The biggest chipmakers release a new generation of AI chips every year.
And every time they do, the previous generation gets pulled out of data centers and dumped as scrap.
One American company has a tech breakthrough that turns that AI waste into gold.
They’re projecting to scale from zero today to $200 million in annual revenue within the next 12 months.
Their Pre-IPO is now open to every investor at less than $5.00 a share. My estimates suggest the stock could jump 370% after the NYSE listing.
The World Economic Forum says…
The world’s e-waste contains $62 billion in recoverable precious metals every single year, including gold, silver, platinum, and copper.
That’s sixty-two billion dollars buried in landfills right now.
And the AI revolution is making this number bigger by the day.
Big Tech is on track to spend over $600 billion on infrastructure in 2026, a 36% jump from last year.
Every dollar buys chips, every chip gets replaced on a refresh cycle, and the waste pile keeps growing.
A traditional gold mine takes about 15 years to go from first drill to first ounce.
The permitting battle alone can swallow a decade.
Capital costs run from hundreds of millions up to $1 billion.
And after all of that, the ore they pull out contains roughly 1 gram of gold per tonne of rock.
The model is basically blow up a mountain, wait 15 years, and get a gram per tonne.
But there’s one company that’s doing something entirely different.
Their raw material comes from the tech industry’s trash.
I’m talking about printed circuit boards pulled out of phones, laptops, servers, and AI hardware.
Circuit boards contain approximately 136 grams of gold per tonne.
That’s 100 times richer than a typical Newmont or Barrick mine.
They’ve built a proprietary water-based extraction process that pulls gold, silver, palladium, and copper out of that material.
The plants are modular. Small enough to run inside a warehouse.
And the capital cost to build one is roughly $17.5 million (compared to an average of $375 million for a conventional mine).
The company’s target production cost is $1,650 per gold-equivalent ounce.
Gold is trading at around $4,800 an ounce.
That leaves roughly $3,150 of margin on every ounce they produce.
Each plant is designed to generate about 40,000 gold-equivalent ounces per year at full capacity.
The business plan calls for five plants operating within 5-years.
That’s the path from zero today to hundreds of millions in annual revenue
And none of this is theoretical.
They’ve been running a demonstration facility for nearly two years.
They’ve completed 23 production batches.
The process works and it works at a scale that’s already generating real revenue.
The company is now raising capital through an SEC-approved financing. Shares are priced at less than $5.00.
There’s no accreditation required and no “millionaire status” needed.
Anyone with a regular brokerage account can invest.
Go here to see how to claim your Pre-IPO shares – before this deal ends.
Ian Wyatt