# AI Bubble Related Articles

HTX News Center provides the latest articles and in-depth analysis on "AI Bubble", covering market trends, project updates, tech developments, and regulatory policies in the crypto industry.

The Real AI Bubble, You Can't Buy It

The article argues that the real "bubble" in the current AI boom is largely invisible and inaccessible to the average investor. Unlike the 2000 dot-com bubble, where overvalued companies were publicly traded, the most significant value surges and financial risks are occurring in private markets. Core AI companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, and Databricks have seen valuations skyrocket (e.g., OpenAI's from $157B to $852B in 18 months), but these transactions happen through private secondary sales, not public stock exchanges. These opaque markets create an "anxiety exposure," leading public investors to chase indirect proxies like memory chip or utility stocks. The author highlights how AI wealth extraction has been radically front-loaded. Employees and founders can cash out years before a potential IPO through structured secondary sales, "founder-led secondary" deals, and collateralized loans against private equity. Major tech firms also use "acqui-hires" or technology licensing deals (like Google/Character.AI, Microsoft/Inflection AI) to secure talent and tech without full acquisitions, allowing early exits outside of regulatory scrutiny. Furthermore, the AI infrastructure build-out is compared to the 2008 real estate bubble. Massive data center projects are financed through complex, off-balance-sheet structures involving private credit, joint ventures, and asset-backed securities using GPUs as collateral (e.g., CoreWeave's deals). This creates a "shadow borrowing" system where the stability of future AI demand underpins trillions in debt, posing systemic risks if expectations falter. The recent collapse of SaaS company Pluralsight, financed by major private credit firms, is cited as a warning. The conclusion is that the most dangerous part of the AI bubble isn't in plain sight on public markets; by the time the average investor sees it, the critical wealth transfers have already occurred in private, unregulated spaces.

marsbit05/14 07:10

The Real AI Bubble, You Can't Buy It

marsbit05/14 07:10

The "Big Short" Prototype Makes a Major Bet: Shorting Nvidia, Going Long on Software Stocks 'Scared Away' by AI

'The Big Short' Legend Michael Burry Doubles Down on AI Bet: Shorts Nvidia, Buys Beaten-Down Software Stocks As the Nasdaq hits record highs and Nvidia's market cap nears $5.3 trillion, Michael Burry—famed for his 2008 subprime mortgage bet—is making a major contrarian move. He is significantly expanding his bearish wagers against the AI frenzy while buying traditional software stocks he believes have been unfairly punished. Burry's latest portfolio adjustments, revealed in his Substack column, include maintaining and increasing put options on Nvidia and Palantir. He has also initiated new short positions on Palantir and expanded bearish bets on the semiconductor ETF (SOXX), the Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQ), and Oracle. Simultaneously, he is buying shares of software companies like Adobe, Autodesk, Salesforce, and Veeva Systems. He argues these stocks have been sold off due to "AI disruption" fears and technical selling pressure from private credit funds, not deteriorating fundamentals. Their valuations have fallen to multi-year lows. This creates a complete hedge: short the perceived "AI winners" and long the oversold "AI losers." Burry believes the current AI infrastructure spending boom mirrors the late-1990s internet bubble, with inflated demand projections and questionable accounting practices by large cloud customers extending GPU depreciation schedules. While his Palantir short is currently profitable, his Nvidia put options are deeply underwater as the stock trades near all-time highs. Burry remains steadfast, comparing Nvidia to Cisco during the dot-com era. He anticipates a broad repricing of the AI bubble, where overvalued beneficiaries fall and unfairly battered companies rebound.

marsbit05/10 03:06

The "Big Short" Prototype Makes a Major Bet: Shorting Nvidia, Going Long on Software Stocks 'Scared Away' by AI

marsbit05/10 03:06

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