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Best Commodity Idea Competition: The Winners

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Best Commodity Idea Competition: The Winners

Wooden human standing on podium with ranking for winner business and sport competition concept.

Dilok Klaisataporn/iStock via Getty Images

In April, Seeking Alpha invited analysts to participate in a Best Commodity Idea competition. We received 40 submissions. Here’s a look at all the winners as determined by the judging editors:

1) Joffrey SimonetMcEwen: Buy A World-Class Copper Project, Get Gold Upside For Free – McEwen offers a compelling risk-adjusted opportunity with near-term catalysts, anchored by its world-class Los Azules copper project—a uniquely ESG-differentiated asset, which is translating into blue-chip strategic investor support and immensely derisks the project financing—while the current valuation entirely discounts numerous upside sources and MUX’s entire gold business.

2) LA CapitalAlphamin Resources: The High-Grade Tin Miner With A Low-Grade Multiple – Alphamin Resources operates the world’s highest-grade tin mines, delivering elite profitability, a fortress balance sheet, and strong shareholder yield, and it is deeply undervalued; tin’s growth outlook is protected by a vast technological and regulatory moat.

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3) Matthew SmithMogotes Metals: Possibly The Next Major Deposit In The Vicuna District – Mogotes Metals offers compelling speculative upside as drill results at Filo Sur indicate potential for a world-class copper-gold-silver-molybdenum deposit; near-term catalysts include additional drill results; positive outcomes could drive a buyout in the CAD $500M-$1B range, with downside supported by the Beskauga project in Kazakhstan.

We selected the winners based on how compelling the thesis is (50%) and independent insights (50%).

First place receives an award of US $1,500, second place US $1,250, and third place US $1,000.

Thank you to everyone who participated—we certainly enjoyed reading your submissions. For those who didn’t place, don’t worry, we’ll post another competition in the near future. Stay tuned for more details.

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Editor’s Note: This article discusses one or more securities that do not trade on a major U.S. exchange. Please be aware of the risks associated with these stocks.

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WiseTech Global Shares Crash 18% as Police Investigate Founder Over Trafficking Allegations

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WiseTech Global Shares Crash 18% as Police Investigate Founder Over

Shares of WiseTech Global plunged 18.44% on Monday, closing at $30.08, as Australian media reports that federal police are investigating company founder and Executive Chairman Richard White over serious trafficking-related allegations sent the logistics software giant to its lowest share price in years.

The Allegations at the Center of the Selloff

Shares of WiseTech Global fell on Monday on widespread media reports that the Australian Federal Police were investigating its executive chairman, Richard White, over claims he exploited a woman’s immigration status for sex and provided false information on a visa application. Reuters could not independently verify the reports. The news was first reported by the Australian Financial Review. The federal police told Reuters they will comment “at an appropriate time.” WiseTech did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The AFR article and others said the federal police launched an investigation into White, WiseTech’s billionaire founder, this year after a complaint from the former head of Kyckr, a separate company controlled by White. The complaint alleged White made up a reason to hire a woman once employed by WiseTech as a cleaner, and provided false information to the government to get her a visa, the AFR said.

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A Multi-Year Low for the Stock

The scale of Monday’s decline pushed the stock to territory not seen in several years. WiseTech, which had already declined sharply from its 52-week high of $121.31, now trades at a multi-year low, sending shares to their lowest level since August 2021 and making WiseTech the worst-performing stock on the ASX 200 for the session.

A Founder Already Carrying Significant Baggage

The severity of the sell-off reflects more than just a single headline. White had only returned to WiseTech’s leadership in February 2026 as executive chairman — having previously stepped down as CEO in late 2024 amid separate sexual misconduct allegations — and the company was already carrying a notable governance discount in the market.

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White’s continued prominence at WiseTech makes the latest allegations particularly material for shareholders. The company’s own website lists him as co-founder, Executive Chair and Chief Innovation Officer, maintaining significant influence over the company’s vision, culture and product strategy even after his earlier departure as CEO.

A Pattern of Governance Turmoil Throughout 2026

Monday’s news adds to what has already been a difficult year for WiseTech’s leadership and governance standing. The company previously placed its shares in a trading halt while the board initiated reviews of governance-related matters. Analysts warned at the time that volatility would remain elevated and that institutional confidence would depend heavily on the credibility of any governance reset.

Markets are not only reacting to one headline. They are asking whether WiseTech can finally move past the Richard White overhang, or whether founder risk remains a recurring drag on the stock.

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A Brutal Year for the Stock Overall

Monday’s plunge extends what has already been one of the steepest declines among Australia’s large-cap technology names this year. WiseTech Global shares have tumbled sharply in 2026, with the decline representing one of the steepest reversals among Australia’s large-cap technology names, with WiseTech caught in a mix of company-specific challenges and broader sector headwinds. The stock has gone rapidly from index darling, up 65% through 2024, to a startling reversal in 2025 that has continued in similar fashion into 2026.

Sector-Wide Headwinds Compounding the Stock’s Troubles

WiseTech’s company-specific challenges have been amplified by sector-wide technology weakness, with the ASX 200 Info Tech Index down sharply over the past 12 months. The ASX Information Technology sector has faced persistent pressure throughout 2026, with the Reserve Bank of Australia having raised rates cumulatively by 75 basis points since January, compressing valuations for high-multiple growth names.

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A Workforce Restructuring Adding to the Turmoil

Beyond the governance concerns, WiseTech has also been navigating significant operational changes that have added their own layer of complexity to the company’s narrative. Earlier this year, WiseTech announced plans to cut approximately 2,000 jobs over two years as it increases the use of artificial intelligence and automation across the business. While management framed the restructuring as a productivity enhancement and margin expansion opportunity, the scale of the cuts has raised questions about prior hiring decisions and potential cultural strain.

A Business That Has Continued Performing Despite the Turmoil

Despite the cascading governance and reputational concerns, WiseTech’s underlying financial performance has remained resilient throughout the upheaval. Despite the governance turmoil and collapsing share price, WiseTech’s underlying business has continued to deliver growth. The company posted first-half underlying net profit of $114.5 million in its 1H FY26 results and reaffirmed its full-year outlook, signaling management confidence in near-term revenue and margin trajectory.

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WiseTech is best known for its CargoWise software platform, which has become deeply entrenched in the global logistics and customs software market, giving the company a sticky customer base and recurring revenue even amid the leadership controversy.

Analysts Remain Divided on the Stock’s Value

Despite the severity of Monday’s decline, Wall Street coverage of the stock remains notably split between bullish and cautious perspectives. Based on nine analysts giving stock ratings to WiseTech in the past three months, eight rate the stock a buy and one rates it a hold, with none recommending a sell. The average 12-month price target sits well above the current trading level, reflecting continued underlying confidence in the company’s business fundamentals among at least some segment of analyst coverage, even as the immediate market reaction to Monday’s news proved overwhelmingly negative.

With the Australian Federal Police having indicated they will comment on the investigation “at an appropriate time,” and with WiseTech yet to issue a public response to the allegations, the coming days are likely to bring further developments that could meaningfully shape investor sentiment toward the stock. Given the combination of a fresh and serious law enforcement investigation into the company’s most influential figure, a pre-existing governance discount, an ongoing workforce restructuring, and a challenging rate environment for growth stocks, market participants are reassessing whether WiseTech’s premium valuation can be restored without a decisive resolution to the founder-risk question that has now repeatedly weighed on the stock throughout 2026.

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Brexit Cost UK Economy 6%, Bank of England Company Data Shows

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The head of one of Britain’s best-known law firms has warned that Rachel Reeves’s reported plan to raise taxes on limited liability partnerships (LLPs) could drive professionals and entrepreneurs out of the UK, undermining London’s status as a global business hub.

Brexit has stripped roughly 6 per cent from the size of the UK economy over the past decade, according to economists who have analysed internal Bank of England data covering the decisions, views and financial results of thousands of British firms since the 2016 referendum.

The study drew on the same intelligence the Bank uses to set interest rates, reconstructing how the UK might have grown had it voted to stay in the EU. Its conclusion is that about half the damage came from the sheer shock and uncertainty of the post-referendum years, with the remainder flowing from the higher trade barriers that followed Britain’s exit from the customs union and single market in 2021.

For the small and medium-sized firms that make up the bulk of the UK economy, the finding will feel less like an academic revision and more like a description of the past ten years: thinner margins, postponed investment and the steady accretion of paperwork at the EU border.

The research is co-authored by the British economist Nick Bloom, a professor at Stanford University, alongside economists at the Bank of England. Crucially, it is the first time the Bank’s granular information on the corporate sector has been deployed in this way.

That information comes from the Decision Maker Panel, a survey the Bank set up in 2016 with the express purpose of gauging the economic impact of Brexit. Normally used to help inform interest-rate decisions, it allowed the authors to track, year by year, how exposed individual firms were to different facets of Brexit, the impacts they reported, and the changes that showed up in their accounts.

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The company-level data point to a 6 per cent hit over ten years. Set alongside five more traditional methods of analysis, the wider studies suggest a steeper average of around 8 per cent. The full paper, published through the National Bureau of Economic Research, sets out the economic impact of Brexit in detail, and carries the customary disclaimer that “the views expressed do not necessarily represent those of the Bank of England”.

Bloom argues that the UK was growing briskly in the years before the vote and could have at least partly matched the United States but for the disruption. The Bank’s company data, he says, offers important corroboration. His paper concludes that “in the case of Brexit, there was a substantial economic impact on the United Kingdom, but it arose gradually over the subsequent decade”.

The timing is notable. The Bank’s most senior figures have become markedly more forthcoming in recent months about the consequences of leaving the EU, a shift Business Matters has tracked as the governor warned the Brexit impact would stay negative for the foreseeable future.

Speaking to journalists, governor Andrew Bailey said that as a result of Brexit, “I think the level of activity and growth in the economy has been lower.” He went on: “And the reason for that is that if you reduce the size of the markets that we trade with, so we reduce our export markets, then that does tend to have a negative impact on growth,” adding that productivity and the size of the market had also been affected.

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Bailey did, however, temper the verdict on the City. The impact on financial services, he said, was “not good”, but “nowhere near as detrimental as many people predicted at the time”.

Not everyone accepts the headline number. Some policy economists contend that it is inherently difficult to model how the UK would have fared without Brexit, and that such studies risk overstating the effect at a time of overlapping global shocks. Critics also argue the analysis does not fully capture the outperformance of US investment and technology, or the European energy crisis that struck four years ago.

The 6 per cent estimate sits within a familiar range. It is a touch above the 5 per cent blow calculated by Goldman Sachs, and it chimes with mounting evidence that smaller exporters have borne the brunt, as seen in the £27bn hit to UK exporters where the smallest firms have been squeezed hardest.

The latest version of the study has landed just ahead of the tenth anniversary of the referendum, and against a backdrop of cautious rapprochement. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said he will meet his EU counterparts at a summit in July to agree deals on food and farm exports, as well as electricity and emissions trading, with further areas of cooperation and alignment expected to be on the table.

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For Britain’s business owners, the political mood music matters less than what it eventually delivers at the border. A decade on from the vote, the lesson buried in the Bank’s own company data is a sobering one: the cost of Brexit did not arrive in a single dramatic shock, but accumulated quietly, firm by firm, year after year.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

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Fuel sales halted in occupied Crimea as Ukraine targets oil facilities

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Fuel sales halted in occupied Crimea as Ukraine targets oil facilities

Fuel had already been rationed due to shortages caused by Kyiv’s attacks against supply routes in Russian-occupied territories.

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South East Water annouces new chief executive

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South East Water annouces new chief executive

John Halsall has previously worked for Thames Water, South West Water and Network Rail.

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Singapore Eyes East Africa as Its Next Major Investment Destination

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How Foreign Investors Should Structure Company Formation in Singapore

President Tharman visited Tanzania, highlighting East Africa as a promising partner for Singapore amid global uncertainty. Singapore plans a free trade agreement with eight East African nations, targeting opportunities in logistics, tourism, agribusiness, and fintech while encouraging younger Singaporeans to engage with Africa.

Key Points

• President Tharman Shanmugaratnam, concluding a three-day Tanzania state visit, urged Singaporeans to better understand Africa, announcing negotiations for Singapore’s first free trade agreement with eight East African Community nations, whose combined GDP mirrors ASEAN’s economy from 35 years ago.

• Key opportunities for Singapore firms include logistics, industrial park development, agribusiness, fintech, tourism, and food security, with Tanzania and Zanzibar offering manufacturing expansion, deep-water port development, and diverse food supply sources to strengthen Singapore’s resilience.

• Singapore aims to leverage its 2027 ASEAN chairmanship to strengthen region-to-region ties with Africa, while addressing investment challenges like foreign currency shortages by encouraging African financial institutions to establish a presence in Singapore to facilitate trade financing.

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East Africa as Singapore’s New Strategic Frontier

President Tharman Shanmugaratnam has identified East Africa as a promising new frontier for Singapore, emphasizing the need for stronger bilateral ties during his three-day state visit to Tanzania. Speaking in Zanzibar, he announced that Singapore would negotiate its first free trade agreement with the eight-nation East African Community (EAC). He highlighted that the EAC’s combined GDP mirrors ASEAN’s economic size from 35 years ago, positioning it as one of the world’s fastest-growing regions. President Tharman also encouraged more Singaporeans, particularly the youth, to engage with and better understand Africa’s diverse opportunities.


Key Sectors Driving Singapore-Tanzania Collaboration

Singapore’s core strengths align well with Tanzania and Zanzibar’s development goals. Logistics, industrial park development, agribusiness, tourism, fintech, and digitisation were highlighted as priority areas. Zanzibar’s planned deep-water port at Mangapwani and accompanying industrial park present significant opportunities for Singapore firms with expertise in port operations and manufacturing infrastructure. Minister Indranee Rajah further emphasized tourism investment and food security, noting Tanzania’s competitive workforce, abundant land, and agricultural resources, including fisheries and produce, which could diversify Singapore’s food supply. Financial services and professional services were also identified as promising collaboration areas.


Strengthening Regional and Community Ties

Beyond bilateral trade, Singapore aims to leverage its 2027 ASEAN Chairmanship to strengthen region-to-region ties between ASEAN and Africa, where trade currently represents only 2% of ASEAN’s total international trade. Minister of State Zhulkarnain Abdul Rahim highlighted shared challenges, including climate change, energy security, and pandemics, as common ground for cooperation. On the ground, Singapore’s involvement was visible at Darajani Souk in Stone Town, where Singapore agro-commodities firm Nomanbhoy & Sons partnered with local group Africab to transform the historic marketplace into a thriving commercial and cultural destination, benefiting hundreds of local merchants and small businesses.

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Form 4 Venu Holding For: 22 June

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Form 4 Venu Holding For: 22 June

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Perenti expands further into US market with $275m contract

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Perenti expands further into US market with $275m contract

Perenti’s underground mining services division has secured its second project in the United States after being awarded a $275 million contract by Barrick Mining Corporation.

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Tata Capital shares slip 3% after stock rallies 17% in one week to lifetime high. What’s ahead?

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Tata Capital shares slip 3% after stock rallies 17% in one week to lifetime high. What’s ahead?
Tata Capital shares dropped around 2.5% on Monday after a 17% rally over the last one week pushed the stock to a lifetime high on Friday.

The shares of the non banking financial company (NBFC) dropped to Rs 357.7 apiece on the NSE on Monday morning. The stock jumped 21% in one month to hit a fresh all-time high of Rs 379.95 apiece on Friday.

Shares of Tata Capital made a muted debut on the stock exchanges in October last year, listing at a 1.2% premium at Rs 330 on both the BSE and NSE. This came after the Rs 15,512-crore IPO was fully subscribed 1.95 times, led by Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs).

The company’s shares have been more or less range-bound since then, dropping over 10% to hit a 52-week low of Rs 296 apiece earlier this month. The stock then gained 28% to hit a 52-week high of Rs 379.95 apiece on Friday.

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Also Read | Tata Capital shares make weak debut, list at just 1% premium after 2025’s biggest IPO

JM Financial on Tata Capital

JM Financial last week upgraded its rating on the stock to ‘Buy’ from ‘Add’, noting that the company’s management remains confident in delivering 23–25% growth in FY25–28E, supported by continued retailisation, branch expansion and deeper product penetration. “Tata Motors Finance’s integration remains on track, and it is expected to become a meaningful profitability contributor over the medium term with ~2% RoA expected by FY28,” it added.


The domestic brokerage noted the post IPO correction in the stock, adding, “Given upcoming visible levers like high yield book expansion (affordable housing/PL etc.), improving profitability trajectory in motor finance while maintaining high growth reinforces our confidence in healthy earnings compounding in the medium term.”
JM Financial also increased its target price to Rs 400 apiece from Rs 380 apiece, with the latest target price implying a 9% upside potential from the stock’s previous closing price of Rs 366.80 apiece on NSE.Also Read | Tata Capital targets 23–25% loan growth through FY28, bets on GenAI and falling credit costs to boost returns

Tata Capital Q4 snapshot

Tata Capital in April reported a 43% year-on-year (YoY) surge in consolidated net profit to Rs 1,502 crore for the fourth quarter of the financial year 2026, along with a final dividend of Rs 0.57 per share for its shareholders.

While net profit surged 43% YoY, revenue from operations grew 9% YoY to Rs 8,160 crore during the quarter under review. Its net interest income (NII) rose 28% YoY to Rs 3,127 crore, and net assets under management (AUM) grew 28% YoY to nearly Rs 2.52 lakh crore at the end of the quarter.

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Tata Capital’s annualised operating expense on the average net loan book was stable at 2.3%, while the cost-to-income ratio improved to 36.1%. Annualised credit cost slightly reduced to 0.8%, while annualised ROA and annualised ROE rose to 2.5% and 14.6%, respectively, during the fourth quarter of FY26. However, these numbers exclude the firm’s motor finance business.

Also Read | Should you buy, sell or hold Tata Capital shares after Q4 net profit surges 43%

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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India, Taiwan ETFs see record outflows before Asia stock rebound

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India, Taiwan ETFs see record outflows before Asia stock rebound
The largest US-listed exchange-traded funds tracking single Asian countries, from India to Taiwan, suffered record outflows in March, just ahead of a massive rebound in the region’s equities on the first day of April.

Traders yanked a record $1.4 billion in March from BlackRock’s $6.7 billion iShares MSCI India ETF, known by its ticker INDA, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The firm’s $7 billion iShares MSCI Taiwan ETF, or EWT, also saw a record redemption of $1.1 billion last month, the data show.

The withdrawals point to growing strain across energy-centric Asia, with India hit by currency weakness, rising yields and profit concerns, and Taiwan’s export-heavy manufacturing base facing rising cost pressures. Still, Asian stocks jumped the most in nearly a year on Wednesday after President Donald Trump suggested he is keen to exit the Middle East conflict sooner rather than later, underscoring how quickly sentiment can shift with each turn in the war.

1Bloomberg

“I’d say this is a greed rebound on new hope for a shorter conflict than what was being priced in a few days ago,” said Ed Goard, chief investment officer of Yousif Capital Management, who holds INDA for clients. “But during times like these, markets overreact to headlines.”

Trump said Wednesday he will only consider a halt to attacks on Iran when the Strait of Hormuz is reopened. In response, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said Hormuz will not be opened based on the “absurd displays of the American president,” according to state-run IRIB.
Stock gauges from both India and Taiwan are still down sharply since before the start of the war.

Bad Start

For India, a bad start to the year for the country’s locally listed stocks turned worse following escalating tensions in the Middle East, with investors concerned about the impact of the global energy crisis on its economy.
The country’s stock benchmark lost 11% in March, taking losses for the year to over 15% and making it among the worst-performing markets in Asia in 2026. With the rupee hitting record lows against the dollar and government bond yields rising, worries are growing that the country’s underperformance relative to its emerging market peers could deepen.
UBS Global Wealth Management and HSBC downgraded Indian equities to neutral in recent days, citing risks from the war.

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In Taiwan, the energy crisis has weighed on the outlook for its chip sector, given that the country is heavily dependent on natural gas imports to run its power plants. The country’s benchmark equities index fell nearly 13% in March, the most since September 2022.

“Taiwan does have advantages over some other smaller Asian countries given it dominates in tech and semiconductors, and this gives it some pricing power to a degree,” Goard said.

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OpenAI, SpaceX, Anthropic IPOs expected to trigger tech wealth migration to South Florida

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OpenAI, SpaceX, Anthropic IPOs expected to trigger tech wealth migration to South Florida

A fresh wave of Silicon Valley wealth could soon flow into South Florida.

With OpenAI quietly filing for a confidential IPO alongside market debuts from aerospace giant SpaceX and AI rival Anthropic, billions of dollars in overnight liquidity are about to be unlocked for executives and middle management alike. But instead of reinvesting in the Golden State, this incoming class of newly minted tech multimillionaires is already flooding Florida real estate brokers with calls — triggering what experts say could be a rapid-fire “Tech Exodus 2.0” measured in months, not years.

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“The California area codes have already started showing up,” Fort Lauderdale Downtown Development Authority CEO and President Jenni Morejon told Fox News Digital. “It’s just that the conversations are evolving.”

“We get that Malcolm Gladwell ‘tipping effect,’ where you almost have to be in Miami because a lot of your friends and family and neighbors are moving here,” DaGrosa Capital Partners founder and chair Joe DaGrosa also said. “We saw that happen in New York. I think we’re going to see the same thing happen out of California.”

FLEEING FOR THEIR FUTURES, A CALIFORNIA EXODUS UNLEASHES A FLORIDA ‘GOLD RUSH’

Despite its strong talent pool, “Silicon Valley is absolutely a boring place to live compared to Miami,” real estate magnate and Naftali Group CEO Miki Naftali added. “How can you even compare between living in Miami and Silicon Valley?”

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Leaving California sign on highway

Many newly minted tech millionaires will likely use their liquid wealth to leave California for the Sunshine State, according to local real estate, private equity and city leaders. (iStock)

This week, SpaceX stock continued to surge following its record-setting IPO last Friday on the Nasdaq, rising more than 35% since it started trading. That briefly made it the fourth-largest global company by market cap before some of those gains were pared back.

SpaceX’s valuation success bleeds into the highly anticipated IPOs of OpenAI and Anthropic, which Reuters reports are both expected to list in late 2026.

Once an IPO hits the public stock market, those paper shares or stock options that employees might own instantly transform into liquid, tradable cash.

“There is going to be this transitional event with the IPO where executives are finally gonna see probably the biggest cash day most of them have ever seen in their lives. And many of them are not making millions, they’re making tens of millions overnight. And I think that’s going to have them thinking long and hard about South Florida and Miami in particular,” DaGrosa, whose firm has spent much of the last two decades investing in real estate, said.

“What we’re seeing here is a shock in a positive way to the financial balance sheets of individuals, particularly out in California, where I think they’re gonna be moving in a matter of months, not years or decades,” he continued.

Nestled between West Palm Beach and Miami, Fort Lauderdale is poised to welcome the tech titans, according to Morejon. The “low-key” culture of Fort Lauderdale and its private neighborhoods could prove to be a refreshing change from the spotlight of California.

CALIFORNIA LOSES FORTUNE 500 CROWN TO TEXAS AS BILLIONAIRE TAX THREAT LOOMS

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“Having newcomers here with wealth is really a calibration. Fort Lauderdale has always attracted wealth that’s active, it’s global, it is highly productive. It’s just not performative,” Morejon said. “The wealth doesn’t hide here. It just doesn’t feel the need to announce itself. And I really think what we’re seeing now with AI founders, with the era of liquidity with SpaceX is a generation that’s used to speed and being very public… But many are also reaching a stage where I think they value discretion, it’s becoming an asset.”

“Tech jobs have actually grown 20% since 2021, and the increase in wealth, in terms of our downtown population, has also grown at the same rate. Our downtown economy supports over $43 billion annually in economic impact, and that’s a disproportionate and overarching share in high-value industries like tech, finance, professional services,” she added “So I think you see that this isn’t just a lifestyle narrative, it’s actually an operating environment for new businesses. And we have the engineering and infrastructure emerging to prove that.”

Naftali admits he feels “it’s too early to tell” when or where exactly new millionaires and billionaires will make the coast-to-coast move, and says the migration won’t solely be coming from California.

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“Who is leading those IPOs? Those that are leading the IPOs are really based in New York because those are the Wall Street guys that are running the IPOs for the high-tech companies, and they are making huge bonuses,” Naftali said.

“There is going to be this transitional event with the IPO where executives are finally gonna see probably the biggest cash day most of them have ever seen in their lives.”

“We speak about Silicon Valley, but SpaceX is not in Silicon Valley,” the developer also noted. “But the point is, it’s all about talent, right? They’re all going after the talent… So [that’s] what Florida is still lacking and it’s gonna take time to attract the talent.”

Yet as the talent begins to follow the capital, the ultimate ripple effects will likely extend far beyond luxury beachfront high-rises. The experts argue that a massive wave of public market wealth creates an entirely new class of consumer — and resident — that shifts the cultural fabric of local communities.

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“What’s interesting, though, is middle management at SpaceX and all these other companies, middle managers have wealth creation that can be $25, $50, $100 million. So what we would historically think of as a middle manager earning a decent living building wealth slowly over time, it’s a game-changer,” DaGrosa pointed out, noting that as these teams migrate, the housing market periphery will see a massive boom.

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“I think what we see is actually more opportunity for Floridians to get better jobs. I mean, when a state is doing well and making money… more people are moving into the state and spending money,” Naftali said.

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“If you’re building a company at scale, you need three things: You need access, you need talent and you need a quality of life that sustains performance,” Morejon stated of her ultimate elevator pitch to incoming West Coast founders. “And if you need a place to dock the yacht, we can handle that, too.”

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