Google McDougall. Yes, Google McDougall. I went ahead and did it. So, uh, added how many shares? Uh, it was around $444 shares at Google. A little less than a $70,000 move. I already up about $2,000 in the position, but now I'm up a lot more because the stock's up over 5% after hours. We'll see where his trades at tomorrow. So, it's a pretty quick quick money maker in regards to Google McDougall here. Okay. Now, in regards to Google, their numbers just came out here in the last hour or two. Revenue beat easily. They beat by over a billion dollars what analysts were expecting. The earnings per share, if the revenue was a boom, the earnings per share was a bang. 281 EPS they did versus $21 was expected. They beat by a mile. By a mile. Google McDougall. Talk about well executing, right? And and this is what it looks like when you have a CEO that's focused full-time on a company. This is what it looks like, folks. Great numbers. Not trash numbers. Not the whole business is in decline. No, no, no. Great numbers. You come in and you smash analyst expectations and you beat even your own expectations, right? Look at the balance sheet of this company. Top five best balance sheet in the world. $95 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities for this company. Additionally, you look at long-term debt, only $10 billion. They could pay that off tomorrow and still have $85 billion chilling around, right? Total stockholder equity of Google McDougall is now up to $345 billion. Unbelievable. That's not even the best part. Look at the income statement. Oh my gosh. So, they did $90.2 billion from $80.5 billion in the same quarter last year. cost of revenues and research and development, they kept that in check very well. Sales and marketing, they actually brought that number down shockingly, which is insane to think because I mean like with revenues going up nearly 10 billion, revenues were up on a constant currency basis from what I saw. It looked like around 14%. 14%. Come on, man. GNA, General Administrative, right, was up for the company, but once again, it's a very small number compared to how much revenue was up. So, if you look, income from operations went to $30.6 billion from 25.4 billion. Like, jeez. That's what I'm talking about. Other income, oh my gosh, a shocking 11 billion. Income before income tax is $41 billion versus 28 billion. Look at net income. Net income came through at $34.5 billion versus $23.6 billion in the same quarter last year. Diluted EPS came in at 281 versus 189 was expected. Like, banger. That's what we call an A+ income statement right there, folks. Okay. Now, when you want to break it down a little further here, look at Google search and other came in at $50.7 billion versus 46.1. YouTube came in at all a little under $9 billion versus $8 billion in the same quarter last year. Google Network was the only thing that was down. It was down, you know, we can call it about $150 million year-over-year. Now, if you look a little deeper here, Google Google advertising in general was up about a little over $5 billion year-over-year. Additionally, look at Google Cloud. $12.2 billion it did for Google Cloud versus 9.5 billion in the same quarter last year. So, the cloud business is growing rapidly. But that's not even the best part of the cloud business. Look at operating income loss. Okay? Specifically, look at Google Cloud. Google Cloud in this same quarter last year did $900 million of operating income. This latest quarter, it did almost $2.2 billion dollar of operating income. That's way over 100% growth in operating income on a year-over-year basis. And the revenue is not even remotely close to 100% plus, which means there's huge, huge leverage in Google Cloud now at this point in time. So basically whatever is coming into Google Cloud for topline growth moving forward, so much of that dollar amount is going to make its way straight down the bottom line. They have it now at scale. When a business is at scale, that means every new dollar that comes in, a lot of it is reaching that bottom line. So phenomenal. Additionally, they just upped the dividend for all shareholders. They're now going to pay 21 cents every 3 months for every one share you own, which is a 5% increase. and that that dividend, they have so much room to move that up over the next 5 10 years, it's ridiculous. Additionally, stock repurchases, they're talking about they just approved a 70 billion stock purchase program, which is huge. And I Google should be buying back as many shares they can right now given where the business is at, all the different business lines they have, the profits pouring in for this company quarter in and quarter out. I mean, look at the total income from operations. It was $30.6 billion. It's like buy back as many shares as you possibly can right now if you're Google. Now, you guys know if you watch my content for many years now, you know I preach what? GVD, building out a great portfolio of growth stocks, value stocks, and dividend stocks. But every once in a while, you get to find a magical stock that is all three of those in one. It's not only a growth stock, but it's also a value and a dividend. It's rare. rare you ever get to find that opportunity, but we have that with Google. Google has doubledigit revenue growth, right? Latest quarter here was around 14%ish on a constant currency basis. Ford P is under 20 for Google. It means it's a value stock, right? And we have a dividend coming in every quarter. It's the perfect stock. Oh my gosh. And so now you might say, "Okay, I know about Google search. That's great. I know they're trying to expand Gemini and the AI space, and that might be a big thing over the next 5 10 years. I know about YouTube. I know about Android. I know about Google Cloud. But is there some else really exciting about Google?" Well, there is. And it doesn't get talked about too much yet. Whimo. Whimo. From my understanding, Google owns around 70 to 80% roughly of Whimo. They from what I understand, they've sold portions of it over time to raise money for Whimo. Okay. But from my understanding, they still own around 70 80% of whatever Whimo is worth. Now, it's also debated like how much is Whimo worth if it was a standalone company. I could tell you it's a very large number. A very large number. And the reason being is Whimo one, they're clearly the leader in the marketplace. Like you can go in many different major cities today and go get Whimo rides with no driver inside. So the things that Tesla's talking about doing, Volkswagen's talking about doing it, all these other companies want to do this overtime, but that's like in the future. Whimo's doing it today. And even another stock I own, Amazon, right? They got the Zuks, which is here in Vegas. From what I always see, there's always a driver in front. Whimo has a fleet of vehicles today with no driver inside that you can take all over the city. I've done it. I did took about five or 10 rides when I was in San Francisco a few months ago. No driver inside. Car just took me where I needed to go. That's happening today. Now, the thing you got to understand about Whimo is for Google, they don't necessarily have to make money per ride. I'm sure over time they'll make a profit for each ride they give, but that's not even the end all for Google in regards to this. You got to think bigger here. What is Google at the end of the day? The biggest advertising company in the world. That's how they make their money. So, let's imagine, you know, we're 5 years in the future, 10 years in the future. Google have got massive market share, you know, across all major cities for Whimo. They're giving rides all over the place, right? An Uberish type market share. All right. What are they going to leverage at that time? Advertising. They're going to be able to have in-car advertisements for everybody's rides. They're going to be able to send people notifications. Let's say somebody, you know, got a ride on a Friday night to, you know, this this bar, right? come Thursday night of the next week or Friday night, maybe they receive a notification. Hey, you know, first rounds on the house at such and such bar, a competing bar or something like that, right? Um, let's say they got a ride to, you know, Texas Roadhouse, and another steakhouse says, "Hey, we want that customer." So, they say, "Hey, come in on this night, get a steak, and we're going to give you a free appetizer, a free dessert, or something like that." try to steal that customer away from Texas Roadhouse. That's a place that things are going to go over time. And so that's what's important. And so Whimo, could they make money per ride over time? Sure. And that's could be a successful business. But that's not even the end all. They are the biggest advertising company in the world. You've got to think bigger in regards to this because that's where the big money's at. Who cares if you make, you know, a dollar for giving Johnny a ride down there? Like that's cool. But you know what's cooler? also feeding all those advertisements, making all that money off that, knowing where everybody's going. They're going to this place, this place, this place, be able to send them relevant offers, then you can build more commerce around that. I mean, jeez, like there's so many opportunities there. So many opportunities. And then you can tie it in with Android and and uh, you know, Android wallet. I mean, there's a lot there's a lot that can happen there. And so, understand Google's spending all this money. They're making this big investment because this is bigger than just like we're going to make 50 cents a ride. No, no, no. This is way bigger than that. You know, other companies are going to be trying to just focus on like making a profit per ride. Google, they're going to be focused on other things. Okay, I can tell you that much. Now, you this is a great chart by Joseph Carlson posted this one. Whimo paid weekly driverless rides over time. And you can say you can see it is going up rapidly and you ain't seen nothing yet. Just wait to see this chart in 12 or 24 months from now as they expand into more and more cities and it starts to catch on more and more scale. Oh my gosh, the amount of Whimo rides that's going to start to happen here in the next 12 to 24 months while other folks are trying to get their product up to market, right? It's going to be ridiculous. And so they got first mover advantage in a massive way and you know just watch Whimo take off. Google. The moral of the story is they have insanely great core businesses of Google search of YouTube, right? Gemini is going to compete long-term with Chat GBT. Believe me, Google's not just going to let Catch GPT dominate for the next 10, 20 years. Like you'll see, in my opinion, Gemini slowly take more and more market share over the next several years. You know, just as Google did in the search. Google was not the first popular search engine. Heck no. There was Yahoo search. There was other platforms. people using MSN and stuff like that. Ask Jeeves like was it like Google search got bigger over time. I think that's going to happen with Gemini and I've been messing around with Gemini product. It's really good. It's really impressive. So, um yeah. Now, what else have I been buying? Well, I bought $31,000 worth of AMD stock. You know, this is crazy. To see AMD trading under $100 is just crazy, man. Crazy. Like I think this is just a stock that people are going to be looking back at a few years and be like, "How did we miss this one?" Like how did we miss this one? I truly believe that. And um it's wild, man. It's wild because there's not there are not that many big tech companies that I look at and I say, "Wow, that one might have 5x or 10x potential, right?" Even I look at Adobe or Google, some of those stocks, like those are great money-making, easy stocks for me to buy that I'll should be able to make easy money on over the next 5 years, right? But could I say they're going to 5x or 10x over the next 5 years? Probably not. I don't see Google 5xing or 10xing in the next 5 years. Nor do I see that happening with Adobe. I think they'll be great returns. I think both those stocks will severely outperform the stock market. But are they that 5x or 10x opportunity? I'm not so sure about that. If you want to talk about a company that at least has a chance, a realistic chance to be that, that is already a big tech company, look no further than AMD. AMD is really a company, when you see where this company's revenues will be going over this next 5 years in their earnings per share. I think that's one of the very few big tech companies that you can look at and be like, dang, they might actually have a shot to 5x or 10x that that stock over the next 5 years and what Lisa Sue is going to do there. So, you know, I think there's just not a lot of people respecting AMD right now. And uh and it's going to be funny. You know what's interesting is once everybody catches on, it's going to be an absolute pile up to get into the stock. And just my question is, is that 3 months out, 6 months out, 12 months out, 18 months out? But there'll just be a pile up to get into that one. So Technologies, I bought over $15,000 worth of SoFi Technologies, which is very exciting. Very exciting. Now, you guys know how I feel about SoFi. I I truly believe they are one of the most attractive opportunities for becoming a massive financial institution over the next decade, right? Massive financial institution, you know, like one of the big dogs. Now, when it comes to SoFi, I've been talking for the longest time about how I want 5,000 shares in the public account. I want 5,000 shares. And I kept kind of pushing it off, pushing it off. I finally said, "You know what? Let's freaking do this." And I've got myself to the 5,000 shares. And so I did it finally and now I feel good with where I'm at with SoFi. Like I feel good. I I feel like I don't need to buy any more shares. Not to say I won't, but I don't feel like I need to. I never when I because I own 3,700 shares for the longest time in the public account and I always felt like come on, man. Like I got to get to 5,000. I finally just said screw this, man. I'm doing it. Like and if SoFi becomes a financial giant over this next decade, like I think they're going to become like I'm gonna look back and be like, "Oh my gosh, remember when I was buying SoFi shares at 10 bucks, nine bucks, eight B?" Like it's just going to be crazy, right? So that's SoFi. Now, what about Patreon? So the Patreon portfolio, the smaller portfolio, right? Uh yeah, I bought some stocks in this one. Some of them are similar, some of them are different. Now, keep in mind, if you ever want to join my Patreon, it's always linked in the description area down there. It's the second link right underneath my private stock group and thousandx application right there. If you want to support my content, see the stocks I'm buying and selling each week, you go ahead and join my Patreon there. Okay? Also, by the way, my Instagram and X is linked in the description area as well. So, Patreon. And by the way, I I care so much about this portfolio. You might think I don't care about it because it has $33,000. I care so much about this portfolio. It's so fun to me. I It's like back in the day, you used to play a game called Clash of Clans. I'm not sure if you guys ever heard of that game, but you know, you build up this base to be this like beast base and that was cool, but then it became more timeconuming and like more difficult and then it was fun to like start a new base and so I I love having the Patreon portfolio. It's smaller amount of money, but man, I I love it. It's fun. So, what did I buy? Well, Win bought some wind resorts. You know, it's just one that I understand all the geopolitical stuff going on right now. No one wants to own a travel company. Okay, whatever. like, you know, I think they're going to be just fine over the next 10 10 years. And so, win looks extremely attractively priced. I picked up some shares. PayPal. PayPal. I haven't been talking a lot about PayPal. There's actually an exciting announcement today in regards to uh PayPal's uh basically stable coin and using it on Coinbase and some positive developments in regards to that. But PayPal, another just huge money maker, huge cash flow company. Alice Krisa seems like everything going in the right direction in regards to PayPal. So, uh, yeah, I really like PayPal. Uh, E.L.F. bought $625. So, a pretty big move in regards to that one. I've been adding to ELF aggressively. Bought some Amazon stock. $724 worth of Amazon stock. And that's crazy. Almost the same exact amount uh of AMD, right? Cuz 7 $72463 of AMD. $724.64 of Amazon. Uh, Amazon's really attractively priced right now. I would have bought some Amazon in the public account. I just wanted to focus more on Adobe and and Google, right? So, this is what the Patreon portfolio is looking like now. Right? This portfolio is doing tremendous tremendous. And imagine, just imagine for a moment when Nike and AMD go on a run. And maybe I'm wrong on AMD. Maybe I'm wrong on Nike. Maybe they never go on a run and just is bad. I think I'm going to be I think I'm going to be right in regards to both those stocks. And not only right, but like very very right as in like Nike is like triple the price in three years and like AMD is like triple or 5x the price in 3 years, right? I think there's a decent probability of that. And so imagine when those stocks go on their run, imagine where this portfolio is at then because those two stocks are are are holding the portfolio back right now, right? And they're really the only two stocks that are holding the portfolio back because the only other red position I have in the public in the Patreon portfolio is win down 3% down $97 is literally nothing, right? So those two are holding the portfolio back. So imagine what the returns are going to go to when Nike and AMD go on a run. Like oh my gosh, it's going to be insane. So that portfolio has been doing tremendous and I could not be more proud of it. Hey, I want to thank you so much for watching that clip here today. I hope you really enjoyed that one. What you're looking at right now is 1,000x stocks.com. Thousandx does not just show you a billion different metrics that are completely irrelevant. It's curated, mandatory metrics, advanced metrics curated for long-term investors, not for traders. So you can understand a company on the highest level possible, how it operates, and most importantly, making judgments on whether you want to invest capital into a company or not. Understanding the upside, the downside with companies. Is that company worth our investments or shall we keep our hands away? So, how you can access thousandx.com is you can go to the description area of this video or you can go to 1000xstocks.com apply for access to the service. Now, you look at the stock and say, why not up more? Like, SoFi knocks out the ballpark, right? PayPal knocks out the ballpark. Great great numbers, great guides, good conference calls. Why are these stocks not up more, right? Like the moves are kind of lame. Well, did you see what happened to Google? Google McDougall last week. Google McDougall had great earnings. Everything was far better than feared, right? And the stock went up, but the hardly went up, right? And that's kind of what we're seeing here with SoFi and PayPal. So, why is that? Well, you got to understand the market we're in right now. We're in an extremely fearful market, right? Look at the fear gauges in the month of April. We reached levels on the fear and greed index that were getting very very close to where we were March 2020 when the worldwide economy was shutting down. People were thinking it was going to be closed for 3 years. If you look at AI investor sentiment the last 9 week span, you've never seen it this bearish. And they've been doing the survey since the '9s. You've never seen it that bearish for a 9week span ever. Go back to the great financial crisis. Go back to 2020 grow back to the tech bubble. Go back to the '90s. Go back to the '8s. It's ridiculous. So, people are scared to buy anything right now. Scared. Like, I just want to hold down gold. You know, you see gold go up all the time. It's because people are like, I feel more comfortable just having my money in gold right now. I don't want to own stocks right now. I just want to own gold, right? I don't own Bitcoin. I don't own anything. I don't want to I don't, you know, money market funds. Uh, put me in treasuries, but don't put me in in the stock market right now, right? So, people are scared. And so, that's why you don't see these stocks moving up huge. Additionally, remember what's coming tomorrow and the next day you have Microsoft and Meta reporting after the bell tomorrow, right? Additionally, on Thursday, you have Amazon, Apple reporting after the bell. Those are the big dogs and those will those stocks in themselves, those four stocks will completely move this market because of how heavy the weights are in the Q's and S&P 500. So, some people are saying, I don't want to step in front of that. uh you know especially when you're in an extreme fearful market investors and hedge funds and folks and a lot of these short-term folks I don't want to step in front of that right now because if if all of a sudden you know those stocks report bad earnings bad guidance bad conference call whatever really scared freaks the market out the whole market's sinking which means SoFi goes down and PayPal goes down everything goes down right and so people right now are in the like the perspective it's a false it's not a good perspective to beat them but they're in the perspective of I'd rather those stocks go beast after Microsoft, Meta, Apple, Amazon report and I'm not part of it, then be in those stocks and they go down a bunch because those earnings weren't it and they send the Q's down, they send the S&P 500 down, right? And the whole indexes go down because then the Russell falls as well, right? And it's kind of like a cascading effect. It's dominoes. And so that's the way people are at right now. And um you know, I don't agree with it, but it's just I understand I understand how these Wall Streeters think. These Wall Streeters are scared right now. And so for them to go, you know, run into SoFi and PayPal today and bid them up 5, 10, 15%. You know, in this environment, they're just waiting. They're like, "Let me see what happens here, and then maybe I'll feel more comfortable." Right? And so that's the market we're in right now. Now, what about my price predictions for each of these, and then we'll talk about if I'm going to be buying or selling any shares in either of these stocks. Okay? So, I don't know if you guys follow me on X. I always have it linked in the description area of all my videos. So, if you ever want to follow me on X, you can certainly do so. But I posted this on X, you know, a couple hours ago. I said, "Up $26,000 on SoFi. What do you think SoFi will be, you know, in three years?" I said, "Under $25, $25 to $50 or $50 plus." And from what I noticed is the overwhelming majority thought $25 to $50, right? Some people thought under 25, some people thought 50 plus, but the overwhelming majority kind of in that 25 to50 range. Keep in mind, the stock right now is like $13. So, we're talking about almost a double up from the like the low range there, right? And then like, you know, we can call it uh a 3x plus to the higher range. So, do I agree with that? The answer is yes, I do agree with that. I do believe that SoFi, if we're going to fast forward 3 years in the future, we'll be somewhere between$25 and $50 somewhere in there, right? Um, I think there's going to be there's going to be I think likely at least one or two major hype cycles that will happen with SoFi in the next 3 years as well. Do keep that in mind and that could even take it above 50 in the short term because I'm looking at the way SoFi numbers are coming through here at this point in time. And so based upon the way I'm seeing those numbers come in and then if we get into the stock actually start moving up substantially as well, I think you'll probably eventually have a hype cycle that builds in SoFi and that's going to attract a ridiculous amount of attention to the stock. So you know there's a potential that in the next 3 years at some point in time the stock goes above 50, but overall I feel comfortable kind of predicting that it'd be $25 to $50 range 3 years from now. And based upon the way Anthony Noto's run this company, I don't have any reason to disbelieve that essentially right now in regards to PayPal. Here's the deal, man. Every time I run projections on thousandx.com, when I run my projections, I do my bare case, my base case, my bull case, I have this stock somewhere between $120 and $200 in three years from now. So, which puts it at basically a almost a double up on the low-end range, right? And a triple up on the high-end range. So like like PayPal like you know the significant upside like I said it's not nearly as sexy exciting as something like a SoFi but at the end of the day I think PayPal is going to be a tremendous money maker over the next several years here right now do keep in mind if you use thousandx.com we have the advanced projections as well now right the intermediate projections is one and I love this one this one I actually use even more than an advanced projections um this one essentially allows you to do a bull case, a base case, and a bare case all in one place, right? And run your numbers. You can, you know, adjust your revenue growth for companies, net income growth, right? And then it'll kind of spit you out your net income margins, and you can kind of put in your PE ratios, low-end, high-end. But keep in mind that advanced projections for some of you guys that want to go crazy with it, you can do revenue, cost of revenue, right? Then you're going to get your gross profit margins. You can adjust operating expenses in terms of percent increase decrease, right? Other income, other operating expenses, right? Then you're going to get your net income, your net income margins. You could also if you want to dilute shareholder value or subtract shareholder value. So let or share if you want to add to shares. So let's say there's a company that's diluting shareholder value and you want to dilute shareholder value by 5% a year, you can do that. Additionally, if let's say there's a company like PayPal that's going to take, let's say, 5% of the shares or 10% of the shares off the market each year, you can also do like a minus number there as well. So, it'll take shares off the market. So, you can get a more uh you know, I guess you say realistic earnings per share. So, if you ever want to do that, you can do that as well. And that backs the numbers up several years and you can take that all the way out to 2030 in regards to advanced projections. So, for you guys that use 1000X, uh, you know, I think you'll enjoy that. And by the way, if you don't have access tox.com, you want to apply for access, go to 1000x.com and then since you're not a member, click this button over here, apply for access, and you can certainly apply for access to,000x.com on there. Okay. All righty. Next up here, will he be buying or selling shares of PayPal and SoFi? Well, let's think about this for a moment. Okay. So, I expect PayPal stock to be between $120 and $200 three years from now, right? I expect SoFi to be $25 to $50 range three years from now. So why not buy more? Like why not buy more, right? Like the companies are reporting good numbers. The guidance is good and this is in these uncertain times like you have the most excuse to bring down numbers, you know, and so if I could say ah, you know, it's so uncertain out there, bad times, like we're going to bring down our numbers a bunch, right? PayPal could have done the same. And no, if anything, they're guiding higher than expected, than what the experts thought, than what the company thought. So if you're doing that in these uncertain bad times where everybody's so scared, what's it going to be like when things are feeling good again? What's it going to be like when consumer confidence is good again? Right? When the market's feeling good again? That's going to be interesting, you know? And I thought this was a perfect for me to take this picture and post that because Super Micro just came out after the bell and their shares are slumping. There's a disaster over there at Super Micro. And so you got a lot of companies that are in disaster mode right now. Reporting bad numbers, numbers that are missing by a mile, right? Bad guidance. And PayPal and SoFi are not those companies. PayPal and SoFi, if anything, are doing much better than anticipated, much better than expected, right? There's that speaks volumes. Now, that does not mean I can go too heavy in these stocks, right? Because I have to watch position sizing on both these. At the end of the day, SoFi is somewhat of a bank, right? Obviously, huge fee based revenue, but still like, you know, it's kind of in the banking space, so there's risk there, right? PayPal has risk as well. So, it's not like I could go crazy crazy heavy in SoFi and PayPal, but at the end of the day, like it makes sense to buy it more. But do keep in mind, you got to stay diversified in this game. You know, one of the reasons I'm able to get through these bare markets, through these nasty markets, is I don't go all in one stock, right? Two stocks, something like that. You always see me stay well diversified. That's how I can make it through what's happened this year, what happened in 2022, what happened in 2020, right? What happened in that end of 2018 crash? We were on pace for the worst December since the Great Depression. I can make it through all these markets because I'm able to stay diversified, right? Growth value, dividend stocks. I don't get too overexposed to a stock where I put myself at some crazy risk. And at the end of the day, there's so many stocks that are going to perform tremendous over the coming years. You know, I'm I'm we're talking about PayPal SoFi. I'm expecting those stocks to do amazing over the next 3 years. But do you think these are the only two stocks in the whole stock market that are going to do amazing over the next 3 years? No, of course not. I give you a long list of stocks that have immense upside over the next 3 years despite all the drama going around the globe and Trump and tariffs and blah blah blah. Despite all that, it's a lot of companies that are going to be doing tremendous. But it's not all them, right? You have a company like Starbucks report after the the bell, right? And they missed they missed their numbers, right? PayPal and SoFi are companies beating their numbers, having good guidances and and and that makes me feel very very good, right? And so at the end of the day, like it makes sense to buy more PayPal stock and buy more uh SoFi stock here, right?