# Пов'язані статті щодо Profitability

Центр новин HTX надає останні статті та поглиблений аналіз на тему "Profitability", що охоплює ринкові тренди, оновлення проєктів, технологічні розробки та регуляторну політику в криптоіндустрії.

Dalio Warns: AI Boom Shows Signs of a Bubble, Day of Reckoning Will Be the Time of Burst

Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, warns that the current artificial intelligence investment boom shows classic signs of a bubble, which he expects will eventually burst. In a Bloomberg Television interview, he noted that great technological revolutions often lead to capital inflows that create bubbles, making it difficult for investors and companies to calibrate their spending accurately—either overspending to capture market share or underspending and losing their competitive position. This caution comes amid significant rallies in AI-related assets, particularly chipmakers, driven by soaring demand for data centers and high-bandwidth chips, raising debates about overheating valuations. In contrast, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently asserted that investors embracing the AI wave would see "crazy" returns and dismissed concerns over return on investment for data center spending as outdated. Dalio, however, focuses on the risks in the profit realization phase. He argues that bubbles tend to show signs of破裂 when markets transition from investment to the need for tangible returns, describing the burst as a process of converting paper wealth into cash. While acknowledging AI's intrinsic value, he expressed concern over the future profitability of some AI companies, suggesting the market is repeating a familiar pattern. The 76-year-old billionaire, who fully exited Bridgewater in 2025, has a net worth estimated at $21.5 billion according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

marsbitВчора 10:17

Dalio Warns: AI Boom Shows Signs of a Bubble, Day of Reckoning Will Be the Time of Burst

marsbitВчора 10:17

Should You Buy SpaceX Stock at $1.7 Trillion? Here's What the Market Is Worried About

SpaceX is preparing for a massive IPO aiming to raise around $75 billion at a valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion. While its achievements in reusable rockets and the profitable Starlink satellite internet service are clear, the market is concerned about the aggressive valuation. Key issues include: the current $1.75 trillion valuation, which is about 94 times 2025 revenue, seems to price in not just existing businesses but also unproven future ventures like AI infrastructure and orbital data centers. Financially, while Starlink is profitable, the AI division, bolstered by the acquisition of xAI, is incurring massive losses and consuming the majority of capital expenditures. This acquisition also introduced complex related-party financing arrangements and debt onto SpaceX's balance sheet. Furthermore, corporate governance poses a challenge. SpaceX's dual-class share structure ensures founder Elon Musk retains absolute control, limiting ordinary shareholders' influence over high-risk, long-term strategic decisions. The future success of ambitious projects like the Starship rocket—critical for lowering costs and enabling new services—remains a significant variable for the valuation. In summary, the market's apprehension (FUD) centers not on doubting SpaceX's past technological triumphs but on questioning how much premium public investors should pay for a future that combines proven profits with highly speculative and capital-intensive new ventures, all under a governance structure that offers limited shareholder oversight.

marsbitВчора 01:51

Should You Buy SpaceX Stock at $1.7 Trillion? Here's What the Market Is Worried About

marsbitВчора 01:51

Will the US AI Bull Market Crash?

Will the U.S. AI bull market collapse? SoftBank has invested $34.6 billion in OpenAI, with Masayoshi Son selling stakes in Nvidia, Deutsche Telekom, Alibaba, and T-Mobile to fund it. He plans to invest another $30 billion this year, raising his stake to 13%, even taking on debt. This frenzy is driven by OpenAI's valuation surging to $852 billion in February, generating over $45 billion in paper gains for SoftBank. Similarly, Anthropic is reportedly negotiating funding at a $900 billion valuation, up from $61.5 billion a year ago. The article draws a parallel to the dot-com bubble, comparing OpenAI and Anthropic to Yahoo. Back then, Yahoo's portal model seemed unassailable, but it was disrupted by more targeted services. Today, the core assumption is that all AI applications must rely on foundational models like OpenAI and Anthropic, making them permanent "toll booths" of the AI era. However, as AI becomes a ubiquitous utility, this "model-as-gateway" advantage may erode. Financially, to justify trillion-dollar valuations with high P/E ratios (30-40x), these companies would need annual net profits of $25-30 billion, implying revenues of $50-80 billion. Current metrics like Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)—$25 billion for OpenAI and $30 billion for Anthropic—are based on monthly subscription extrapolations and include promotional, less-sticky API usage. Aggressive price cuts on tokens to capture market share further squeeze margins. A critical risk is that the entire AI industry's profitability depends on downstream applications generating substantial revenue. Currently, besides some coding and content assistance, no "killer app" has emerged to create massive new markets. If enterprises pause AI spending due to performance plateaus, economic downturns, or poor ROI, the foundation for these valuations could crumble. Two potential outcomes are outlined: 1) A Yahoo-style crash where valuations collapse, companies downsize, and AI becomes a low-margin utility business. 2) A successful reinvention where companies find sustainable monetization, perhaps by replacing SaaS or achieving AGI. However, the market's impatience could trigger a downturn before such a breakthrough. The article concludes that while AI will undoubtedly transform society as a fundamental infrastructure, the current speculative frenzy mirrors past bubbles. A correction wouldn't mean the end of AI but could remove financial hype, leading to more grounded integration into industries. The rapid rise warrants caution, as a collapse in trillion-dollar valuations could cause significant economic damage, surpassing the fallout from the dot-com bust.

marsbit05/29 09:11

Will the US AI Bull Market Crash?

marsbit05/29 09:11

AI Giants Queueing Up for IPOs: Is This the 'Last Dance' for the U.S. Stock Market?

A massive wave of IPOs from AI giants like OpenAI, Anthropic, and SpaceX is taking shape, potentially reshaping the U.S. stock market. OpenAI is reportedly preparing for a historic IPO, targeting a valuation over $1 trillion and raising roughly $60 billion, which would dwarf previous records. Anthropic is also advancing its own IPO plans, projecting significant revenue growth and achieving quarterly operating profit. However, their financial profiles starkly differ. While Anthropic is nearing profitability with a focus on enterprise clients, OpenAI continues to report substantial losses, with a negative operating margin and expectations for positive cash flow only by 2029-2030. Analysts warn these listings could trigger a major "passive fund reshuffle," forcing index funds to sell holdings in established tech giants to make room for the new entrants, potentially pressuring the broader market. Some observers view the IPO rush as a "risk transfer," allowing early private investors to cash out at peak valuations while passing future financial uncertainty to public market investors. The divergent paths of Anthropic's near-term profitability versus OpenAI's long-term, high-cost growth narrative present a critical choice for investors. The outcome of these IPOs is seen as a major swing factor for risk assets in 2026, testing whether this surge marks a new cycle or a potential peak.

marsbit05/25 06:27

AI Giants Queueing Up for IPOs: Is This the 'Last Dance' for the U.S. Stock Market?

marsbit05/25 06:27

UBS Enters the Fray, 20 Swiss Banks Now Offer Crypto Trading, Covering 2.5 Million Accounts

Global wealth management giant UBS has entered the cryptocurrency market, offering Bitcoin and Ethereum trading to select private banking clients in Switzerland as of January 2026. This move is part of a broader trend in Switzerland, where approximately 20 banks now provide crypto services, collectively covering over 2.5 million accounts. Client data from Zurich Cantonal Bank (ZKB) challenges the stereotype of crypto being solely for the young, revealing that the average buyer is aged 30-50 and predominantly male. Notably, over 40% of these clients previously held no investment portfolio, indicating crypto is activating dormant capital. The business case is proving substantial. For several Swiss banks, crypto-related activities already contribute a significant and disproportionate share of profits, with unit economics often outperforming traditional banking services. This institutional adoption in Switzerland reflects a global trend, with a recent survey showing 73% of institutional investors planning to increase crypto allocations in 2026. Switzerland's early regulatory clarity through its DLT Act and established custody infrastructure have provided a foundation for this growth. However, upcoming challenges include the implementation of the OECD's Crypto Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) in 2027 and ongoing reforms by Swiss regulator FINMA. The final shape of these regulations will be crucial in determining whether Switzerland can maintain its leading position in the global banking crypto sector.

marsbit05/13 02:40

UBS Enters the Fray, 20 Swiss Banks Now Offer Crypto Trading, Covering 2.5 Million Accounts

marsbit05/13 02:40

Plummeting Around 12%, Duan Yongping's Bottom-Fishing CoreWeave Turns into a Fierce Battlefield Between Bulls and Bears

On May 8th, AI cloud computing provider CoreWeave (CRWV) plunged 11.4% following its Q1 2026 earnings report, intensifying the polarized market view on the stock. While revenue doubled year-over-year to $2.08B and its Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO) surged to nearly $100B, its net loss also widened to $740M. The key trigger was a weaker-than-expected Q2 revenue forecast, coupled with rising costs that compressed adjusted operating margin to just 1%. The bull thesis centers on CoreWeave's massive order backlog, deep strategic ties with NVIDIA as a key customer and investor, and client diversification with major names like Anthropic and Meta. Supporters point to its 'hyperscale' status and over $20B in recent financing. Bears highlight the "growth at all costs" model: despite soaring revenue, losses are expanding, capital expenditures are massive (~$6.8B in Q1), and total debt has ballooned to around $25B. Significant insider selling by executives adds to skepticism. This contrast is embodied by investor Duan Yongping (known as "China's Buffett"), who initiated a small, exploratory position (~0.12% of his portfolio) in Q4 2025 near the stock's lows, viewing it as a speculative bet on the AI infrastructure chain. The upcoming Q2 report is seen as a critical test for management's promise of a profit margin rebound. CoreWeave remains a battleground stock where long-term narrative clashes with near-term financial reality.

marsbit05/09 09:15

Plummeting Around 12%, Duan Yongping's Bottom-Fishing CoreWeave Turns into a Fierce Battlefield Between Bulls and Bears

marsbit05/09 09:15

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