A week ago I tried to get into Cerebras at the IPO date, they aimed at the $110-125. The first option i got to buy them on the IPO date, it was ~$360.I believe a similar thing will happen with SpaceX IPO, that it will explode on the first day of trading, you won't be able to get in before they x3 (or more).Which brings me to Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, an exchange traded fund that for some reason, have 19% of their fund in SpaceX? Their NAV is basically zero, so you are kind of buying SpaceX with 0.2 leverage..An x3 at 0.2 leverage.. That is still close to a x2. There is almost no downside risk, the remaining 80% is pretty diversified (although pretty tech heavy).I'm giving you the why, the how and the when.. This is as close to free money as it gets.
>>62248848>This is as close to free money as it gets.
>>62248858Im doubling your money in less than a month, with no downside risk.How is that not free money?
While you retards are chasing AI software bubble wrappers that will dump 90% next week, FBR Limited ($FBR / $FBRF) is building the physical future.Look at Hadrian X. This is a massive automated system that lays bricks and builds the shells of entire houses in record time. No breaks, no delays, no human error. 100% precision.The global housing shortage is worsening by the day, and this represents a viable scalable automation solution.
>>62248848interesting, how did they acquire shares of a private company
>>62248914It's pie in the sky
>>62248929I'm taking a shot and will remind you of your decision to stay poor.
>>62249008The "turns Premium", it's 2% premium to their NAV. They been trading on a discount for most of last year.Also their $1.25 tn valuation is a lot lower than the $1.75 tn SpaceX target at their IPO.. But again, this is the entire gimmick, i believe the public market value SpaceX a lot higher than private equity does, just as we saw with Cerebras.
>>62248848>SpaceX IPO, that it will explode on the first day of tradingPeople have not learned to this day why the first day IPO price explodes upwards yet, have they?