Deja vu? (An 11x Return Last Time this Occured)

Deja vu? (An 11x Return Last Time this Occured)

Legendary stock speculator Jesse Livermore once said:

“There is nothing new in Wall Street. There can’t be because speculation is as old as the hills. Whatever happens in the stock market today has happened before and will happen again.”

I have discovered that, while history never repeats completely on Wall Street, it does tend to rhyme. By studying historical patterns, investors can gain a mental edge and perhaps even a roadmap if proven correctly. For instance, last year, I pointed out to Tech Innovator Investors the uncanny resemblance between Google’s (GOOGL) 2004 IPO U-turn base structure and CoreWeave’s (CRWV) 2025 IPO U-turn base. Each stock was in a hot industry group, was liquid, and had several bullish catalysts. CRWV would go on to mimic GOOGL’s 2004 performance and provide me with a juicy 118% in 2025.

Zacks Investment Research
Zacks Investment Research


Image Source: TradingView

Meanwhile, Paul Tudor Jones famously predicted the “Black Monday” crash of 1987 by using a 1929 overlay chart as precedent.

Earlier, while scanning through charts, I made a fascinating discovery. Oklo (OKLO), a leader in the small modular reactor (SMR) nuclear space, is forming a near-identical pattern to April 2024. In 2024, the stock corrected in a zig-zag fashion (with the first leg being the longest), dropped ~70%, and then tagged its 200-day moving average before exploding higher. Currently, OKLO shares have created an identical zig-zag pattern, have corrected ~63.44%, and recently found support at the rising 200-day moving average.

Zacks Investment Research
Zacks Investment Research


Image Source: TradingView

While precedents are by no means a guarantee, the performance potential is undeniable. Following the April 2024 correction, OKLO shares would scream higher from ~$17 to nearly $200 a share!

President Donald Trump recently said that he will not allow big tech companies to drive consumer electric prices higher. In other words, tech giants who are building energy-hungry data centers will need to supply their own power. Already, tech leader Microsoft (MSFT) has pledged to make major changes to its energy consumption to ensure that taxpayers “do not pick up the tab” for data center power. Meanwhile, 33% of planned data centers will not use the grid, and this number will only grow (a positive for OKLO0.

Zacks Investment Research
Zacks Investment Research


Image Source: Michael Thomas

Oklo recently received validation of its nuclear ambitions after signing a major deal with Meta Platforms (META) to develop a 1.2 GW energy campus.

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