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 Stock Is Up 22% Pre-Market on a Buyout Headline
One product launch is doing most of the work this morning. A single new PC chip has split the semiconductor space cleanly in two, lifting the names with a seat at the table and dumping the rivals left defending turf they thought was safe. That is how fast the market reprices a competitive threat.
Away from the chip fight, the winners share a theme: investors are paying up for clear, forward-looking stories, whether that is a marquee housing buyout, a rotation back into software, or a fresh bet on next-generation computing. The losers share one too. Anything tied to crypto sentiment is under pressure as Bitcoin slides to its lowest level in weeks.
🤝 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
Taylor Morrison Home (TMHC): +22%
The homebuilder is the day's biggest gainer after Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy it for $6.8 billion. Greg Abel called Taylor Morrison a best-in-class operator and tied the deal to expanding homeownership, which tells you Berkshire is making a long-horizon bet on US housing demand.
Arm Holdings (ARM): +11%
Arm is surging after Nvidia used its technology to develop a new PC processor unveiled in collaboration with Microsoft. The reveal puts Arm's architecture at the center of a fresh push into personal computers, a market it has long wanted deeper in.
International Business Machines (IBM): +9%
IBM jumped after Barclays initiated coverage at overweight, framing quantum computing as the next major compute paradigm and calling IBM's strategy compelling. Melius Research also raised its price target. Two analyst endorsements landing together on the quantum thesis is giving investors permission to treat IBM as a forward-looking bet rather than a legacy name.
ServiceNow (NOW): +8%
ServiceNow led a broad software rally on the first trading day of June, with the iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF up 3.5%. The whole group caught a bid, but ServiceNow ran the hardest.
📉 Pre-Market Movers
The Biggest Losers, Ranked
Qualcomm (QCOM): -7%
Nvidia's move into PC chips has rattled its rivals. The same announcement lifting Arm and Nvidia is read as a direct competitive threat to Qualcomm's own ambitions in the space. When a dominant player enters your market, the incumbents reprice fast.
Intel (INTC): -6%
Intel fell on the same dynamic, with Nvidia's new processor seen as encroaching on territory Intel has long owned. Advanced Micro Devices dropped more than 3% for the same reason. The market is betting Nvidia's PC push comes at the rivals' expense, and the legacy chipmakers are on the wrong side of it.
Robinhood (HOOD): -3%
Robinhood slid as Bitcoin fell below $73,000, its lowest level since mid-April. Coinbase dropped about 3% on the same move. These names trade as leveraged plays on crypto sentiment, so when Bitcoin rolls over, they tend to move first and hardest.
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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.
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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
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Only three stocks made the cut.
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If market rotation accelerates, these are the types of names that historically benefit first.
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👀 What We’re Watching
Here’s One Ticker That’s Trending Today
Dollar General (DG)
Retail traders are zeroing in on Dollar General ahead of its Q1 earnings tomorrow morning, with the StockTwits debate split down the middle on a single question: in a squeezed economy, does the dollar store win or lose? Bulls argue that tighter household budgets drive shoppers toward the $1 price point, while bears counter that Dollar General's core low-income customer is already stressed enough to skip even a dollar-store run.
The stock is down more than 19% year-to-date, and rival Dollar Tree's strong print has primed sentiment for a possible read-through. Same-store sales are the number traders are watching, and tomorrow's report could be what either confirms the trade-down thesis or hands it to the skeptics.
