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 Quantum Stock is Up 15% Before the Bell
Washington bought equity in a frontier sector this morning, and the tape lit up. A handful of names that were left for dead earlier this year are suddenly the day's biggest winners, lifted by a single headline that reframes what kind of bet the U.S. government is willing to make about which technologies matter for the next decade. The signal is bigger than the dollar amount.
The losers tell a very different story. Clean beats are not getting rewarded anymore, layoffs at one of the biggest names in financial software are reading as a confession about slowing growth rather than a sign of discipline, and the long-running shape of an entire sector is being redrawn before the bell after a much-rumored mega-IPO finally hit the SEC.
🤝 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.
I spent two years reverse-engineering BlackRock's exact playbook.
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
D-Wave Quantum (QBTS): +15%
The quantum name is leading the sector higher after a Wall Street Journal report that the federal government plans to hand out $2 billion in grants to nine quantum firms, with Washington taking equity stakes in exchange. When the government starts buying equity in a frontier sector, the market reads it as official endorsement.
GlobalFoundries (GFS): +14%
The chip manufacturer is set to receive the largest individual award in the package, with $375 million earmarked for its role in the quantum buildout. That puts GlobalFoundries in the rare position of being both an established fab and a government-anointed quantum infrastructure play.
Applied Digital (APLD): +9%
The data center operator jumped after announcing a long-term lease with a high investment-grade U.S. hyperscaler. In an AI buildout where hyperscaler dollars are the most valuable currency on the tape, that's the kind of customer signature that re-rates a stock.
e.l.f. Beauty (ELF): +9%
The beauty name beat Wall Street estimates on the top and bottom lines and said it would unwind some of its tariff-related price hikes, citing the strain of higher gas prices on consumers. A consumer-friendly pricing move paired with a clean quarter is exactly what nervous retail investors wanted to hear.
📉 Pre-Market Movers
The Biggest Losers, Ranked
Intuit (INTU): -15%
The financial software giant announced a 17% workforce cut and missed on revenue for the fiscal third quarter. Layoffs of that size signal that even AI-fluent software incumbents are bracing for slower growth, and investors are punishing the admission.
Rocket Lab (RKLB): -6%
The space stock tumbled after SpaceX filed its long-awaited IPO prospectus with the SEC. Rocket Lab has long been the public-market proxy for retail's space exposure, and now a much bigger, much more dominant competitor is about to be tradable.
Kroger (KR): -4%
Bloomberg reported the grocer plans to slash prices across its stores to take on Walmart and Costco. Price wars compress margins, and the market is pricing in the cost of the fight before the fight begins.
Deere (DE): -3%
The agriculture equipment maker crushed second-quarter results, beat consensus on both lines, and reaffirmed full-year guidance. The stock is still selling off, which suggests investors were positioned for a raise, not just a hold.
🤝 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
Ross Stores (ROST)
The off-price retailer reports Q1 earnings after the bell today, and the timing couldn't be more loaded. Walmart just guided lower, Kroger is reportedly slashing prices to fight for market share, and the entire consumer backdrop has gotten cloudier. The question circulating on retail forums is whether a softening consumer is actually good news for Ross, the place shoppers historically trade down to when budgets tighten.
Analysts have been quietly bullish into the print, with UBS, JPMorgan, and Citi all raising price targets in the past week. With consumer-bellwether anxiety sitting front and center across the tape this morning, tonight's print could end up reading less as a Ross story and more as a verdict on where the American shopper actually is right now.
