2 Developments In America’s 5G Rollout Investors Must Be Aware Of

 | May 31, 2019 08:09AM ET

My longtime readers know 5G is the most disruptive force of the decade .

In short, 5G will supercharge America’s wireless networks. It will give us internet speeds 1,000x faster than today’s.

This will open up a whole new world of disruption.

Think of 5G as a “tool” that will enable tomorrow’s disruptive businesses, one of which I revealed in my free special report, The Great Disruptors.

For example, how many of the following do you use?

  • Music streaming services like Spotify (NYSE:SPOT)
  • YouTube’s video streaming
  • Ride-hailing from Uber (NYSE:UBER)
  • Amazon’s online store

The last wireless upgrade—4G—is the driving force behind them all.

4G arrived in the early 2010s and brought us much faster speeds. With that came the ability to do things like watch movies, stream music, or shop from anywhere on your phone.

4G allowed disruptors like Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) to flourish. From 2010 to today, their stocks grew 325%, 1,350%, and 3,825%.

5G will be MUCH bigger than 4G.

4G was an upgrade. 5G is a total overhaul. It’s going to enable transformative disruptions like self-driving cars and remote surgery.

Today, I’ll tell you about two big new developments in 5G—and what they mean for investors.

Quietly, 5G Is Driving One of the Biggest Disruptions of 2019
As you may have heard, the US Government recently banned Chinese telecom giant Huawei from doing business in the US.

I warned back in February this was likely to happen. My prediction ruffled some feathers. Huawei reps even contacted me to insist I was wrong!

Huawei is the world’s second-largest phone maker, behind only Samsung (KS:005930). It stands accused of placing secret “backdoors” in its equipment. If true, these backdoors allow the Chinese government to spy on Americans who use Huawei’s gear.

Huawei is a private company. It has no publicly-traded stock. But its ban rocked markets all the same...
You see, Huawei buys a ton of parts from American companies. It bought $20 billion worth of computer chips from US companies last year, according to investment bank Evercore.

US chipmaker Qorvo (NASDAQ:QRVO) gets 13% of its revenue from Huawei...

Radio-frequency firm Skyworks Solutions (NASDAQ:SWKS) counts Huawei as its third-largest customer...

And facial recognition company Lumentum (NASDAQ:LITE) gets almost 20% of its sales from Huawei.

As you can see in this chart, all three stocks tanked on the news.