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Feb 10, 2026
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LONG
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Lutnick highlights Kansas's broadband plan, noting they achieved coverage with "67% fixed wireless" and only "29.5% fiber," calling it the "best performing service" for the price. The federal government is officially validating Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) as a primary solution for rural broadband, moving away from the previous administration's fiber-optic obsession. This reduces capex pressure on fiber builds and validates the business model of FWA providers. LONG T-Mobile (leader in 5G Home Internet/FWA) as the primary beneficiary of federal grant dollars shifting toward wireless solutions. Capacity constraints on 5G networks in rural areas. |
CNBC
Commerce Sec. Lutnick testifies before lawmak...
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Feb 10, 2026
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LONG
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Lutnick notes that for some states (like New Hampshire), satellite was 21.5% of the solution, and explicitly states, "Sometimes satellite... works best." While Lutnick rejected SpaceX's specific "rider" demands, the admission that satellite is essential for 20%+ of difficult terrain (vs. 0% in pure fiber plans) cements LEO satellite internet as critical infrastructure eligible for federal funding. LONG SpaceX (via private markets or closed-end funds) as they secure a permanent slice of the $42B BEAD pie. Regulatory friction regarding service terms (the "rider" dispute mentioned by Shaheen). |
CNBC
Commerce Sec. Lutnick testifies before lawmak...
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Feb 10, 2026
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LONG
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When asked about Tether, Lutnick states, "I believe US dollar backed stablecoins should be fully audited." Senator Reed criticizes the "Genius Act" loopholes for unaudited offshore coins. The administration is signaling a crackdown on offshore/unaudited stablecoins (Tether) while favoring regulated, audited US alternatives. This regulatory moat favors compliant US-based crypto infrastructure. LONG Coinbase (issuer of USDC, the compliant alternative) as regulatory pressure mounts on Tether. Over-regulation stifling the broader crypto market. |
CNBC
Commerce Sec. Lutnick testifies before lawmak...
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Feb 10, 2026
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LONG
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Lutnick defends the weakening dollar (down 10%) as a correction that aids exports, stating, "We are exporting more... that's why our GDP has grown." He predicts "enormous manufacturing job growth." A Commerce Secretary explicitly endorsing a weaker dollar is a green light for large US exporters. A cheaper dollar makes American heavy machinery and engines more competitive globally against foreign rivals. LONG Industrials (Caterpillar, GE) that benefit from FX tailwinds and pro-manufacturing trade policies. Inflationary pressure from import costs (tariffs). |
CNBC
Commerce Sec. Lutnick testifies before lawmak...
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