Before You Buy SpaceX, Read This

Before Friday | A Solid Right Investor Note

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The 10 Best AI Stocks to Own in 2026

AI is moving from experiment… to essential.

Every major industry is integrating it.
Every major company is investing in it.

By late 2025, AI was already an $800B market — growing at a pace that could push it well beyond $1 trillion in the years ahead.

Cloud infrastructure is scaling fast.
AI-enabled devices are multiplying.
Automation is becoming standard.

But here’s the real question…

When trillions flow into this transformation — which stocks stand to benefit most?

Our new report reveals 10 AI stocks positioned across the backbone of this shift — from the companies powering the infrastructure… to those embedding intelligence into everyday systems.

If you want exposure to one of the defining growth trends of this decade, start here.

Editor's Note

Some Investing Wisdom

The Market Rewards Patience ⌛️  

Most investors who end up losing money in the market actually invested in the right assets.

But somewhere along the way the price went sideways, or pulled back, or just sat there doing nothing for months. And they couldn't take it anymore. So they sold. Then watched it do exactly what they always thought it would — just without them on board.

The market doesn't reward the people who are right about their thesis. It rewards the people who can stay right through the volatility. Those are two very different things.

The Examples 💵 

Amazon lost 90% of its value between 2000 and 2001. Then it became one of the most valuable companies in human history. Bitcoin has dropped 50 to 70% four separate times on its way to $126,000. The people who built real wealth from BTC weren't smarter than the people who sold at the bottom. They just had a longer fuse.

Tesla has dropped more than 50% from its highs four separate times since going public — including a 73% crash from 2022 to 2023. Nothing fundamentally changed about the company during that period. The reasons you invested in the first place were still intact. And the stock recovered every single time, returning an average of 446% in the year following each bottom.

Patience is Not a Personality Trait 🎞️ 

It's a skill. Which means you can learn it and improve. Unfortunately, most people have to lose real money before they actually develop it.

Volatility exists on purpose. It's what drives prices lower and then higher. When you listen to the voice that makes you second-guess your timing, you hand your gains to someone with a longer time horizon than you have.

That's really all a market correction is — a moment when wealth transfers from the impatient to the patient, roughly every four to six years like clockwork.

What This Has to Do With SpaceX 🚀 

The SpaceX IPO prices this Thursday at $135 per share and opens for trading Friday on Nasdaq under SPCX. At a $1.75 trillion valuation, it is the largest IPO in stock market history. And for the first time, retail investors are getting genuine access — Fidelity is opening IPO shares to any brokerage account with $2,000 or more, and SpaceX has reserved up to 30% of the offering for retail. That's three times the typical allocation.

Here's what I'd encourage you to think about before Friday: the investors who will regret SpaceX the most won't be the ones who missed the IPO. They'll be the ones who buy in on Friday, watch it pull back 30% over the next six months, and sell — right before the decade-long run that follows.

The Takeaway 🥡 

SpaceX is a 10 to 20 year thesis. Starlink's subscriber base. Starship's cost curve. The data center ambitions. None of that gets resolved in the first quarter of trading. The investors who benefit most from this IPO will be the ones who buy it the same way they would have bought Amazon in 2001 — not because the price is right, but because the direction is right, and they're willing to hold long enough to find out.

Learning to sit with uncertainty is the single most valuable investing skill any of us can develop.

The people who will look back at this decade with the most regret won't be the ones who picked the wrong assets. They'll be the ones who picked the right ones and didn't hold on long enough to find out.

Not financial advice. Do your own homework.

Until next time,

SOLID RIGHT