Unless you’ve been living beyond the hinterlands, you’ve been blitzed by 5G ads by now, I’m sure. The biggest beneficiaries of 5G tech so far? The marketing staff of phone makers and carriers. Here’s the thing though. The numbers are in, and 5G — for lack of a better term — kinda sucks. Here’s the thing about THAT though — it’s good for us. | | The Fight for America’s 5G China is spying on us through the holes in our current cell phone system... And the only way to reclaim our airspace is the complete rollout of America’s brand-new, secure 5G network. The President, the Pentagon, and all of our allies are taking immediate steps to secure our cell networks once and for all. They’ve set aside billions of dollars to make it happen — and it’s going to jumpstart America’s 5G network faster than most investors expect. The battle has begun... and I have a list of the three All-American “Battleground 5G” companies that’ll benefit the most from the Pentagon’s support. Click here to learn why this urgent 5G rollout could make 10x your money in the weeks ahead. |
The marketing blitz for 5G from the big names in the business has been intense for over a year now. Get your 5G phone now. Get on the “nation’s (first/ best/ largest) 5G network”. Those networks aren’t living up to the hype. They often can’t even match the existing 4G LTE systems. 5G systems are practically worthless for a vast majority of people who are in places where 5G is technically in place. It’s a lie of omission. Like so many tests done under ideal conditions, they simply don’t apply to the real world. They are carefully staged to make sure a single device is the only one on a single connection that is maxed out in all possible ways. 5G speed potential suggests a profound change to how we use data. 5G in the real world doesn’t have the infrastructure to make it possible. It isn’t even close. That, right there, introduces the silver lining — not for the carriers, not for the customers who bought 5G devices — but for us as investors. The peddlers will have to "backfill" so to speak. They'll have to make good on the sales pitch. Don’t take it from me though, take it from industry insiders and analysts who are dealing with real-world data. | | CDC Backs New COVID Technology (20-cent stock to soar) The CDC just greenlighted an anti-COVID technology for reopening schools and businesses. Dr. Fauci says it merits “serious consideration.” He even uses it himself. Tech giants Apple, Microsoft, and Facebook are investing $3 billion. But they don’t own this technology. One tiny tech stock does. For a brief window, you can buy it for $0.20 per share. Click here for the full story. |
As the Washington Post noted in an article a while back while testing real-world 5G speeds: “RootMetrics, a network-analysis firm owned by IHS Markit, said that in the first half of the year, median AT&T 5G speeds were 46 Mbps, only slightly faster than the 4G LTE speed of 43 Mbps. At T-Mobile, speeds increased more as a percentage, but its median 5G speed of 25 Mbps still can’t even compete with its rivals’ 4G LTE speeds.” Chris Sambar, AT&T’s Executive Vice President for Technology Operations, said, “Our 5G experience initially is as good or better than our 4G LTE experience.” Emphasis added and not lost on us. Here’s another. Mark McDiarmid, the Senior Vice President for Radio Network Engineering and Development at T-Mobile, said, “We’re not claiming that this is where the story of 5G ends. It’s very much a beginning.” It keeps coming. Verizon has claimed its 5G network is 25% faster than today’s 4G, but real-world tests show that only 1% of Verizon customers with 5G devices can access those download speeds, and even then it depends on the bandwidth of the hardware Verizon has installed or approved. This is where 5G networks are today. They are all heavily marketed potential with no follow-through. Smoke and mirrors, at least for now. The carriers want the money to come in first to fund the capital-intensive process of backfilling the capacity of their networks and to make good on their promises. | | 
Coal Is Out, Wind Is In I know, wind energy isn’t new. But it is becoming a major alternative for electricity for us. Give me a second to hear me out… You can already see wind emerging as a leading source of electricity in parts of the country. Take the Midwest for example. According to the American Wind Energy Association, wind has coal defeated while becoming the leading source of energy in both Kansas and Iowa. Dear reader, it won’t be long before other states follow and coal becomes a thing of the past. But you could profit big from this energy revolution now… no matter where you live, what your financial background is, or what you do for a living. Because I know hundreds of “programs” that effectively allow you to collect lump sums of cash every single time the wind blows. The window to participate is shrinking, with some folks already taking advantage of these “programs” and earning upwards of $43,500 a year. All it takes is a simple two-minute transaction and $50 to get started. Click here to find out how you can collect your share... |
A picture is worth a thousand words. Here you go: 
The 5G “revolution” is profound but it is anchored in the real world. The science is solid, the tech is there. Now it is about basic consumer engineering and deployment. The network we’re being sold is going to get built, but we can’t — as the numbers show — access it yet. It is being built though. Hundreds of billions of dollars will be spent for decades to come. The best proof that the 5G “revolution” will create massive profits going forward is that 5G infrastructure is underperforming by such a large margin right now. From the top down to the bottom — carriers, telecoms, and tower owners all the way through bargain bin routers, signal repeaters, and subsidized phone contracts — the flood of money into 5G infrastructure has only just begun. Let’s make sure whoever needs to make that happen pays a hefty premium to us through the companies we own. Take care, 
Adam English @AdamEnglishOC on Twitter
Adam's editorial talents and analysis drew the attention of senior editors at Outsider Club, which he joined in mid-2012. While he has acquired years of hands-on experience in the editorial room by working side by side with ex-brokers, options floor traders, and financial advisors, he is acutely aware of the challenges faced by retail investors after starting at the ground floor in the financial publishing field. For more on Adam, check out his editor's page. *Follow Outsider Club on Facebook and Twitter. |
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