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kart23 | 2 months ago
Michael Burry is betting against AI growth translating into real profits as a whole, not the circular funding.
kart23 | 2 months ago
Michael Burry is betting against AI growth translating into real profits as a whole, not the circular funding.
mvkel|2 months ago
[0] consider pagerduty, incredibly profitable with little revenue growth. Trading at 1.5X revenue, where high revenue growth, unprofitable companies are trading at 10X revenue.
danvayn|2 months ago
cyanydeez|2 months ago
mewpmewp2|2 months ago
arcticbull|2 months ago
danielmarkbruce|2 months ago
It's not that different to any type of vendor financing. Vendor financing is legit, if done legitimately.
danvayn|2 months ago
buzzin_|2 months ago
The real story is that Nvidia is accepting equity in their customers as a payment for their hardware. "What, you don't have cash to buy our chips? That's OK, you can pay by giving us 10% of everything you earn in perpetuity."
This has happened before, let's call it the "selling the goose that lays golden eggs scan." You can buy our machine that converts electricity into cash, but we will only take preorders, after all it is such a good deal. Then, after bulding the machines with the said preorder money, they of course plugged the machines in themselves instead of shipping them, claiming various "delays" in production. Here I'm talking about the bitcoin mining hardware when the said hardware first appeared.
Nvidia is doing similar thing, just instead of doing it 100% themselves, they are 10% in by acquiring the equity in their customers.
calvinmorrison|2 months ago
even better, we take preorders, while we delay for 1 year, we run the ASICs ourselves with way outsized TH/s power compared to the world. Once we develop the next one, we release the 'new' one to the public with 1/10th of the power.
dylan604|2 months ago
myhf|2 months ago
londons_explore|2 months ago
whatshisface|2 months ago
tim333|2 months ago
johnnyanmac|2 months ago
There's a lot of "shoulds" that go out the window when you're basically in a hype cycle. We're high stakes rolling at this point. It's a matter of when the house goes broke.
>Michael Burry is betting against AI growth translating into real profits as a whole, not the circular funding.
One can lead to the other.
credit_guy|2 months ago
unknown|2 months ago
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nrhrjrjrjtntbt|2 months ago
Is that bad? Depends. Did the purchase of chips make sense. Would they have done that if someone else say an independent entity invested?
actinium226|2 months ago
mr_toad|2 months ago
Their shares have been tanking for a month, even after a very good earnings report, so perhaps the market seeks a little more diversity?
chasd00|2 months ago
/not an investing/finance/anything to do with money expert.
fngjdflmdflg|2 months ago
[0] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2025-10-07/openai-s-...
[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/04/nvidia-has-a-cash-problem-to... -- Actually "Cash and short-term investments", not sure what is included in that, but I don't think it includes these major deals.
Jare|2 months ago
biggoodwolf|2 months ago
abakker|2 months ago
cyanydeez|2 months ago
And how inflation and interest are accounted.
nh23423fefe|2 months ago
0manrho|2 months ago
> Michael Burry is betting against AI growth translating into real profits as a whole, not the circular funding.
It's not even so much that he's betting against that translating into profits, but rather that the pace of infrastructure investments is too out of sync with the timeline of realizing those profits, and also that throwing money at the problem doesn't necessarily move that break-even ROI timetable forward in a sustainable way (beyond a certain point).
That's what popped the DotCom bubble. It was the fundamental fallacy that potential profits and revenues were directly proportional to and/or dependent on investment, and even more specifically that more investment would realize not just greater returns, but the belief that more investment yielded greater return sooner which just wasn't true - at least not beyond a certain point. So while many people associate the Pets.com flop with the dotcom bubble, it was actually over investment in and by Cisco (chiefly, but not solely) that really precipitated the bubble bursting.
A lot of people see lots of parallels with the AI bubble in that context. If the ROI timeframe is greater than the viable lifecycle of hardware bought today, how wise is it to spend big today? Does it accelerate the timeframe if you spend more, and if so by how much, and up to what point? There's also something to be said about market momentum and strategic positioning, but that's hard to quantify, especially in the context of forecasting how impactful it will be on realizing your ROI at some indefinite point in the future.
DesiLurker|2 months ago
Circular thing is bad too but from a different angle, Imagine if the whole TPU vs GPU thing erodes Nvidia's moat and its profit margins compress. if that happens how long it can keep feeding the same unproductive 'pets.AI' type startups? one break in the narrative and tragedy of commons strikes. will it happen soon? anybody's guess but given Trump is at helm and there is going to be new Fed chief, I doubt it would be anywhere near soon. Definitely not before mid-terms are locked in.
belter|2 months ago
Its about keeping Wall Street bubble momentum, not financials.
kart23|2 months ago