For years now, I’ve been talking about remarkable trends in military technology that have led to triple- and quadruple-digit gains.
I’ve been all over drones, AI, and algorithmic warfare.
But I’ve also been talking about something called the IVAS — Integrated Visual Augmentation Systems.
These are augmented reality goggles that effectively turn standard grunts into extremely lethal robots. (And if you want to find out about the tiny tech company that’s set to explode from their development, check my full report out here.)
The goggles employ thermal imagery, GPS technology, and night vision. But they also allow soldiers to see through smoke, use holographic imagery for training, and can project 3D terrain maps onto the battlefield.
Furthermore, with personnel location information distributed over a tactical network, soldiers can more easily track and identify their fellow platoon members, even in dark or dense environments.
When paired with a weapon sight, soldiers can see through the scope without putting it up to their face. That improves their aim with smart crosshairs and lets them safely look around corners by holding their weapon out.
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Again, this isn’t new information. I’ve been tracking it for years.
What’s new, though, is that the mainstream media are finally catching on.
Thanks to a brand-new partnership between a major defense tech firm and Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta.
The defense firm is Anduril.
It’s a private firm that actually led defense tech funding last year, raising more than $1.5 billion in August. The company was founded by Palmer Luckey, who previously founded Oculus VR and sold it to Meta for $2 billion.
Now Anduril is teaming up with Meta to provide “enhanced perception and enable intuitive control of autonomous platforms on the battlefield.”
To be honest, I don’t even understand what that means exactly. Which is to say, if the platforms are autonomous, why do they need to be controlled?
Nevertheless, it seems like the IVAS system is being integrated with unmanned systems, or drones. That’s a big leap forward.
It means in addition to all the things I mentioned above, soldiers will be able to control drones remotely and easily with, literally, their fingertips.
This development is extremely relevant — not just to the military, but also to investors.
It’s led to a massive surge in share prices for a stock I recommended back in February 2022.
That company is a key provider of microdisplay technology. More importantly, it holds hundreds of important patents on said technology. So you can’t make these systems without going through it.
That’s why its stock has surged 77% since early April.
Yet it’s still trading for less than $1.50 per share.
It’s easily worth double that.
So like I said up top, check out my full report and get in on it now, before things really blow up. No pun intended.
Fight on,
Jason Simpkins
Simpkins is the founder and editor of Secret Stock Files, an investment service that focuses on companies with assets — tangible resources and products that can hold and appreciate in value. He covers mining companies, energy companies, defense contractors, dividend payers, commodities, staples, legacies and more…
In 2023 he joined The Wealth Advisory team as a defense market analyst where he reviews and recommends new military and government opportunities that come across his radar, especially those that spin-off healthy, growing income streams. For more on Jason, check out his editor’s page.
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