Dear Reader,
NASA just announced something huge. Nuclear reactor on the moon by 2030.
Most people will ignore it. Think it's science fiction. Dismiss it as space geek stuff.
Those people will miss fortunes. I won't. And you shouldn't either.
History Repeats for Those Who Pay Attention
Let me tell you about DARPA. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
In the 1960s, they developed something called ARPANET. A network that lets computers talk to each other. It seemed like military tech. Pointless for civilians.
NASA's building a nuclear reactor on the moon by 2030—the spinoff tech will create entire industries—llike DARPA's internet project spawned Google, Amazon, and Facebook.
This isn't just about space—it's about energy, mining, and trillion-dollar infrastructure—100-kilowatt reactors that work in darkness for years without refueling.
The pattern repeats: government funds impossible tech, private sector monetizes it—GPS, microchips, touch screens, Teflon
The Trump Trigger: How one man’s secret plan is about to change everything on January 28th. You’ve been warned. Get the full story.
Then it became the internet.
Google. Amazon. Facebook. Apple. Microsoft. Every tech fortune you can name traces back to DARPA's research project.
The government funded the impossible. The private sector figured out how to monetize it. Early investors made billions.
That pattern repeats. Over and over.
Government Funds. Private Sector Profits.
GPS? Military project. Now it powers Uber, delivery apps, and logistics companies worth hundreds of billions.
Touch screens? Developed for military aircraft. Now they're in every phone, every tablet, every car.
Microchips? Government-funded research at universities. Created the entire semiconductor industry.
Teflon? NASA project. Now it's in everything from cookware to medical devices.
The pattern's simple: The government tackles impossible problems because they have to. They throw massive money at research. They solve it.
Then private companies take that technology and build entire industries.
That's where the real money gets made.
The Moon Reactor Is Next
NASA and the Department of Energy just signed a deal. They're building a fission surface power system for the moon.
100 kilowatts. Enough to power 80 homes. But that's just the start.
This reactor runs for years without refueling. Works in total darkness. Operates in extreme temperatures. Zero maintenance.
Think about what that means.
The Spinoff Technologies
Energy Secretary Chris Wright compared this to the Manhattan Project and Apollo Mission. He's right.
Those projects didn't just achieve their stated goals. They created entire industries.
The Apollo Mission gave us:
Freeze-dried food
Water purification systems
Portable life support
Advanced battery technology
Computer miniaturization
Satellite communications
Each spawned billion-dollar industries.
The moon reactor will do the same.
Compact nuclear reactors that work anywhere? That's not just for the moon. That's for remote locations on Earth. Disaster zones. Military bases. Off-grid communities.
Autonomous power systems that need zero maintenance? That's infrastructure gold.
Mining technology for the lunar surface? That comes back to Earth. Deep sea mining. Arctic operations. Extreme environment extraction.
Advanced robotics that operate without human supervision? Every industry wants that.
The Commercial Space Rush
NASA's not doing this alone. They're partnering with private companies.
Trump's space policy explicitly mentions "space exploration and commerce." That's code for: private sector, get ready.
The mining operations they mentioned? That's asteroid mining. Lunar resource extraction. Rare earth elements worth trillions.
The infrastructure to "stay" on the moon? That's habitats, power grids, transportation. All built by private contractors.
This is the new gold rush. Except it's happening 238,000 miles away.
How to Play This
I'm watching which companies get NASA contracts. Those are the obvious plays.
But I'm also watching the suppliers. The technology developers. The ones building components for these systems.
Nuclear reactor companies working on small modular reactors. Energy storage innovators. Robotics firms. Advanced materials manufacturers.
When DARPA developed the internet, you didn't have to invest in ARPANET. You could've bought Cisco. Intel. Companies building the infrastructure.
Same principle here.
The 2030 Timeline Matters
Six years. That's the window.
In six years, this reactor will be launched. When it works—and it will work—the technology proves itself. Then the race begins.
Commercial applications. Private sector competition. Massive capital flowing into spinoff tech.
Get positioned now. Before the herd sees it. Before the media hype. Before prices explode.
Early investors in internet infrastructure made fortunes. Early investors in GPS companies did the same.
Early investors in moon reactor spinoffs will do it again.
The Bottom Line
The government takes the risk. Mostly waste your hard earned tax dollars. But the private sector pays attention to contracts that equals massive profits.
That's the game. Always has been.
NASA's building a nuclear reactor on the moon. They're solving impossible problems. Creating breakthrough technology.
Then private companies will monetize it. Build industries around it. Make billions from it.
The question is: will you be positioned when it happens?
Or will you read about it in 2035 and say, "I should've seen that coming"?
History's repeating. The pattern's clear.
DARPA created the internet. Fortunes followed. NASA's creating moon reactors. Fortunes will follow.
Pay attention. Do your research. Position early.
Because the next Amazon isn't a website.
It's a company that figured out how to use moon reactor technology on Earth.
Robert Kiyosaki
Editor, Money Power and Profit
P.S. The fake news calls Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill a tax break for the rich.
They’re wrong.
Everyday Americans can now use these loopholes to:
✔ Cut thousands off their tax bills…
✔ Multiply their cash flow…
✔ Protect family wealth for generations.
That’s why Donald Trump and I wrote this book:
It’s not available anywhere else!