• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    Paul Krugman was predicting the 2008 crash as far back as 2004.

    The markets can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent, as the saying goes.

  • NottaLottaOcelot@lemmy.ca
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    21 hours ago

    I find it problematic that they are using forward PE as a comparison, because forward PE in and of itself is a guesstimate based on numbers a company puts out to attract investors. Sure, they can be audited, but there is plenty of creative accounting done to improve optics

    • Bakkoda@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      To anyone who has imposter syndrome: Imagine being able to say shit like this and call it a career?

      You can do it. I have faith in you.

      • Talcosis@lemmy.zip
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        2 days ago

        Imagine being able to say shit like this successfully and earn enough to call it a career.

        That skill is not very common.

  • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    That will result in massive order cancellations at NVDA, MU, AVGO, SNDK, etc., because no one needs the chips, networking, memory, or processor power," he added.

    Well that is just false as there is pent up demand in the consumer markets that should be more than enough to make chip makers good money but I guess they don’t consider us regular folks real customers anymore

    • C4pt41n_Pr0xy@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      But graphics cards, CPUs, RAM, and other components needed in data centers are a far cry from the same components used in home and office desktops and laptops. It’s like trying to sell parts used in F1 race cars on the consumer car market. Technically, there will be buyers, but the vast majority of these parts will remain unsold because demand for such specialized components is negligible in the general consumer market.

      • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        22 hours ago

        The capacity will be freed.
        I am sure nvidia can repurpose the dies for consumer focused stuff and call them whatever or put them into business/workstation SKUs instead of enterprise/DC applications.
        Same for other products they sell.
        They arent as hyper specialized as an F1 (except maybe for those extreme 5U gpu compute nodes. They can hardly repurpose those lol

      • Gsus4@mander.xyz
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        18 hours ago

        Heyhey, I want a kW-(rain)water cooled tower, speak for yourself! :D

      • StarryPhoenix97@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I’m not sure if it’s fully a bubble, or if the bubble is partly being used as a smoke screen to hide the upfront cost of redesigning computing infrastructure.

        A lot of the time, I think AI is just the branding layer. The real goal is top-to-bottom SaaS.

        Like, they’re letting these AI companies hold the bag for building datacenters which will then get scooped by various companies like microsoft and google to offer virtualized home computing through a client.

        • towerful@programming.dev
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          21 hours ago

          This is what it smells like to me.
          You won’t own a computer, just a terminal.
          You won’t own software, just access to it.

        • fascicle@leminal.space
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          1 day ago

          its all a guise to build the foundation then pass it on to a surveillance state as SaaS, who benefits a lot of ai pattern recognition to link camera footage, internet usage, and a ton of other data points

        • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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          1 day ago

          There might.be a little of that going around as well, but the datacenters haven’t actually been built even close to the scale claimed, and the racks in there are kinda useless at serving SaaS webpage stuff, too many GPUs to make it make sense financially.

        • zbyte64@awful.systems
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          2 days ago

          Didn’t we fight a cold war over this? The Soviets wanted a top down internet and it was more expensive and less capable

      • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Especially since those parts carry a significantly higher premium than consumer parts.

        and you know nvidia isnt gonna sell the shit at a reasonable price.

      • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        What I meant was changing their production capacity to consumers.

        My point was that chip manufacturers will have customers besides AI, not that the data center chips will have other customers

        • mirshafie@europe.pub
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          2 days ago

          Yeah, hopefully, but even if the AI bubble bursts today new consumer chips is a year away at least.

          (Sorry for being a cynic, I’m saving up for a graphics card for my nephew and I’m bitter.)

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      2 days ago

      I keep hearing this from people and it’s not true. People want GPUs for playing games not running AI so the backlog of chips isn’t useful to anyone.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          1 day ago

          Yeah but it’ll be months before they can get production up and running. They’ve foolishly completely abandoned the consumer market which means they don’t have the factories set up to produce consumer chips.

          They also have nothing they can do with their own stock so it’s not like there’s going to be a glut of components.

    • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      No business does anymore. I maintain that’s why all the cars are the same 4-6 colors these days. Black, white, grey, and silver aren’t offensive to the corporations that buy fleets. Blue and red have to be there so they can do “patriotic” displays.

      Oh, and I’m really quite sorry to all of you that hadn’t noticed that all the cars are the same colors these days. Once you see it, you can’t unsee it.

      • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        It’s been this way for decades, this is not a new phenomena and it is not a conspiracy - these things are driven by consumers.

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I know it’s been a thing for decades, but even in the '80s I could still walk on a lot and find yellow, green, orange and purple cars. These days it seems those are all special order.

          • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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            1 day ago

            The few sources I looked at point to paint having gone up in price significantly since the 80’s, I also know that there are tighter regulations on paint (lead banned in 78 in the U.S. for example). I think dealerships started charging more for specific colors, and ultimately most people don’t view their cars as symbols of freedom anymore. Who cares what the thing that brings me to my job looks like? I’d give it and more up to be able to live without working.

            I don’t think it’s about all businesses not giving a shit, times have just changed. If cars being black, white, silver, and grey is the price we pay to not have lead (and other things) in paint — I think it’s a fair trade off.

            Edit: Some definitely do not give a shit. Nvidia seems to be a business that does not give a fuck who got them to where they are.

      • theyoyomaster@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        And here I am with my douchebag orange car right next to my super candy apple green wrapped wagon…

        Yeah, I can’t stand cars in colors that aren’t colors.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        2 days ago

        They’re all going with weird grey clay colours. Often in mat. It’s really weird and I don’t like it.

        I should be able to tell someone what colour my car is, I don’t want to have to go, oh well it’s a sort of dull concrete but slightly bluer.

        • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          That was the biggest thing I liked about my SAABs. No matter what color they were, no other car in the lot looked like that.

  • rozodru@piefed.world
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    3 days ago

    “If a company isn’t making as much money as quickly as it, and investors, thought it would” that’s the sign, saved you the click.

    • lemmydividebyzero@reddthat.com
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      21 hours ago

      But everyone knows that and those with money did not decide to sell so far. So, it’s all bla-bla… Maybe it happens tomorrow, maybe in 4 years, maybe never with an intensity that will be remembered as a crash…

    • Rothe@piefed.social
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      2 days ago

      Which is a useless metric in today’s market, since none of the AI companies have made a single cent yet, in fact they are bleeding billions, but are still receiving billions in investments, most of it from other AI-involved companies.

      • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        The companies being talked about are the picks and shovels guys. Sandisk, Crucial, Nvidia, Oracle. The ones that should actually be making money now, and so far have been.

        Jesus Christ, it’s not even a long article, you can just read it and know this stuff before you comment.

    • CapuccinoCoretto@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      But that isn’t how greater foolism works. It doesn’t matter how stupid one is, as long as there are others more stupid.

    • benjirenji@slrpnk.net
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      2 days ago

      Duh, aren’t we passed this situation yet? Millions and even billions of workers should’ve been replaced by now. Many problems including coding: solved.

      Or are investors really this patient and resilient when it comes to hollow hype?

    • NottaLottaOcelot@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      I mean, I agree that the market left fundamentals behind years ago. But when increasing numbers of transactions are handled by robo-advisors all working on similar parameters and institutional ownership is something like 71% of the DOW, can we expect the same result as in 2000?

      Billionaires aren’t going to roll over and go bankrupt - they will manipulate the stock market to make it look like the economy isn’t failing. A crash and government intervention isn’t impossible, but I suspect we are already wallpapering over the mess - note that central banks say “markers of recession” rather than “recession”, because then it can’t possibly be real. They would prefer that the 30% of shares owned by us plebs aren’t panic sold so the problem stays invisible, but if it is, they will buy up the shares at a discount and continue to trade them among themselves with fictional dollars that have been loaned into existence.

    • Modern_medicine_isnt@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      It really was a waste of an article. I think I am dumber for having read it. It failed to provide any real information on what was seen preceeding the dotcom bust. Just some super generalizations of no value.

      Also, it refers to these mythical investors who supposedly think about earning potential and all that. Most really don’t. They invest because they think the stock will go up. And usually that has more to do with if they think others will buy it than the Financials of the company. SpaceX is a great example of that.

  • Lovable Sidekick@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Terrible headline. The AI bubble will definitely burst, but stocks being undervalued is not “exactly” (or even approximately) “how the dot-com bubble burst”. The bubble refers to overinvestment by overly optimistic opportunists overestimating the market, and it burst when thousands startups that failed to make a profit ran out of venture capital at about the same time. This is what’s going to burst the AI bubble - it’s just a question of when. The stock value thing, as the article itself explains (kind of), is just a symptom that investors are starting to sense/fear this getting near.

  • hansolo@lemmy.today
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    2 days ago

    Yeah, been hearing this for a year.

    Starting to worry it’s all… doomerism hype?

    Nah.

    • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      We heard about the debt derivative crash coming from 2006. If you said it was coming people laughed at you and called you stupid, mostly Harvard grads.

      • hansolo@lemmy.today
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        24 hours ago

        Sure, some people heard about it in 2006. Not many, and even the people sounding alarms were called cranks up until the day after Lehman collapsed. However, right now a lot of social media is full of people basing the bubble’s “any second now!” metrics on emotional AI-hate arguments, not real data points. I also thought we had crossed the line at some point, and that was 6+ months ago. Since then the Big 4 have been getting large contracts, which isn’t exactly a sign of a hollow middle.

        I’m sure we’ll see in a couple years who was right, but I only see this as a fractional bubble where pieces fail individually, not the whole system as one.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 day ago

      What nonsensical logic.

      “I’ve been hearing this for a while so that must mean it’s not true”

      • hansolo@lemmy.today
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        1 day ago

        Ah yes, the absurdity of consistently inaccurate speculation being consistently inaccurate speculation.

        Chicken Little vs. The Boy Who Cried Wolf.

        Where’s the flaw in the logic, again?

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          2 hours ago

          The Boy Who Cried Wolf is literally a cautionary tale about fallacious reasoning.

          The people in charge of protecting against wolves should not have ignored the person crying about it just because they had been wrong previously

    • anon_8675309@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      When there’s a bubble, at first you hear “hmm this is weird maybe it’s a bubble”. Then more people start saying ,”yeah it looks like a bubble”. Then more people start analyzing how it IS a bubble. All the while big investors are like, “ I know it’s a bubble but right now I’m making bank, so…”. Finally, after those investors decide it’s been a good run, they cash out and the bubble truly starts bursting.

      So right now everyone knows it’s a bubble. What we’re seeing is the big investors trying to squeeze every last billion out of it.

      • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Finally, after those investors decide it’s been a good run, they cash out and the bubble truly starts bursting.

        This time they wasted so much money that they’re trying to foist the bad investments on retail investors with overblown valuations and IPOs before cashing out.

        • nullspace@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          You seem to be talking about SpaceX, but I gotta point out that with the fast-track it’s not just the retail investors holding the bag. It’s anyone with a retirement fund.

          • aesthelete@lemmy.world
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            22 hours ago

            it’s not just the retail investors holding the bag. It’s anyone with a retirement fund.

            I was thinking retail investors — whether individually or through an index fund — covered both. If you have any control over your retirement funds though, you can use that control to get out of the stock market if you want. So it isn’t anyone with a retirement fund, just nearly anyone with a retirement fund.

            He didn’t make it into the s&p 500. NASDAQ bent over and opened wide though.

      • hansolo@lemmy.today
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        2 days ago

        Yeah, heard it all before, and I’m very familiar with the structural “curiosities” of the existing investment landscape.

        Very few people correctly called the problems with 2007-2008. Not none, but few. And with soooooo many people mindlessly on the “it’s a bubble!” bandwagon so early, a lot of accuracy and legitimacy is lost months or years beforehand for no other reason than why conspiracy theory people say “we’ll get UFO disclosure this year!” Or “This year the Cubs/Arsenal/Red Sox will do it!” It’s just the thing they say until one time they’re right.

        I’m not telling you it won’t happen in a sense… But it’s not going to happen how or when you think. IMO, you’re looking at a partial stuttering effect maaaaaybe late winter like Q1 2027, and that’s about it. There’s to much alternate demand for everything LLM companies are already buying up to create a full and similar bubble like the Dot Com bubble.

          • hansolo@lemmy.today
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            23 hours ago

            You’re only cherry-picking some panic-mongering bias-confirming reporting here. Honestly - Yahoo? NBC? CNN? Why not Grandma’s Facebook shares and the Babylon Bee?

            Plus, did you even read the Forbes article? The opening paragraph is literally what I’m trying to tell you.

            For example, one huge thing you’re missing this is that the large companies of the Big 4 with frontier models aren’t taking out loans for this. It’s all the startups that are trying to draft on them that are using loans. THAT is a danger, that tens of thousands of idiots will sink a corner of the financial system from the sheer weight of defaulting loans because ChatGPT said their shit sandwich idea was “revelatory, and honestly, a great idea!”

            But that’s not going to tank OpenAI or Google. Google has cash money. OpenAI as a fair bit of cash money. Meta has cash money. Anthropic had cash and then Trump tried to sink them… but they might be OK in the long run. They’re doing great on the code side of things.

            What you’re also erroneously assuming points to a bubble points to how OpenAI, Google, Whatever Musk calls his stupid company this week, and Palantir all are doing to avoid classic bubble economics of huge loans to pay back. You don’t pay back stocks. It’s equity. That’s cash trading hands, not loans that come due one day. Hell, Antropic is buying server time from Grok - that’s real cash trading hands to perform a service. That’s not a bubble, that’s the kind of thing that prevents a bubble. Like, bro, do you even bubble?

        • Jiral@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          I don’t claim I know when the correction will happen but I wonder what massive alternative demand you see for the mountains of highly specialised server gpus in storage that will be obsolete in maybe 3 years time? For many of them that means likely before they will ever be turned on. The dotcom bubble created infrastructure that was, largely, not obsolete when the bubble bursted and made a lot of sense to salvage. That is a fundamental difference to inference infrastructure.

          • hansolo@lemmy.today
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            24 hours ago

            The WorldCom fiber layouts were akin to the railroad bubble in the 1840s, in that those were pathways with nothing to use them. I can see the parallels here, but the difference is GPUs aren’t nailed to the ground. They can be moved to demand, unlike railway lines and fiber lines.

            GPUs process data. They don’t spoil or expire. Sure, they’ll lose value, but it’s not like they stop being useful, even if highly specialized. Hell, even selling them second hand to China with an export waiver would be a way to recoup value. So already, the premise is flawed in that, specialized or not, China will use them. Or the EU or universities looking for a deal and building out their own local processing.

            • Jiral@lemmy.world
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              23 hours ago

              Both rail and communication infrastructure lead to some useless connections but much of it was no useless, in both cases. GPUs are not bolted to the ground but they do become obsolete no matter if you deny it or not. The issue is that the real costs is in using GPUs is very different from these previous bubbles. Those obsolete GPUs will cause much higher operating costs than newer generations, to the point where they won’t be interesting to use even if you gave them away for free. To make matters worse, other infrastructure is much more flexible in its use, one can transport all sorts of things on railways, one can send all sorts of data on communication infrastructure. Those specialised GPUs aren’t very useful for anything other than a fairly narrow use case.

              I think you do not fully appreciate the crazy amounts of GPUs we are talking about here. China has no massive real shortage of GPUs. They managed to get black market GPUs more or less directly from Nvidia just fine. Nor are European universities IT wastelands without compute capabilities. But even if they’d go crazy on expandig compute infrastructure with outdated power hungry GPUs, that would be barely more than a drop in the ocean. Nvidia does have to resort to circular financing to keep the boom cycle accelerating, with GPUs going just to some storage facility if they exist at all. That is not how healthy demand looks like.

              • hansolo@lemmy.today
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                20 hours ago

                In a $10 Trillion bubble, what percentage, exactly, are the GPUs you’re taking about?

                Is it 10%? Are there a Trillion dollars worth of GPUs you’re worried about? Or less?

                • Jiral@lemmy.world
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                  16 hours ago

                  If you are talking about GPUs being only a small share of the overall total sum, bad news that the supporting infrastructure is also to a large extend tailor made for that very narrow use case. No one else will need such huge data center facilities designed specifically for GPUs, that includes also the non GPU components. And the infrastructure is the only thing of substance of this bubble. The models aren’t it. Open weight models are on the heels of the closed models. As soon as they are good enough for common applications, the business case for charging billions is slowly evaporating.

                  You are also mistaken, I am not worried about GPUs. I am merely stating that they and their server infrastructure (which is tailor made for them) are rapidly getting obsolete equipment by their nature and while the clock is ticking they are largely not even being used. This is fundamentally different from the dotcom and railway bubble.

    • TheBlackLounge@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      Dot-com bubble took about 5 years before it burst, and that was crazier. Why would you think this one would pop quicker?

        • TheBlackLounge@lemmy.zip
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          Nah, like a 5th of the market was tied up in dot com. Hundreds of start-ups that were all supposed to take over their sector. AI is not sustainable, but it’s nothing like that.

      • rumba@lemmy.zip
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        24 hours ago

        The problem is, we kinda just fell into the dotcom bust. The internet hit, most loved the internet, It made a lot of money and didn’t put people out of work directly. It burst when the investors decided they wanted to cash out and everyone jumped out at the same time.

        The AI bubble is being tended to. They know how it works, infusing money here and there, they can keep it going for a long time. AS the mega rich are invested in it and they’re siphoning all the cash out of the middle and upper middle class, all they have to do it keep the engine running and suck it all dry.

        You see them right now carefully stepping into IPO. Courting the right billionaires and trillionaire. There’s already clear indicators that these big entities need to be 10x larger to actually earn their valuations, nobody cares. Corrupt bottom to the top.

        This one may not actually pop in decades if they can manage it

      • hansolo@lemmy.today
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        2 days ago

        You’re talking about from buildup to crash, though. As if everyone just looking at literally any large investment and saying “it’s a bubble!” is dong anything other than being a broken clock right twice a day.

        I follow conspiracy theories extensively, and people have always predicted a huge, massive economic collapse next year - every year. On Art Bell, it was a constant, reiterated prediction every year from 1994 until 2013. It’s only the ones that happened to say it in 2006 or 2007 that rode the credit of “actually predicting the 2008 crisis!” Even the ones saying it before the Dot Com bubble didn’t get it right because their doomerism made all predictions “end of the world” level.

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          I wonder if there’s a name for this fallacy…

          As if everyone just looking at literally any large investment and saying “it’s a bubble!” is doing anything other than being a broken clock right twice a day.

          Suggesting that something isn’t true simply because a lot of people are saying it’s true (with or without evidence, doesn’t really matter). “I keep reading about this being a bubble, so that means it can’t be true”

          It’s like the inverse (converse? I forget. It’s been years since I took a logic course) of an appeal to the masses.

          Regardless, it’s fallacious reasoning.

          • hansolo@lemmy.today
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            23 hours ago

            You’re not getting the full picture of the reasoning, or intentionally ignoring parts, I dunno.

            • Large groups of people are historically bad at predicting financial markets. Very few people ever correctly predict a bubble ending, and considering that a large group of people are traumatized by 2008 and can read Wikipedia well enough to see the Dot Com bubble, they’ve erroneously put 2 and 2 together and think all large investments in tech will equate to a bubble. Regardless of the structure underlying it.

            • Structural differences between Dot Com bubble and AI investments are numerous and extensive. Structurally, they’re similar anecdotally at best. Yes, there are problematic parts. Data center demand will never be met by anything other than a few janky fly-by-night centers and ramshackle kludge-hosts in Serbia or Brazil where they’re not regulated like the US or EU.

            • The circular investment issue isn’t just actual cash trading hands, it’s assets and stock as well. In previous bubbles the majority of the bad investments were over-leveraged financing. Loans. There’s actually very little in terms of loans going into these companies, which is a notable difference between this and literally every other bubble in history.

            • I think the bubble will be 2 or 3 smaller bubbles that falter, but the mass of the overall industry will fail to full tip over because there’s enough parts that can be scrapped and reapplied to other issues anyway, that demand won’t ever evaporate as it did for $2 million URLs in the Dot Com bubble, or railway lines to nowhere in the 1840’s.

            • This does not ignore or assume no problems from layoffs and job displacement. That’s a very real and huge threat, and AI will only enhance this problem by trying to claim it can manipulate and bilk poor people better than Google can.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          2 days ago

          Except people did predict the crash, they could see it coming and they made bank out of it. They made a movie about it.

        • TheBlackLounge@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          I haven’t heard this much bubble talk ever. It’s not the same prediction made by the same people again this time. I don’t even know anybody irl who likes vibecoding (myself included) who thinks this is sustainable.

          Even the ones saying it before the Dot Com bubble didn’t get it right because their doomerism made all predictions “end of the world” level.

          I don’t know what you’re trying to say. People had bad takes about that bubble so all bubble scepticism is discredited? But it popped, which means all these investors had bad takes as well. So…

          Nobody worth listening to thinks this bubble is going to be worse than the dotcom bubble. It’s simply not that big to begin with. I guess there’s some wishful thinking too, but what’s the alternative to this investors-expected AI growth? Everything except the AI market crashes?

          • hansolo@lemmy.today
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            23 hours ago

            I haven’t heard this much bubble talk ever.

            Exactly. And you know who’s bad at predicting things? Large groups of people.

            It’s a fractional bubble at best. Unlike the Dot Com bubble, which invested in things like URLs that no one wanted and WorldCom’s fiber layout, the buildouts and investments being done on spec aren’t of the kind that are single-use. Data centers are always in demand, anyway. Storage and cloud compute are always in demand. Electricity is in demand. If AI flops tomorrow, other than 3 over-valued companies employing…a few hundred people, and idiot investors in those companies, the entire economy isn’t yet entirely dependent on LLMs exactly because they suck at most of what they do anyway. Government contracts are stabilizing the whole industry anyway, something absent from the Dot Com era.

            Edit: You know who IS a risk? All the dipshit startups that think putting a wrapper on a CustomGPT was a good business model, and took out loans for that rather than split equity. That’s going to be your first indicator to look for, and it’s wavering because, as it turns out, 99.999999% of those ideas are stupid.

            History is the best teacher, and a detailed look shows these are only alike in that they are tech-related.

  • DandomRude@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    If even the goddamn BusinessInsider comes to this conclusion, I wonder why they don’t also realize that all stock market transactions work this way today. None of this has the slightest connection to the real world anymore. Stock prices are determined purely by how many billionaires—or rather, their concentrated capital—are betting on which companies. And here’s the key: They always win, because even with the most absurd business ideas, they can drive up the price, which only crashes after the super-rich have sold their shares.

    This makes it very easy to understand why the dumbest people in the world never lose money, as long as they’re rich enough.

    Humanity is footing the bill for this, and it’s now becoming very clear just how high that bill is.

      • DandomRude@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Well, if they were to start doing this on a large scale, everything would probably collapse pretty quickly.

        If, for example, BlackRock were to pull its billions out of AI companies, “the market” would be terrified and smaller investors would start asking about the business model—then they’d quickly realize that it doesn’t add up at all, and they’d want to sell their shares as well, because even this giant player has lost their trust.

        The result would likely be the collapse of the global economic system, since such absurd amounts of money are at stake here that a crash would make the 2003 banking crisis look like a minor slip-up.

        The bitter truth is that this will almost certainly happen sooner or later—and this time, governments will no longer be able to step in to bail out the “systemically important” megacorporations, because the sums involved are so vast that even the richest countries in the world can no longer foot the bill.

  • yesman@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    When financial publications are giving advice on how to trade inside a bubble, that’s a leading indicator that the bubble is about to pop.