Nuclear energy stocks surged 40%+ this year as the next buildout cycle accelerates toward 2026. One uranium producer just generated nearly $200 million in quarterly free cash flow, while other nuclear companies locked in massive government contracts—all driven by real earnings and exploding demand as U.S. capacity is projected to triple.
Our analysts identified 7 nuclear stocks positioned to capitalize on this trend right now. Some offer explosive upside tied to uranium prices, others provide steady growth from infrastructure contracts. Get the complete list with names and tickers free today—but this report moves behind the paywall soon.
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Live Well. Invest Smart. No Apologies.
Image via Outdoor Life
The 9mm Still Runs the World (And It’s Not Even Close)
If you measure “greatest” the way markets measure “best product”—adoption, distribution, reliability, and staying power—the 9mm Luger is the most successful cartridge ever put into wide circulation. Outdoor Life’s case is simple: the 9mm didn’t win by being flashy; it won by being everywhere, working in everything, and staying affordable enough that normal people actually train with it.
That last part matters. In the real world, capability is a function of reps. A cartridge that’s controllable for most shooters, widely available, and supported by an ocean of handgun options is the one that ends up dominating holsters, nightstands, and duty belts—cycle after cycle.
✍ My Take: The 9mm is the S&P 500 of handgun cartridges: not the most exciting dinner conversation, but it quietly compounds results. If you’re optimizing for real-life outcomes—carry comfort, follow-up shots, training volume, and ammo availability—you don’t need a boutique caliber. You need something you can buy anywhere, shoot a lot, and trust.
Ten Mountainfilm Picks That’ll Make You Want to Close the Laptop and Go
Mountainfilm has been doing this for decades—Telluride altitude, big stories, hard-earned perspective. Modern Hiker rounded up 10 official selections worth watching now, and it’s the kind of list that reminds you why the outdoors hits different than anything on a screen: consequence, weather, risk, grit, and the occasional joy of a simple camp meal that tastes like a five-star restaurant because you worked for it.
These films aren’t just “pretty landscape” reels. They’re built around human performance and purpose—climbers, runners, conservationists, and communities—plus the uncomfortable edge where ambition meets reality. It’s good fuel if you’ve been stuck in an earnings-season loop and need to remember there’s a world outside your watchlist.
✍ My Take: A great outdoor documentary is a portfolio rebalance for your brain—less noise, more signal. Watch a couple of these, then schedule a long weekend somewhere with thin cell service and thick air. If you can’t carve out time, you don’t have a time problem—you’ve got a priorities problem.
Image via TheStreet
Uber Misses the Quarter, But the Stock Likes What It Sees
Uber had one of those earnings moments where the headline says “miss,” but the market listens harder than it reads. TheStreet notes the familiar pattern: reported numbers disappoint, yet investors take the stock higher because the forward indicators—guidance, margins, bookings trajectory, cost discipline—hint at a better story than the top-line snapshot suggests.
This is what mature platform businesses do when they’re run well: they stop chasing growth at any price and start proving they can generate durable cash flow in messy macro conditions. Uber’s no longer trying to win your approval with hype—it’s trying to earn it with operating leverage.
✍ My Take: I’ll take a “messy quarter” with improving unit economics over a clean quarter built on promotions and accounting gymnastics. The market’s telling you it cares about the engine, not the paint job. If Uber keeps expanding margin while maintaining demand, it stays investable—even if the headlines keep lagging by a day.
That’s the Brief—keep your powder dry, your standards high, and your capital working.
— Cole Hargrove