A message from our partners at Golden Portfolio Warren Buffett is sitting on $325 billion in cash – his largest hoard ever. Not because he wants to – but because he can’t find value in the usual places. Now, as US government spending spirals out of control, Buffett knows he’s losing billions of dollars to inflation. That’s why I predict Buffett’s next investment will catch millions of people off guard. It’s not another bank… railroad company… or more shares of Apple. It’s a gold company. How do I know? Because the math doesn’t lie: You can buy the average gold developer for $30 and get back $13 a year — That’s a 43% ROI annually. Over 10 years, that’s $130 on a $30 investment. Tell me where else Buffett can get that. But there’s one specific miner Buffett likes best: - It’s the best-managed major gold miner in the industry…
- Has massive cash flow…
- Is trading at a deep discount to fair value…
- Positioned at the heart of Trump’s new mining push…
Don’t wait for Buffett to reveal his position in his 13F filing on February 17th… Right now, you have the chance to front-run the greatest investor of all time. Go here and I’ll give you the name and ticker – along with details on my top four small miners. To your wealth, Garrett Goggin, CFA, CMT Chief Analyst & Founder, Golden Portfolio P.S. A lot of investors write in to tell me how much they’ve made in Bitcoin. My reply? Good for you. First off, gold investing is cyclical. You really only want to own gold at one specific time in the cycle. That time is now. Second, the world’s governments are not buying Bitcoin. They’re betting on gold. All of them. Bitcoin (does anyone really know for sure the US government didn’t create it?) will be a good bet… until it isn’t. It may end up doing great. Or it may be eclipsed by any number of tech developments. Meanwhile, gold will continue to do what it’s done for almost 6,000 years of recorded human history: Protect wealth through chaos. Go here if you want the name and ticker of Buffett’s likely gold play… and details on my top four miners
Just For You From a Dividend King to FinTech, These 3 Large Caps Just ReportedAuthored by Jordan Chussler. Date Posted: 2/12/2026. 
Key Points - After mixed Q4 results, Coca-Cola maintained its 2026 guidance, including EPS growth of 7% to 8%.
- Robinhood has prioritized prediction markets, despite a short-term stock dip following a Q4 revenue miss.
- Duke Energy beat on the top and bottom lines, with the utility company extending its long-term growth projections, fueled by a massive five-year capital investment plan.
With earnings season in full swing, investors are counting on companies' full-year and Q4 2025 financials to provide an impetus for the S&P 500, which so far has mustered a gain of just 1.22%. More importantly, shareholders are watching guidance to glean clues about how their portfolios may perform through the remainder of the year. Gold Above $5,000 per Ounce in 2026! Here's How to Play It...
With so many strange events happening across the economy (consumer confidence plummeting, credit-card delinquencies soaring, and more), it's no wonder the richest investors are loading up on gold. But what you might not realize is that there's a much better way to profit from rising gold prices - WITHOUT ever touching an ETF, mining stock, or even bullion. Get the full details here. A number of large-cap companies have already reported—or will report—earnings this week, including four household names on Feb. 9. From a Dividend King and a fintech groundbreaker to a 122-year-old electric utility provider, these companies' reports offered insights into their stocks, sectors and industries. Despite Coca-Cola's Mixed Results, Guidance Remains Steady Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) reported full-year and Q4 2025 results before the market opened on Feb. 10. By the close, the consumer staples giant had slipped 1.47% after posting mixed results. The company beat analyst expectations for earnings per share (EPS) by $0.02 but missed the consensus revenue estimate by nearly 2%. Quarterly revenue rose 2.2% year over year (YOY). The soft-drink maker has not missed on earnings since Q1 2017, and its dividend—which Coca-Cola has increased for 64 consecutive years—has an annualized five-year growth rate of 3.93% and a payout ratio of nearly 66%. For 2026, the company expects organic revenue growth of 4% to 5%—stronger than Q4's YOY revenue growth—alongside EPS growth of 7% to 8% and free cash flow of approximately $12.2 billion. On the earnings call, management noted that over the past 50 years Coca-Cola's annual volume declined only once (during the pandemic), leaving investors little reason to doubt the blue-chip stock's ability to deliver again in 2026. The Market Overlooks Robinhood's Enormous Annual Revenue Growth After an outsized gain of more than 185% in 2025, shares of mobile-first brokerage Robinhood (NASDAQ: HOOD) fell more than 7% in after-hours trading on Feb. 10, after the company beat on EPS but missed on revenue. Robinhood's Q4 2025 EPS came in at $0.66, topping analyst expectations of $0.58. Revenue of $1.28 billion fell short of estimates of $1.32 billion. The market's negative reaction appears shortsighted. While quarterly revenue missed expectations, annual revenue of $4.47 billion represented a 52% YOY increase. And based on this year's Super Bowl ads, prediction markets are returning to the spotlight in the United States. That trend is underscored by Robinhood's recent push into prediction markets, which could become a major revenue driver as the company positions itself to compete with Kalshi and Polymarket while continuing to serve retail investors in equities and crypto. Industry consultancy Grand View Research forecasts the global predictive analytics market will grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 28.3% from 2025 to 2030, rising from $18.89 billion to $82.35 billion. That backdrop should benefit Robinhood's top line: prediction markets were listed as the company's number-one priority in its earnings presentation. Of the 24 analysts covering HOOD, 17 assign it a Buy rating, and the stock's average 12-month price target implies roughly 54% potential upside. Duke Beats on Top and Bottom Lines, Extends Its Long-Term EPS Growth Projections Over the past six months, the utilities sector has trailed all 11 S&P 500 sectors with a modest gain of just 0.91%. But over the past month, driven by natural-gas-driven inflation and rising electricity demand this winter, the sector's 1.85% gain has outperformed the broader market. Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK), which grew from early 20th-century regional utilities through decades of mergers and acquisitions into one of the largest U.S. utilities, reported Q4 2025 financials on Feb. 10 and beat on both the top and bottom lines. Duke's EPS came in at $1.50, while revenue of $7.94 billion easily surpassed analyst expectations of $7.57 billion. With a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 19.62, the company's earnings are projected to grow about 6.3% this year, from $6.33 per share to $6.73 per share. Notably, Duke's five-year capital plan increased by $16 billion to $103 billion, funding roughly 14 GW of incremental generation over five years and supporting a projected 9.6% earnings-based growth rate. Management also said it is "extending our 5%–7% long-term EPS growth rate through 2030." Eleven of the 18 analysts covering DUK assign it a Buy rating, and the stock's average 12-month price target implies about 8.69% upside. Meanwhile, Duke's dividend, yielding 3.44%, continues to reward patient shareholders with a 2% annualized five-year growth rate and 20 consecutive years of increases. |