated fuel assumptions both in focus, this report could be the event that either validates the demand story or shifts the spotlight back to costs.

How are you feeling today?

Are you bullish or bearish heading into the trading day?

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