Louis Navellier here, In 1991, I built what I called the $400,000 Model Portfolio. It became one of the most documented calls of my career. Two of the stocks in that portfolio went on to become the #1 and #2 best-performing stocks of the entire decade. The third — Microsoft, finished in the top 10. The Los Angeles Times covered the growth of these stocks. You can look it up. Here’s what those three stocks actually did: EMC Corp averaged 94% per year for nine consecutive years. A $10,000 investment became $3.96 million. Dell averaged 93% per year for nine years. That same $10,000 became $3.85 million. Microsoft averaged 63% per year. The “slow” one still turned $10,000 into $835,000. If you had split $30,000 across all three, $10,000 in each, you could have entered the new millennium with $8.6 million. Thirty thousand dollars. One year’s savings for a middle-class family. The kind of money most people could put together if they truly understood what was at stake. Those weren’t the only calls from that era. I recommended Oracle at a split-adjusted 51 cents. It trades above $156 today. I found Monster Energy at 8 cents, Business Insider later called it “the century’s best-performing stock.” I recommended Google in 2005, and Nvidia at $1.50 split-adjusted in 2016, it trades above $188 today. A $10,000 investment then is worth over $1 million now. Here’s what I want you to understand. The people who built fortunes in the 1990s didn’t work harder than everyone else. They weren’t born with advantages most people don’t have. They just understood something that most Americans were never taught: in this country, the rules are completely different depending on what you own. I’ve put together a free presentation that explains exactly what I mean by that, and why right now, in 2026, I believe we are at the beginning of a wealth-building opportunity that rivals anything I saw in the 1990s. The door is open. But based on everything I’m watching, it won’t be for long. Watch My Full Briefing, It’s Free  Louis Navellier Senior Quantitative Investment Analyst, InvestorPlace |
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