Forget Bitcoin at $123K: Ozak AI at $0.012 Delivers What BTC Can’t—8,333% Explosive Growth Potential

While Bitcoin struggles to maintain its throne at $123,000, a new contender emerges from the shadows—and it's not playing by the same rules.
The AI Revolution You Can Actually Afford
Ozak AI shatters the entry barrier with a mere $0.012 price tag, making Bitcoin's astronomical valuation look like institutional gatekeeping. This isn't just another altcoin—it's artificial intelligence meets decentralized finance, creating a synergy that traditional cryptocurrencies can't replicate.
8,333% Returns That Make Wall Street Blush
While traditional investors chase 8% dividend yields, Ozak AI offers growth potential that would make any hedge fund manager reconsider their career choices. The math speaks for itself—we're talking about turning a $1,000 investment into $84,330, something even the most optimistic stock analyst wouldn't dare predict.
What Bitcoin Can't Deliver
Bitcoin's proof-of-work consensus? Energy-intensive and increasingly regulated. Ozak AI's machine learning algorithms? Continuously optimizing and adapting—like having a team of quantitative analysts working 24/7 without the seven-figure salaries.
The Cynical Truth About Modern Finance
While traditional finance continues to peddle 'safe' 4% returns and charge 2% management fees, Ozak AI represents everything that terrifies the old guard—actual democratization of wealth creation. Because nothing says financial revolution like making bankers irrelevant.
This isn't just another crypto play—it's a fundamental shift in how value gets created and captured. The question isn't whether you can afford to invest, but whether you can afford to miss what comes next.
Verizon Communications
Verizon, one of the top telecom companies in America, served 146.1 million wireless customers and 12.9 million broadband customers at the end of its latest quarter. But over the past five years, its stock declined more than 30% as its wireless business struggled to gain new customers and its aging business wireline segment shrank.
However, Verizon now trades at just 6 times next year's adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) and pays a high forward yield of 6.7%. That low valuation and high yield should limit its downside potential. It's raised its dividend annually for 19 consecutive years, and its low payout ratio of 63% gives it plenty of room for future hikes.
Verizon has been struggling to keep pace with's and's aggressive promotions, but it expects to bundle more of its wireless and broadband plans together to offset that pressure. It also expects its planned acquisition ofto add another 2.2 million fiber subscribers to its higher-growth broadband business when it closes next year. From 2024 to 2027, analysts expect Verizon's adjusted EBITDA to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3% as those stabilizing tailwinds kick in. So while the telco leader faces some near-term challenges, it should attract more income investors as interest rates decline.
Energy Transfer
Energy Transfer, one of the largest midstream companies in the U.S., operates more than 140,000 miles of pipeline across 44 states. It provides pipeline, storage, and terminalizing services for natural gas, liquefied natural gas (LNG), natural gas liquids (NGLs), crude oil, and other refined products. It also exports those resources to over 80 other countries and territories.
As a midstream company, it generates most of its revenue by charging upstream extraction companies and downstream refining companies "tolls" to use its infrastructure. That toll road model insulates it from volatile commodity prices, since it merely needs those resources to keep flowing through its pipes to generate steady revenue.
As a master limited partnership (MLP), it pays out distributions (which include a return of capital to its investors) instead of regular dividends (which don't include a return of capital). Last year, it generated a distributable cash FLOW (DCF) of $8.36 billion to cover its $4.39 billion in total distributions. It currently pays a high forward yield of 7.9%.
From 2024 to 2027, analysts expect Energy Transfer's adjusted EBITDA to rise at a steady CAGR of 4% as it expands its domestic facilities and exports more LNG overseas. At 7 times next year's adjusted EBITDA, it still looks like a safe and undervalued income play.
Realty Income
Realty Income is a leading real estate investment trust (REIT) that owns more than 15,600 commercial properties across the U.S. and Europe. It mainly rents out those properties to recession-resistant retailers like convenience stores, drugstores, and discount stores, and it splits its rental income with its investors. As a REIT, it needs to pay out at least 90% of its pre-tax income as dividends to maintain a lower tax rate.
Realty Income is one of the few REITs that pays its dividends monthly. It's raised its payout 132 times since its IPO in 1994, and it currently pays a forward yield of 5.4%. Its occupancy rate has never dipped below 96% since its public debut, even as the U.S. economy was rattled by three major recessions.
Like many other REITs, Realty Income's growth was throttled by higher interest rates, which made it pricier to purchase new properties and generated tougher macro headwinds for its tenants. But as interest rates decline, those headwinds will subside. It expects its adjusted funds from operations (AFFO) per share (which REITs use to gauge their profits) to rise from $4.19 in 2024 to $4.24 to $4.28 in 2025 -- which will easily cover its forward dividend of $3.21 per share. At $59, it still looks like a bargain at 14 times that estimate.