June 11, 2026
Dimon Say Banks Should Be “Scared S**tless”
Featured: Post-Panic Short Covering: SMCI in Focus
Editor’s Note: JP Morgan’s Jamie Dimon warned this day was coming. Now the investment expert who called Nvidia before it soared 1,000%, says it’s finally here. Full story…
Dear Reader,
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon… the most powerful banker in America… told his peers something shocking not too long ago.
He said, “banks should be scared s**tless.”
Not about a recession or interest rates…
It’s the moment big tech finally comes for Wall Street.
And that moment just arrived.
At the center of everything is Elon Musk.
And Elon just launched the most direct assault on traditional banking America has ever seen.
He’s secured money-transfer licenses in all 50 states. He’s signed a deal with Visa. And he’s already mailing physical banking cards to Americans across the country.
Most surprisingly, he’s offering yields on cash that are 10 times what your bank is paying you right now.
Dimon saw it all coming. As did The Federal Reserve, IMF, Goldman Sachs, and BlackRock.
In fact, they’ve all been warning about this for years.
And while the banks figure out how to respond, there’s a narrow window for regular investors to get in early, before this becomes front page news.
My name is Luke Lango. I was voted America’s #1 stock picker in 2020. My readers have had the chance to see gains as high as AMD +13,500%… Nvidia +5,000%… Palantir +1,200%.
And I’ve put together a full briefing on exactly what to do with your money right now because of this.
You can find everything on this page here.
Best,
Luke Lango
Senior Investment Analyst, InvestorPlace
P.S. Your bank has been skimming off every transaction, every deposit, every paycheck for your entire life. Elon just decided to end that. The investors who move first on this story could make incredible profits. In fact, my readers have had the chance at gains as high as 13,500% or more when I’ve spotted stories like this early. Get the full briefing here.
Post-Panic Short Covering: SMCI in Focus
Here is the thing about high-beta AI names – when they break, they break fast. And when the selling exhausts itself, the reversal can be just as disorienting in the other direction.
Super Micro Computer ($SMCI) fell approximately 26.77% on June 10 after the server maker announced plans to raise roughly $7 billion through a mix of equity and equity-linked financing. The stated purpose: to fund component purchases necessary to fulfill a backlog of roughly $39 billion in advanced AI server orders from more than 20 customers. The market heard something else entirely. What registered was dilution – a $7 billion raise against a company whose market cap had already been sitting near $34 billion. Existing shareholders got compressed, fast.
The Pentagon just put a military chip in your iPhone
Apple, Microsoft, and Google just agreed on something. That never happens.
Every new iPhone, every Copilot+ PC, every Android flagship – they all now ship with the same military-grade “ghost-chip” architecture inside.
The Pentagon demanded it. Cloud-connected AI has a fatal vulnerability: one severed cord and the system goes dark.
Off-grid ghost-chips solve the problem. No cloud. No cord. No kill switch.
One secretive company holds the master blueprints. They don’t build a single chip – but they collect a royalty on every one shipped.
This did not happen in a vacuum. The broader AI complex had already taken a hit. The Nasdaq fell approximately 4.2% on June 6 – its steepest single-day drop since early 2025 – as Broadcom posted record results but declined to raise its full-year AI chip outlook, a hotter-than-expected May jobs report pushed the 10-year yield above 4.5%, and roughly $1.3 trillion in value came off U.S.-traded chipmakers in a single session. High-multiple hardware names, the ones most sensitive to discount rate shifts, absorbed the worst of it. SMCI carries a beta of approximately 2.62. That kind of leverage cuts both ways.
Slight tangent, but it matters: SMCI’s last quarterly earnings actually surprised to the upside – $0.84 per share versus a $0.62 estimate, a 36% beat. Fiscal year 2025 revenue came in at $21.97 billion, up 46.59% year over year. The fundamentals are not broken. The problem is the method of financing growth, and what that signals about the capital intensity of AI infrastructure at scale. Getting $39 billion in orders sounds like a win until the company confirms it cannot fill those orders without raising billions first.
As of June 11 pre-market, shares had bounced approximately 12% off the prior close of $29.27. The move reflects short covering after an extreme one-day dislocation, not a fundamental reassessment. That distinction is critical. Short covering after a panic sell-off is mechanical – it is traders closing losing positions and locking in gains from the down move, not new buyers making a long-term call on the company.
Wall Street’s consensus on SMCI sits at Hold. The average 12-month price target across analysts is approximately $36 to $37. The stock is currently trading near the bottom of its 52-week range, which spans $19.48 to $62.36. The dilution overhang is real and multi-year in structure. The $2 billion at-the-market program alone does not begin until Q3 2026 at the earliest.
For traders monitoring pre-market activity today: the bounce is there, it is sharp, and it is exactly the kind of short-lived relief move that follows extreme single-day compression in high-beta names. Whether it holds past the open is a different question – and the dilution pressure does not disappear because the stock bounced 12% overnight.
Investors are watching this fast-growing tech company
No, it’s not Nvidia… It’s Mode Mobile, 2023’s fastest-growing software company according to Deloitte.
Their EarnPhone has helped users earn and save over $1B, driving $115M+ in revenue and an eye-popping 32,481% revenue growth. And having secured partnerships with Walmart and Best Buy, Mode’s not stopping there…
Like Uber turned vehicles into income-generating assets, Mode is turning smartphones into an easy passive income source. The difference is, investors like you still have a chance to invest in Mode’s pre-IPO offering at $0.52/share.
They’ve just been granted the stock ticker $MODE by the Nasdaq and over 59,000 investors participated in their previous rounds.
$71M+ already invested – claim your stake at $0.52/share and earn up to a 20% bonus
Please read the offering circular at invest.modemobile.com. This is a paid advertisement for Mode Mobile’s Regulation A Offering.
- SMCI fell ~26.77% on June 10 following a $7B equity and equity-linked financing announcement
- The raise is designed to fund component purchases for ~$39B in AI server orders from 20+ customers
- Pre-market June 11: shares up approximately 12% off the $29.27 prior close
- SMCI beta: ~2.62 – amplifies both down moves and short-covering bounces
- FY2025 revenue: $21.97B (+46.59% YoY); last quarter EPS beat by 36%
- Analyst consensus: Hold; avg. 12-month price target ~$36–$37
- 52-week range: $19.48 – $62.36; stock currently near range lows
- Dilution overhang extends into 2029 via mandatory convertible preferred structure
– The Editorial Desk
