Friends, if you still don't know about "Nvidia's $16 Trillion Paycheck Program…" |
You're missing out on what could be the biggest opportunity of the year. |
According to Morgan Stanley… |
This could have a $16 trillion impact on the economy. |
To put that into perspective, it would be enough to send a $1,000 check to every household in America… |
Every single month… for the next 10 years! |
So please get the details on how you could get positioned for the next payout, which is scheduled for February 17th. |
Let The Game Come To You! |
Big T |
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In case you missed it, here is Big T's Digital Asset Daily. |
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From Roughnecks to Robots – The Next AI Trend |
In the early days of oil drilling, roughnecks measured their experience by the number of fingers still attached to their hands. |
Most oil wells were dug or chiseled with picks and shovels… And companies thought protecting their equipment was more important than protecting their men. |
Worker safety was so unimportant that injuries and deaths weren't even tracked before the 1880s. |
For roughnecks – the guys who handle drill pipes and maintain the rigs – the risks were plentiful. Over the long term, toxic air filled their lungs and caused cancer… And deadly fires and explosions were always an imminent threat. |
In 1890, for example, 20 dockworkers died when lamps ignited fumes from an oil tank at a refinery in Chicago. |
Now, a lot has changed in the last century. Oil rigs tower 2,000 feet above the ocean floor, and the U.S. pumps out 12.9 million barrels of oil per day. |
It's a far cry from 1859, when Edwin Drake first struck oil in Titusville, Pennsylvania. That year, the U.S. produced just 2,000 barrels – in total. |
But one thing hasn't changed: Oilfields are still deadly. |
Oil and gas extraction is one of the most dangerous industries in the world. In recent years, the U.S. oil industry has averaged 24.2 deaths per 100,000 workers, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). That's 6.5x higher than the national average, which is 3.7 fatal work injuries per 100,000 workers. |
And, despite more than 100 years of tech advancements, many of the original dangers still exist. |
The Deepwater explosion in 2010 is a prime example. It killed 11 of the 126 workers onboard – and the resulting oil spill cost an estimated $65 billion to clean up. |
Here's why I'm telling you this… |
The energy industry has always been built around one assumption: that humans have to be there. It's been that way since Drake struck oil in 1859. |
But that assumption is now breaking – thanks to the most revolutionary tech trend of our day: Artificial intelligence (AI). |
From Lab to Real Life |
Today, robotics is improving safety for oil rig workers while increasing profits for a new type of "AI company." |
I saw this firsthand at CES Las Vegas last week. |
CES is the world's largest tech conference. It's the same place where, in 2016, Teeka had his bitcoin epiphany – leading his readers to peak gains of 29,272%. |
This was my first year at CES, and the conference floor looked like a playground for robots. It's easy to see why some are calling 2026 the year that robots go "from lab to life." |
I played poker with a humanoid dealer… saw a robot keep up with a guy in a ping pong match… and, maybe the weirdest of all, watched two robots beat each other up in a boxing ring. |
 | Source: Houston Molnar at CES 2026 |
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But the story that caught my attention isn't about AI bots in consumer entertainment. It's about old-school businesses that have been around for more than a century. |
I'm talking about legacy blue-chips like Caterpillar, John Deere, and Oshkosh. Companies that, in the past, you might have dismissed as boring or slow. |
And for good reason. |
Over the past 10 years, these stocks have returned 823%, 544%, and 291%, respectively. Those are solid numbers. But small potatoes when compared with the top tech names. |
Popular AI companies like Tesla, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Nvidia are up 2,792%, 7,265%, and 23,125%, respectively, over the same span. |
But that's about to change as we enter what Teeka calls Phase Two of the AI wave. And what I saw in Vegas last week made me even more bullish on his thesis. |
Phase Two Is for the AI Adopters |
When I talked to representatives from those legacy businesses in Vegas, it confirmed a bigger story we've been highlighting since late 2025. |
Moving forward, the biggest gains from the AI boom won't come from the companies Teeka calls the AI builders – the companies building out the AI infrastructure. |
They'll come from legacy blue-chip companies deploying AI technology at scale to increase efficiency, expand margins, and magnify profits. |
Teeka calls these companies the AI Adopters. |
Here's how he put it in Wednesday's Digital Asset Daily: |
If you are hoping Palantir, Nvidia, and Mag 7 stocks are going to move the needle on your net worth – please think again. They have had their life-changing moves already. The time to buy them was 5-10 years ago. That's when I recommended Nvidia, Amazon, Tesla, and a slew of other Big Tech names. The game has moved on... And if you don't move on with it, you could be doomed to a decade or more of underperformance. [That's because] 2026 and beyond belongs to the AI Adopters. The companies that will use AI to drive massive cost savings across their sprawling, inefficient global empires. |
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And nowhere is this inefficiency more obvious right now than in the energy industry. |
Energy Is the Perfect AI Target |
The energy business is one of the most capital-intensive industries on Earth. It consumes staggering amounts of money, spits out enormous revenue… Yet somehow still runs on razor-thin margins. |
Take Patterson-UTI Energy, a "pure play" oil driller that does $5.4 billion in revenue per year with just 5% margins. |
By comparison, an AI company like Nvidia does 75% in margins. |
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If Patterson-UTI Energy just boosts its margins by 1 percentage point to 6%, that'll increase profits by $54 million – without drilling a single new well. |
That's $54 million in "found money" that works its way to the bottom line… and into your pocket as a shareholder. |
That's why AI matters here more than almost anywhere else. And it's a similar story for the oil majors. |
A major energy company like Chevron – which generated $202 billion in revenue in 2024 – doesn't need AI to reinvent oil drilling to earn a big payday. It just needs AI to increase margins by one percentage point to net $2 billion in cost savings. |
But let me bring you back to one of the best ways AI and robotics will cut costs and save lives. |
As I told you above, working on an oil rig is dangerous and cost-intensive. AI and robotics will solve that. |
Robots can replace human roughnecks, taking over dangerous tasks like "tripping pipe" (connecting heavy drilling pipes). They can inspect the inside of storage tanks and pressure vessels, so issues can be spotted before they cause explosions. And they can do underwater repairs at depths that would be deadly for human divers.
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AI robotic systems could bring down the number of humans on a drilling rig by 20-30%, according to business intelligence firm Rystad Energy. For oil majors, that could mean cost savings of more than $7 billion in wages in the U.S. alone. |
Once you see the math… you can't unsee it. And this logic doesn't stop at oil. Think of other dangerous industries for workers like construction, mining, and farming. It's all the same story. |
In mining, a single autonomous vehicle can be 120% more efficient than manual driving. In farming, the global market for autonomous equipment is set to grow from 19 billion in 2025 to more than 55 billion by 2032 – a 190% jump. In construction, companies like Caterpillar are testing machines that can grade land, pour concrete, and move materials with minimal human oversight.
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That's exactly why the upside in Phase Two is so explosive. And readers of Teeka's newest research service, The Asymmetric Edge, are already finding that out. |
Over the past two months, collectively, AI pure plays like Broadcom, Palantir, and AMD are down 17%. Meanwhile, our carefully curated AI plays are scorching ahead. |
Right now, they're collectively outperforming Wall Street's AI darlings by as much as 27 percentage points. |
And yet, most investors are still chasing the same expensive AI names. |
If Teeka is right – and I believe he is, based on my research at CES… Over the next five years, you have a higher chance of doubling your money in a legacy, blue-chip energy company than in the most hyped AI stock on TV. |
Not because those AI stocks won't go up. But because their valuations are already sky-high (as you'll see below). |
| | | | Has Teeka Lost His Mind? | | Big T recently released this controversial video… | Where he said Nvidia could help fund your entire retirement… | WITHOUT you having to buy a single share. | Has he lost his mind? | See the proof for yourself, and you'll be the judge. | He will even share his personal brokerage statement with you… | Showing how he has personally made hundreds of thousands of dollars in the last 12 months with this secret. | |
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AI Isn't Just for Silicon Valley Anymore |
What CES confirmed for me is that the world is about to look very different. By the end of 2026, robots won't be a novelty. They'll be everywhere. |
Farms, mines, oil fields, construction sites… You name it. AI isn't just for Silicon Valley anymore. |
And the companies that control that transition – the AI Adopters – are the ones that will drive the biggest profits in Phase Two of the AI boom. |
That's why Teeka recently recommended a legacy oil company that's plugging AI into its sprawling global operations. |
Right now, it's trading at a 87% discount to popular AI names like Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla. On top of that, it pays a dividend 14.5x higher than these companies, two of which pay no dividend at all. |
You'll find the name of this oil major in Teeka's new research service, The Asymmetric Edge. And he's included five other AI Adopters in his new special report, Nvidia's Paycheck Program: The Top Five Companies for Massive AI Payouts. |
The days of deadly oil drilling are numbered. Robots are replacing human roughnecks, just like rotary rigs replaced picks and shovels at the turn of the 1900s. |
And if you understand how this story unfolds, you can position yourself ahead of the crowd. |
Don't Watch the Future Happen. Own It! |
Houston Molnar |
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