A $2 Trillion IPO & the Space Economy
Most important take away
Oil futures are in steep backwardation ($110 front month vs $70 end-of-year), suggesting the market believes supply disruptions from the Strait of Hormuz closure will be temporary — but this may not reflect physical supply realities. SpaceX has filed for a confidential IPO at a potential $2 trillion valuation, only needing to sell a small fraction of shares to achieve it.
Summary
Actionable Insights
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Don’t assume US energy independence insulates you — the US still imports crude and has seen 30-35% gas price increases, worse than some countries more dependent on Persian Gulf oil. Monitor both futures and physical supply data.
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Oil futures backwardation is not a guarantee — while futures markets suggest prices normalize by late 2026 (~$70/bbl), experts warn infrastructure damage could keep supply constrained longer. Don’t take one signal as definitive.
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SpaceX IPO (targeting June 2026) — at ~$2T valuation, they only need to sell ~$80-100B in shares. Watch for the S-1 filing for actual financials. The combination of X (Twitter) and xAI with SpaceX complicates the investment thesis.
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Recession risk is real but not certain — strong jobs numbers persist despite oil headwinds, tariffs, and weak consumer sentiment. Lou leans toward a mild recession in 2026.
Stocks & Investments Mentioned
Five-Stock Draft Portfolios:
- Lou’s picks: TransDigm (TDG) — aerospace parts, 45%+ gross margins, near 52-week low, $10B M&A firepower; QXO — Brad Jacobs’ building products roll-up, targeting $50B sales; Nelnet — student loans/payments/school software, beaten S&P 500 over 5 years; Truist Financial (TFC) — regional bank below book value, ~5% dividend yield; Rocket Lab (RKLB) — high-risk space play at $38B
- Dan’s picks: Booking Holdings (BKNG) — forward P/E of 15, stock split coming, AI disruption fears overblown; Moderna (MRNA) — mRNA tech proof of concept beyond COVID, stock doubled from ~$20 to ~$50; Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) — copper/gold producer, inflation hedge following Dalio’s approach; Microsoft (MSFT) — beaten-down Mag 7, trust Satya Nadella to navigate; Berkshire Hathaway (BRK) — biggest holding, Greg Abel transition reassured by resumed buybacks
- Travis’s picks: Alphabet (GOOGL) — AI easy button, YouTube undervalued, Waymo hidden value; Uber (UBER) — self-driving beneficiary not victim, expanding delivery; Disney (DIS) — 14x earnings, $60B park investment, strong original IP run; Intuit (INTU) — 16x forward earnings, tax/accounting not easily disrupted by AI; Workday (WDAY) — 12x forward earnings, AI companies use it
Radar Stocks
- York Space Systems (YSS) — pure-play space economy, recent IPO, modular manufacturing for cost-conscious satellite services
- McCormick (MKC) — quarterly beat plus $40B+ merger with Unilever food assets, significant integration risk but scale matters
Other Notes
- Nike weakness discussed — still profitable but likely not an attractive investment vs alternatives
- Dollar strengthening could complicate economic outlook
Chapter Summaries
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Oil Market Analysis — Oil at $110/bbl with Strait of Hormuz effectively closed. US gas up ~$1/gallon. Futures in steep backwardation suggesting temporary disruption, but physical supply experts are less optimistic. US still imports crude despite being a net exporter of refined products.
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Economic Impact — Jobs report strong, unemployment down. Consumer sentiment terrible but spending continues. Lou expects mild recession in 2026 from combined oil, tariff, and sentiment headwinds. Dollar strengthening adds complexity.
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SpaceX IPO & Space Economy — Confidential filing for potential $2T valuation IPO targeting June. Morgan Stanley projects $1T space economy by 2040. SpaceX at ~$16B revenue. Combination with X and xAI complicates the thesis. Discussion of share pledging vs. selling as exit strategy.
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Five-Stock Draft — Each host picks 5 stocks for a mini portfolio. Focus on beaten-down quality (BKNG, DIS, MSFT), AI plays (GOOGL, WDAY), space (RKLB), commodities (FCX), and contrarian picks (TFC, MRNA).
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Nike & Brand Discussion — Nike’s weak earnings and brand challenges. Brands can survive (Lego, Hershey) but many don’t. Nike still profitable but not an attractive investment.
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Stocks on Radar — York Space Systems as pure-play space stock; McCormick’s merger with Unilever food assets.