Blade Air Mobility stock ready to take off, Barron's says 09:15 BLDE, UBER 1 month ago Cramer liked it. Terrible ad I could tel you stories about this guy- used to live right near our store.
lol look on Cramers Board there is Clear Secure YOU. At Hold Idea # 2 for next week-- Here come the tourists!!!!
Here's the meat of the infrastructure bill. What's our play(s)? Most are priced in I think. FLR, GVA, maybe DISH on the rural broadband thing, VMC, I still like CAT but it hasn't moved really, $205, it's probably time for it to start up. I wonder what resilience and western water storage is about? There might be one there Stoney. AQUA? It's $43 now. That was a good pick at $29. Not sure if what they do is what this about though. More to follow.... +++++++++++++++++++++++++ Transportation Roads, bridges, major projects: $110 billion Passenger and freight rail: $66 billion Public transit: $39 billion Airports: $25 billion Port infrastructure: $17 billion Transportation safety programs: $11 billion Electric vehicles: $7.5 billion Zero and low-emission buses and ferries: $7.5 billion Revitalization of communities: $1 billion Other infrastructure Broadband: $65 billion Power infrastructure: $73 billion Clean drinking water: $55 billion Resilience and Western water storage: $50 billion Removal of pollution from water and soil: $21 billion
OK Stoney, I did a little research on things. Here ya go: ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ $10 billion in bipartisan infrastructure bill would go to PFAS cleanup Michigan Radio | By Caroline Llanes The bipartisan federal infrastructure bill, that senators finished writing this past weekend, would include $10 billion for PFAS cleanup. PFAS—or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances—are a family of chemicals often called "forever chemicals" because they can persist in the environment for centuries. Exposure to certain kinds of PFAS has been linked to impaired immune systems and increased risk of some kinds of cancer. Of the ten billion dollars, $5 billion is dedicated to help small and disadvantaged communities address PFAS in drinking water. Another $4 billion is for helping drinking water utilities remove PFAS from drinking water supplies, as well as connecting well owners to local water systems. The remaining $1 billion would help wastewater utilities address PFAS in wastewater discharges. David Andrews is a senior scientist with the Environmental Working Group. He said $10 billion is an incredible investment focused particularly on drinking water. "This is really a significant amount of funding to make a sizeable dent in terms of addressing what we know are some of the most contaminated sites across the country," he said. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Soooo, what does that mean for us? It turns out there are very few companies that get rid of this stuff. I looked and sure enough... Guess who does. Right there on their website. In blue below. This VZ's first pick for the NEW infrastructure play: $AQUA---->$43 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Air & Water Remediation Ion Exchange (IX) Systems Ion Exchange (IX) Systems See All Air & Water Remediation Mobile and emergency ion exchange solutions to remove organic and inorganic contaminants from water. Ion Exchange (IX) Systems Description Features Description Mobile and emergency ion exchange solutions to remove PFAS, metals and other inorganic compounds from water. Ion exchange (IX) is a tried and true method of removing metals and other inorganic compounds from water. Arsenic, cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, nickel, selenium, radionuclides, and zinc are just a few examples of the compounds that our ion exchange systems have removed from water. Ion exchange systems can also be used to remove non-metallic compounds such as ammonia, nitrate, perchlorate, and silicate. Electrons and protons are subatomic particles. Protons form the nucleus of the atom, and electrons move around the proton. Electrons and protons are electrically charged. Protons are positively charged. The electron has an electrical charge equal to a proton’s charge, but is negative. The protons attract the negatively-charged electrons to form atoms. Atoms with a positive charge equal to the negative charge are said to be neutral. Sometimes, an atom will lose or gain an electron, and is then in an “ionic state.” An ion is an atom or molecule that is electrically charged. Cations, having has lost a negatively-charged electron, are positively charged. Anions, having gained an electron, are negatively charged. Cations and anions are attracted by their opposite electrical charge. Ion exchange exploits this tendency to pull ions out of a solution. Ionic compounds from a water or solvent stream are captured on the ion exchange media (“resin”).
2nd pick, and its had quite a run since I recommended it this time around in the low $90's last Spring as my grid upgrade play for all the EV's to come, (the first time I pointed it out was a few years back at $35), and that would be Quantum Services. Maybe wait for a pullback. $PWR------> $117 3rd pick, and Stoney found this one while I was talking about Fluor several months back. Its lagged a little, but I think it'll catch up to FLR's recent move, perhaps even surpass as its more of a pure-play. Big in California, and you know those politicians are gonna be paying back favors. Granite Construction. $GVA--------> $41
It's fusion not fission Van. That's the answer to our power troubles. Some smart dudes formally of TESLA and other tech places are working on this with MIT.> Russia is powering a town with a mini nuke based off shore in a boat<---- Mini Nukes<----- Could be ABB?
The zeroth law of thermodynamics will ultimately bear the truth on this. There is an ironical funny here. The premise for all the unicorns and rainbows about fusion is the extraction of deuterium from seawater which they all claim is "abundant". Well, how much deuterium is there really in the earth's oceans? Once it is all extracted, THEN what? No more fusion.
$78-->$82 5 days.... Ingevity Corporation (NGVT)- ye of warm paving mix NYSE - Nasdaq Real Time Price. Currency in USD $82.17+3.29 (+4.17%)