The AI Nobody's Talking About Is Already Picking WinnersVIEW IN BROWSER 
Imagine waking up one morning to find your bank account drained… your phone locked… and your passwords no longer work. At the same time, systems you rely on every day — payments, communications, even parts of the power grid — start to glitch or go dark. All this with no warning, no explanation, and no obvious point of entry. Just chaos. This is what could happen if hackers armed with AI exploited "zero-day" vulnerabilities: hidden flaws in software that no one knows exist and, therefore, has had zero days to fix. On April 7, Anthropic released a limited version of Claude Mythos, an AI system so capable that the company immediately restricted access to it. Mythos uncovered zero-day vulnerabilities in every major operating system, including one that had gone undetected for 27 years. These hidden weaknesses can be exploited to steal data, seize control of computer systems, cripple critical infrastructure, and more. Anthropic didn't program Mythos to do this. The hacking capabilities emerged on their own. As the company explained: "We did not explicitly train Mythos to have these capabilities. Rather, they emerged as a downstream consequence of general improvements in code, reasoning, and autonomy." The reaction at the highest levels was immediate. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent held a closed-door meeting with top bank CEOs to discuss risks to the global financial system. Shares of major cybersecurity firms fell by double digits. Most investors missed it entirely. The usual noise — Middle East tensions, gas prices, tariffs — drowned out what may be the single most consequential technological development of our generation. Because Mythos isn't just a more powerful chatbot. It's a signal that AI has crossed a threshold that I've been watching for, and writing about, for months now. We've moved from AI as a tool that responds to instructions… to AI that can act, adapt, and solve complex problems entirely on its own. In my work tracking hypergrowth opportunities across decades of market cycles, shifts like this don't just change the technology landscape. They reshuffle the entire investment landscape with them. The companies on the right side of this shift could see the kind of explosive, compounding growth that defined the early cloud winners and the best AI infrastructure plays of the last three years. The companies on the wrong side may not survive it. Which side your portfolio is on right now matters more than almost anything else. This Shift Is Already UnderwayTo understand why Mythos matters, you need to understand what’s been building underneath it. A new kind of AI that doesn’t just respond to prompts… but can execute complex tasks on its own. A year ago, a Chinese startup called Manus AI introduced a system that could analyze financial transactions, screen job candidates, and navigate complex digital workflows without step-by-step human input. Retired New York Times writer Craig S. Smith called it a “game-changer.” That forced every major Western AI company to respond. Within months, OpenAI and Anthropic released similar systems capable of handling multistep tasks, managing workflows, and making decisions with minimal oversight. Then last November came OpenClaw, a free, open-source platform that exploded to 30 million monthly users. At Nvidia Corp.’s (NVDA) GTC conference, CEO Jensen Huang called it “probably the single most important release of software… probably ever.” These aren’t chatbots. They’re digital workers – handling emails, moving files, managing information, writing code, reviewing contracts… and doing it around the clock without asking for a raise. I’ve seen this firsthand. With Claude Code, I can now give an AI assistant raw financial data and ask it to build a quantitative model. It runs off by itself to write thousands of lines of code. Then it tests the model… critiques it… asks for more data… and suggests improvements. It’s no longer a robotic mecha-suit that needs a human pilot. It’s the whole machine, replacing entire teams of analysts and coders. And if I can do that as one analyst, imagine what Anthropic’s 1,500-person engineering team came up with when they used these tools for themselves… So even if Mythos isn’t the endpoint, it’s a clear step-change in what these systems can do. New generations of AI models typically appear six to 12 months after a major launch, and I wouldn’t be surprised if a “Mythos V2” arrives by December.
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Nokia. BlackBerry. Motorola. All wiped out — not by a crash, but because a new technology made their old one irrelevant overnight. The same event is about to hit AI. A new government computer coming online this year could be trillions of times more powerful than today’s leading models — turning five-year breakthroughs into five-day breakthroughs. $1.1 billion money manager Louis Navellier has identified which stocks to sell before it happens — and the one ticker to buy before May 5th. Click here for the full details, free of charge. |
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Why Your “Safe” AI Stocks May Be the Most ExposedHere’s where things get uncomfortable. The same technology behind Mythos is now dismantling the business models behind some of Wall Street’s most popular stocks. On Feb. 4, Anthropic released a legal plug-in for Claude Cowork. The effect on Wall Street was immediate.
- Shares of Thomson Reuters Corp. (TRI) gapped down 19%.
- LexisNexis parent RELX Plc (RELX) dropped 15%.
- com Inc. (LZ) crashed 20%.
Wall Street has been calling this the “SaaSpocalypse,” a rolling collapse in software-as-a-service (SaaS) stocks that has now spread far beyond legal tech. Will AI replace customer service platforms? Real estate brokerages? Financial services? Business automation? That fear isn’t misplaced. For 15 years, the SaaS profit machine worked like this: Build a dashboard, connect it to a database, charge companies $30 to $100 per month per employee to use it. The more workers a client hired, the more money software companies made. No one questioned the 95%-plus gross margins these firms routinely earned. But agentic AI doesn’t need dashboards. It connects directly to underlying systems, pulls data, updates records, and triggers next steps automatically. When one AI agent can do the work of five junior analysts or paralegals, companies don’t just need fewer employees. They need fewer software licenses. And if these systems get powered by a model as powerful as Mythos, the pressure on SaaS business models could accelerate very quickly. Meanwhile, the companies you’d expect to benefit – the pure-play AI names – are trading at valuations that assume perfection. We saw this movie before during the dot-com hysteria. Many sought-after internet darlings like Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO), Lucent, and AOL failed to deliver… and so did firms like Borders and Circuit City that were disrupted by the internet era. So, the question isn’t whether AI is a big deal. That debate is over. The question is: As investors, how can we profit? The Coming AI ReckoningMy InvestorPlace colleague Eric Fry believes the big profit opportunities will be in the “Appliers.” These aren’t the firms building AI. They’re the ones using it to transform entire industries. Think sensors, robotics, industrial systems, and security infrastructure. Companies with hard-to-replicate data edges and real-world integration that can’t be vibe-coded away. He sees this “AI Reckoning” as a major inflection point. In the coming months, he believes we’re going to see a wealth shift from those holding the wrong stocks to those positioned in AI Applier companies that connect this digital technology to the physical world. He’s put together a free presentation that goes far deeper than I can here – naming the specific stocks he believes are most at risk, and the ones positioned to capture the upside as this shift accelerates. The scenario we started with may sound extreme. But the forces behind it are already here—and they’re beginning to reshape which companies win, and which ones don’t. If you own any AI-adjacent stocks (and at this point, who doesn’t?), it’s worth seeing what he found – especially before this shift becomes more obvious to the broader market. Thomas Yeung, CFA Market Analyst, InvestorPlace P.S. A lot of investors think the biggest AI gains are already behind us. Eric Fry believes the opposite may be true… but only for a specific group of companies that most people aren’t watching. In his latest presentation, he explains why some of today’s biggest winners could struggle from here, and how a lesser-known group could deliver outsized gains in the next phase of the cycle. It’s worth a look if you haven’t seen it yet. 
Keith Kaplan
CEO, TradeSmith |
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