My last two Pre-IPOs delivered 171% and 777%…
And I’ve found a new gold Pre-IPO that could deliver similar gains.
Here’s why I’m personally investing in it.
The World Gold Council recently reported that gold production grew just 1% in 2025.
That’s despite gold being up 54% in the last year.
Their own outlook warns of “lengthening development timelines amid protracted permitting processes”…
And they say most major miners are forecasting production declines in 2026.
Meanwhile, demand hit a record 5,002 tonnes last year.
The gap between what the mines can pull out of the ground and what the world wants is roughly 1,300 tonnes.
The world’s biggest gold mine produces just 65 tonnes a year (1.7% of global supply).
And only 1 in 10,000 mineral discoveries ever reaches actual production.
One American company has discovered a brand-new way to extract gold.
It runs a small facility in a warehouse that produces gold at a concentration 100 times richer than any Newmont or Barrick mine on Earth.
The raw material is printed circuit boards pulled from discarded phones, laptops, and AI servers piling up across America.
A typical gold mine produces about 1 gram of gold per tonne of rock. Circuit boards contain roughly 136 grams of gold per tonne.
The company spends about $5,000 to acquire a tonne of that electronic waste.
And thanks to their tech breakthrough, it extracts roughly $25,000 worth of gold and other precious metals.
Their cost to produce one ounce is about $1,650.
Gold is trading near $4,800, so they have more than $3,000 of margin on every ounce.
They’ve been running a demonstration facility for nearly 2-years with 23 completed production batches.
And now they’re raising capital to build their first full-scale plant.
The company plans to list on the NYSE within the next several months.
My research suggests the opening price could be around $20.
That’s roughly 370% above the Pre-IPO price you can claim today.
The company is now offering Pre-IPO shares to all investors, big or small.
Go here to claim your Pre-IPO shares before this deal ends.
Ian Wyatt