Famed historian Yuval Noah Harari recently issued a warning that should send a shiver down the spine of every American. He predicts the emergence of a massive new “useless class.”
These aren’t just people who are temporarily unemployed.
These are people who have become economically irrelevant.
As Luke Lango and I just exposed in our recent interview, we have reached the “Singularity.” For the first time in 250 years, intelligence has been decoupled from labor.
During America’s first 1776 moment, the steam engine replaced muscle. In this new 1776 moment, AI is replacing the human mind.
If a machine is faster, cheaper, and smarter than you at your specific job... the economic reason to hire you simply vanishes.
This is why you see the "Magnificent 7" tech giants adding trillions in value while the "real" economy feels like it’s in a death spiral.
And the divide is widening. On one side: The "Useless Class" who cling to old-world skills. On the other: The "New Aristocracy" who own the assets of the Technological Republic.
Which side will you be on?
Luke and I have identified the three specific money moves our research indicates you must make to ensure you stay on the winning side of this divide.
Click here for the full story.
Good investing,
Porter Stansberry
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By Jennifer Woods. First Published: 3/2/2026.
The semiconductor sector remains in focus as major chipmakers report earnings and pursue strategic investments that could reshape supply chains and market share.
Industry snapshot
Overall demand for chips stays strong, driven by artificial intelligence, data-center expansion, and steady consumer-electronics purchases.
Corporate developments
Recent moves include strategic investments and partnerships; see MarketBeat's coverage of Meta's investment in AMD chips for more detail.
Company spotlight
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Q4 2025 earnings
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Despite a Double Miss, D-Wave's Earnings Could Fuel a New Rally
By Nathan Reiff. First Published: 2/27/2026.
Key Points
- Despite quarterly losses and revenue that failed to meet analyst expectations, D-Wave Quantum's Q4 earnings report showed many promising signs of growth.
- One highlight was the company's bookings momentum, which surged by 471% on a sequential basis—and January 2026 bookings have only continued to accelerate.
- D-Wave also maintains a strong cash position with about $885 million on hand, giving it ample room to fund its aggressive R&D plans in 2026.
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After weeks of anticipation—and amid a share price decline of nearly 29% year-to-date (YTD)—D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) reported Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings, and the results were mixed. What's likely to make headlines is that the company missed analyst expectations on both the top and bottom lines for the quarter, despite year-over-year (YOY) improvements in both categories.
Look a little closer, though, and there are several reasons investors could be optimistic about D-Wave's outlook. The company showed strong improvements across multiple areas, including quarterly bookings, its cash position, full-year revenue and gross profit. Those gains, combined with the firm's acquisition of Quantum Circuits earlier this year and its repositioning as a dual-focus gate-model and annealing quantum technology company, may help cement D-Wave as one of the leading names in the space going forward.
D-Wave's Earnings Come Up Short—But Also Impress in Important Ways
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Getting the bad news out of the way first: D-Wave's adjusted quarterly loss of $0.09 per share was larger than the $0.05 analysts expected, and reported revenue of $2.75 million was roughly $1 million below estimates, even though it was about 22% higher than the prior-year quarter.
The revenue performance underscores that D-Wave remains a speculative play—the quantum market is still nascent, and there simply isn't much broadly marketable business yet while other sectors race to develop commercially viable products.
A closer read of the report, however, reveals several encouraging signs. Full-year results were notably strong: 2025 revenue totaled $24.6 million, up about 179% YOY, and full-year gross profit improved by 265% YOY.
Much of that performance was driven by bookings momentum. Q4 bookings reached $13.4 million, a sequential increase of 471%. Even more striking, management said January 2026 bookings topped $30 million, already exceeding the total for all of 2025.
Those bookings stem from a small number of high-profile Advantage2 system sales, and the company still needs to win more smaller accounts to broaden its base. Nevertheless, the momentum in large deals could materially affect future revenue and, eventually, profitability.
D-Wave's Cash Position Remains Healthy
Despite paying $550 million in cash and stock for Quantum Circuits—and taking steps that could dilute shareholders by filing shelf registrations totaling $330 million—D-Wave finished the year with a surprisingly strong liquidity position. As of year-end it held nearly $885 million in cash and marketable securities, after a $250 million cash component of the acquisition.
Management says that cash is sufficient to fund the company's planned path to profitability. Investors have been skeptical, as reflected in the stock's YTD decline. The company also expects aggressive R&D and go-to-market spending in the near term, which could keep bookings and revenue lumpy for a while.
Still, the sizable cash balance should provide a measure of stability as D-Wave executes on its strategy. Whether it's enough to carry the company through what is likely to be a spend-heavy period remains an open question.
The Market Reacts Positively
Shares popped above $21.30 in the hours after the earnings release, though they later settled below $20. Overall, the stock is still down materially YTD, but it remains up roughly 224% over the past 12 months following a large rally in 2025.
Analysts continue to favor D-Wave, assigning it a Moderate Buy rating based on 14 Buys, 1 Sell and 1 Hold. Needham & Co. was the first to issue a post-earnings update, keeping its Buy rating but trimming the price target by $8 to $40. The consensus price target is $37.64, about 89% above the current share price.
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