Friday, June 19, 2026

SpaceX’s $1.75 trillion IPO reveals a pattern

SpaceX is reportedly targeting a staggering $1.75 trillion valuation in what could become the largest IPO in history.

And if you look closely...

There's a lesson hidden inside that number.

SpaceX didn't invent rockets.

It reimagined what they could be.

That's what created so much value.

That’s a big reason why investors are paying so much attention to Mode Mobile.

Because Mode isn't trying to build another smartphone.

It's reimagining what a smartphone can be.

For decades, phones have been an expense.

Mode’s EarnOS platform turns them into an earning asset.

Users earn rewards for things they already do every day:

  • Listening to music
  • Playing games
  • Browsing apps
  • Charging their phones

That idea has already helped Mode reach:

✓ 490M+ users
✓ $115M+ lifetime revenue
✓ $1B+ earned & saved by users
✓ Operations across 170+ countries

And now that the company has its Nasdaq ticker ($MODE) locked in, attention has picked up even more.

Fortunately, investors can still get Mode Mobile shares for just $0.52 (plus up to 20% bonus shares).

SpaceX became valuable by changing how people think about an existing product.

Mode is doing something similar with smartphones.

Next-gen tech is getting rewarded by the market right now, and the largest opportunities are before it hits Wall Street.

Is Mode next?

Get all the details here.


 
 
 
 
 
 

More Reading from MarketBeat.com

AirJoule Technologies: A Cool Shot at a Multibagger

Reported by Thomas Hughes. Publication Date: 6/9/2026.

AirJoule company logo overlaid on a stylized orb with lightning and wind imagery.

Key Points

  • AirJoule is on track to commercialize its technology, which is reflected in the stock's price.
  • Trading volume is increasing in 2026, underpinning bullish stock price action.
  • Analysts and institutions drive the market, with analysts pointing to a 70% upside from the critical support level.
  • Special Report: SpaceX is offering you shares. Don't take them.

AirJoule Technologies (NASDAQ: AIRJ) is an intriguing candidate for a potential 10-bagger stock. This investment could rise 10x from its early-June value because its revolutionary technology is in such high demand that it may soon become ubiquitous. By ubiquitous, we mean everywhere, globally. The technology itself isn’t revolutionary—getting water from air—but the method is, as are the applications.

The primary application is in data centers. AirJoule Technology not only repurposes waste heat by using it to extract water from the air, but also produces ultra-pure water as a byproduct, suitable for evaporative cooling and for replenishing the costly water-cooled systems in use today.

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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.

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The technology centers on sorption. A proprietary sorbent material captures water vapor from the air, then releases it as pure liquid water through a thermal-pressure swing.

While strong demand has been seen from data centers, the applications span industries, including residential, food and beverage, and defense.

The catalyst in 2026 is the transition to commercialized production and the first sales at scale. As it stands, the company’s flagship products are deployed and being validated by third parties, including Arizona State University and the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center.

AirJoule Price Action Heats Up, Explosive Upside Ahead

AirJoule’s stock price action reflects the potential of its technology and business. The stock struggled throughout 2024 and 2025, bottoming in late 2025 before gaining traction later that year. The current market action suggests a reversal is underway, with a strengthening support base pointing to explosive upside.

Strengthening support is reflected in trading volume, which began accelerating after the price bottomed and has continued to build into the present. The market is facing a test in early June, with resistance at a long-term high. Early indications suggest the stock may eventually break through that resistance, with support forming near the low end of the target range above a prior high. The likely outcome is consolidation within that range, followed by a move higher by summer's end as catalysts emerge.

AIRJ chart displaying consolidation and rising volume.

Analysts and institutional activity underpin the market reversal. Analyst coverage remains slim, with only five tracked, but they rate the stock a Moderate Buy. There is an 80% buy-side bias in the ratings, and the consensus price target implies roughly 70% upside. Consensus is rising ahead of August's Q2 report, suggesting a move to 18-month highs by late spring 2027.

Institutional interest is more robust, aligning with the volume increases seen on the charts. Institutions own more than 60% of the stock and have been aggressively accumulating. MarketBeat’s data show accumulation in every quarter since the IPO, with activity spiking to record highs in Q1 2026 and a pace of approximately $16 bought to $1 sold on a trailing-12-month basis. This trend is not expected to end, given the stock price outlook and earnings forecasts.

The analysts' forecasts are robust, expecting quadruple-digit revenue growth next year, accelerating in the following fiscal year, and then continuing at a triple-digit pace for several years after that. The risk is that these forecasts may prove too low, which seems likely given the limited number of estimates and the ramping data center outlook.

AirJoule: Tailwinds and Risks in 2026

Data center capacity will more than double over the coming years, and most of it has yet to be built. All of it needs to be cooled efficiently, and next-generation equipment will have next-generation cooling needs. Backlogs at major hyperscalers, such as Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL), are tied to long-term capacity contracts, including technology that won’t be built until next year at the earliest.

Estimates vary but tend to agree: data center cooling is a market worth $15 billion to $25 billion in 2026, expected to grow at a high-teens compound annual growth rate for years and potentially quadruple in size within the next decade. In this environment, AirJoule is positioned for explosive growth from the moment its products are available, as well as sustained strength for the foreseeable future.

This year's risks include execution. AirJoule is actively pursuing Underwriters Laboratories (UL) certification for its technology, which is critical for commercialization. Delays or mistakes would push back the revenue timeline and likely be reflected in the stock’s price. Cash burn is also a risk and could amplify stock price movements if delays arise. Conversely, UL certification would serve as a trigger, validating the technology and enabling more aggressive investment by institutional players.

Q1 highlights included the impact of a dilutive offering, which increased the share count but left the company well-capitalized and without long-term debt. The question is whether the company can cross the line to profitability without another capital raise, and the odds of success appear high. Management says capital is sufficient to fund operations and strategy through fiscal 2027, well after the first commercial deployments are expected. Assuming the outlook remains unchanged, additional funds should be relatively easy to secure.


More Reading from MarketBeat.com

3 ETFs Giving Ready-Made Access to the Discounted International Small-Cap Space

Reported by Nathan Reiff. Publication Date: 6/14/2026.

Illustrated world map showing global market trends with interconnected data lines and index level charts.

Key Points

  • Small-cap international names may present an exceptional value opportunity while also adding diversification to portfolios lacking an ex-United States presence.
  • Three ETFs that make building exposure to this group of companies easy are GWX, PDN, and DLS.
  • Each of these provides a combination of compelling returns with some passive income bonus, although they are not all equal in those ways.
  • Special Report: SpaceX is offering you shares. Don't take them.

The international small-cap equities space may be one of the most overlooked value opportunities available to investors right now. Over the last two years, the MSXI EAFE Small Cap Index, which tracks developed-market small-cap stocks outside the United States and Canada, has seen some of its lowest valuations relative to domestic large-cap names in decades. At the same time, ex-U.S. developed market stocks have quietly outperformed the U.S. market in recent quarters.

Together, those trends suggest investors may still have a chance to buy international small-cap firms before their valuation appeal fades and while momentum remains intact. Of course, many retail investors won't consider these names, or may not even be aware of them, given their limited name recognition in the United States. However, a group of dedicated exchange-traded funds (ETFs) can add valuable international small-cap diversification to a variety of portfolio approaches.

Deep Basket of Developed International Names for Sector and Geographic Diversification

Hey, it's Jon Najarian. The SpaceX IPO is right around the corner. But I discovered Elon may have something BIGGER planned. Check this out before June 12th... (Ad)

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.tc pixel

The SPDR S&P International Small Cap ETF (NYSEARCA: GWX) follows an index of non-U.S. companies with market capitalizations between $100 million and $2 billion. It focuses on stocks from developed countries, with Japan, South Korea, Canada, and Australia near the top of the list. The fund's largest allocation is industrials at roughly 22%, followed by information technology, materials, and consumer discretionary stocks.

GWX's appeal lies in its broad approach to international stocks outside the traditional mega-cap space. By targeting firms outside popular sectors among investors looking toward international equities, such as energy and financials, GWX can help balance international exposure and reduce reliance on domestic positions.

The highly diversified basket includes more than 2,000 different stocks, with no holding representing more than about a third of a percent of the portfolio. With that breadth, GWX also offers a solid dividend yield of 2.5% as another point of appeal for investors.

With a 1-year return of 25%, the moderate expense ratio of 0.40% may be justified, even if GWX has been a bit slower to stand out in 2026, with year-to-date (YTD) returns of about 12%.

Excellent Dividend Heightens Appeal of PDN

Targeting a similar universe of stocks as GWX but with a focus on companies ranked by book value, cash flow, sales, and dividends, the Invesco RAFI Developed Markets ex-U.S. Small-Mid ETF (NYSEARCA: PDN) comes in slightly more expensive than its rival. PDN's expense ratio of 0.47% is somewhat higher than GWX's, but the potential benefits of a portfolio constructed using these factors rather than market-capitalization weightings may make the extra cost worthwhile.

In terms of performance over the last year, however, PDN is roughly on par with GWX, at about 20% in returns over the last year and 10% YTD. Its portfolio is also slightly smaller, with around 1,600 positions that lean most heavily on industrials, financials, and materials stocks from Japan, Canada, South Korea, the U.K., and elsewhere.

One area in which PDN really stands out is its distributions. The fund offers a dividend yield of 3.1%, which some investors may feel more than makes up for its slight recent underperformance relative to a rival like GWX.

A Modest Trade-Off of Returns for a Stronger Dividend Yield

Investors with a particular interest in dividend-paying small caps might consider the WisdomTree International SmallCap Dividend ETF (NYSEARCA: DLS), which focuses on developed markets outside the United States and Canada. While small-cap names are not necessarily known for paying dividends, a fund like DLS that seeks out those that do may help investors balance growth and income.

Although DLS has the narrowest portfolio of the three funds here, with more than 1,000 holdings, it is still broad enough for many investors. And while DLS has the weakest performance of these three ETFs, returning about 7% YTD and 17% over the last 12 months, its dividend yield of 3.5% is also the strongest.

For investors, DLS may appeal because it builds a dividend strategy around stocks that are often absent from other dividend portfolios, due both to their size and their international status. That can help not only boost passive income, but also strengthen a dividend-focused portfolio through diversification.

On the other hand, investors will have to pay a premium for this option, as DLS comes with an annual fee of 0.58%.

Thank you for subscribing to Insider Trades Daily, which covers the most recent insider buying and selling activity from Wall Street CEO's, CFO's, COO's and other insiders.
 
This email communication is a paid advertisement provided by Mode Mobile, a third-party advertiser of InsiderTrades.com and MarketBeat.
 
 

Please read the offering circular and related risks at invest.modemobile.com. This is a paid advertisement for Mode Mobile’s Regulation A+ Offering.

Mode Mobile recently received their ticker reservation with Nasdaq ($MODE), indicating an intent to IPO in the next 24 months. An intent to IPO is no guarantee that an actual IPO will occur.

The Deloitte rankings are based on submitted applications and public company database research, with winners selected based on their fiscal-year revenue growth percentage over a three-year period.

Pro forma revenue and EBITDA, includes full year numbers of the businesses acquired throughout 2025.


 
 
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