In a major blow to the Harris campaign, the Teamsters Union announced that for the first time in three decades, it would not endorse a presidential candidate.

It’s yet another sign of a massive political realignment thanks to Donald Trump, with the Republicans increasingly seen as the party of working Americans.

And the Democrats representing far-left academics, big corporations like the pharmaceutical industry, Hollywood celebrities and Silicon Valley billionaires.

Teamsters president Sean O’Brien even spoke at the GOP Convention.

Still, the union is getting blasted on social media for not going all the way and endorsing Trump. The excuse was that there was no clear preference among members, but polls showed that rank-and-file Teamsters prefer Trump over Harris by about 2-1.

I guess we should be grateful that at least one union leader is taking some baby steps toward reality.

Maybe the others will eventually recognize the incalculable damage that Biden-Harris policies have done to union workers — from letting cheap labor pour across the border to exporting jobs to Mexico to forcing automakers to lose billions of dollars making EVs that nobody wants to buy.

Well, nobody except Hollywood celebrities and Silicon Valley billionaires. The Dems do know their new target audience…

Speaking of the billions wasted on EVs, what does it mean for Main Street investors?

Of course, I asked Charles Mizrahi. He knows exactly what it means (he’s been saying it for over two years now) … and it’s creating a big opportunity.

See below…

Gov. Mike Huckabee

Director, Prosperity Research

Drilling for Oil on the New York Stock Exchange

Over the past two years, I’ve spoken to industry leaders, consultants and CEOs about the future of fossil fuel.

Prior to my research, I too was sold on the green energy revolution and how fossil fuel was going to be phased out. They were going to replace it with solar and wind.

But despite my aspirations, I soon came to the conclusion that fossil fuel will continue to be in demand for the next decade at a minimum.

The alternatives, solar and wind were just too costly and intermittent.

In addition, EVs were going to run into a wall … there simply weren’t enough minerals to supply the batteries for all the EVs governments were projecting there would be.

I was pretty much alone on this. Many people were telling me I was off my rocker, but I didn’t care.

Because when investing, it’s better to lead, not follow. Take positions in stocks based on our facts and analysis, and not based on popularity contests.

The facts were telling me that fossil fuel wasn’t going anywhere. And history shows, it’s better to drill for oil on the NYSE…

Oil Takeover

By 1981, T. Boone Pickens built Mesa Petroleum into the largest independent oil company in the world. And in the early 1980s, he began acquiring other oil and gas companies.

His deals were big and audacious. His first major acquisition was Hugoton Production Company, which was 30X the size of Mesa!

Pickens attempted buyouts of Cities Services, Gulf Oil, Phillips Petroleum and Unocal. I knew about Pickens when I first started on Wall Street in 1983…

He was already a Wall Street legend.

Pickens was known as a corporate raider and greenmailer.

He would take a large stock position in the target company. Even if he wasn’t successful in acquiring a company outright, he was still able to profit as the stock price of the acquired company would run up.

It was after he took over Gulf Oil that he became a household name when he made the cover of Time magazine in March 1985.

In the early 1980s, Pickens was making his money buying stocks in oil companies, not prospecting for oil.

When asked why, he said: “It’s cheaper to look for oil on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange than in the ground.”

During the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Arab members of OPEC imposed an embargo on the United States for supporting Israel while it was attacked from the south by Egypt and from the north by Syria on Yom Kippur — the holiest day of the Jewish year.

OPEC extended the oil embargo on other countries that supported Israel as well. The embargo banned petroleum exports to these countries and it also cut oil production.

The price of oil per barrel quadrupled, rising from $2.90 per barrel before the embargo to $11.65 in January 1974.

After peaking in 1980, oil prices started to fall, and so too did the stock prices of oil companies. And that’s where Pickens saw his opportunity.

Mr. Market became too pessimistic and was offering oil companies at great prices.

Pickens figured out that it was cheaper to buy shares in an oil company, which had extensive oil and gas reserves, than drill for it on his own.

The lesson I learned from Pickens was this: When industry insiders start buying their competitors, that’s the time to buy.

Because no one knows more about their business than the people running it. If they start buying, stock prices must be cheap.

Like Pickens back in the 1980s, oil producers are finding out “it’s cheaper to look for oil on the New York Stock Exchange.”

We are starting to see that play out right now…

The way I see it, the oil industry is now entering a consolidation phase. That’s why NOW is the time to have a part of your portfolio in energy.

Over the next year, we will continue to see more acquisitions among energy companies. If the past is a guide, the acquisitions will happen quickly and prices will soar.

Regards,

Charles Mizrahi

Charles Mizrahi

Founder, Alpha Investor