| That is, until Burger King announced that same afternoon that it was rolling out its meatless "Impossible Whopper" in select locations. Suddenly, Beyond Meat had a competitor with a product that looked and tasted a lot like theirs. The next day, BYND opened at $145, a 22% decline from the previous day's high. Immediately, several of the Wall Street firms that follow Beyond Meat reduced their price targets for the stock. Unlike Tesla, which holds patents on its electric battery technology that would be difficult to duplicate, the ingredients of a Beyond Burger are available to anyone. Sure, there are elements to its composition that are unique, but not to the extent that competitors can't come up with something remarkably similar. Expiration Date Therein lays the fundamental problem for Beyond Meat. Its ability to retain market share will be due in large part to how well it can promote the brand and not the product. It won't be long until all the major supermarket chains and big-box retailers have their own version of a similar product at lower prices. When that happens, Beyond Meat's profit margins will be under full attack. From a broader perspective, that is the risk every early adaptor takes when being first to market with a revolutionary product. Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) did not invent the smartphone, but it quickly improved on the Blackberry and ended up being the big winner in that market. Likewise, Facebook was not the first social networking site, but it shoved Myspace aside and is now a $500 billion stock. That's what makes investing in new product pioneers so tricky. Just as we don't know if Tesla will ultimately become the industry giant its adherents believe it will, there is no way of telling if Beyond Meat is the next Myspace or Facebook. It would be great if we had a way of knowing in advance when a stock was about to make a big move one way or the other. Nobody does, of course, but there are subtle clues if you know where to look for them. And that's exactly what my colleague, Jimmy Butts, has been able to do by discovering a "hack" that helps him identify stocks about to breakout. Jimmy Butts, chief investment strategist of the trading service Maximum Profit, has come to understand how the stock market is rigged in favor of the huge Wall Street banks. Now he's showing his followers how to leverage this rigged system for their own personal benefit. Jimmy has developed a clever stock market hack and in the last year, he has used it to get away with $37,000. He used this method from his own home. He didn't need any specialized training nor any expensive equipment. If you have an ordinary online brokerage account, you have all the tools you need to make profits this way. Want to learn Jimmy's secret method? Click here for all the details. |
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