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Economy
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AI is a bubble, and everyone says so, including OpenAI’s Sam Altman, who said recently, “I do think some investors are likely to lose a lot of money.” The problem is that the Magnificent Seven tech companies are pouring $400 billion-plus annually into capex buildout for AI, far exceeding the revenues of the actual AI companies themselves.
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Seventy-five percent of the stock market’s gains come from the Mag 7 (Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla), but their capex is funding about 10 much smaller, private AI companies—which are largely unprofitable—creating an unstable, inverted pyramid of equity.
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And yet, Wall Street analysts say capex for AI will continue unabated in 2026. While most analysts expect the S&P 500 to rise next year, this sustained spending on AI will intensify the pressure for a “show me the money” moment. If AI revenues fail to justify the massive investment, it could trigger a severe and widespread global market correction. —Jim Edwards, Executive Editor, Global News
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