It may be grimly funny, but there;s some chewy reading in here:

https://www.loot-drop.io/

The analysis and breakdiwn of WeWork shows that it was even worse than I thought... 🤣

https://www.loot-drop.io/startup/2035-wework

It reminds me of a parody card game about the DotComCrash in 2000/2001, where one of the fictional comanies had the motto,

"We lose money on every sale, but we're making up for it in volume!",

But WeWork did it for real... 🤣

#dotcomcrash #wework #dumpsterfire

Loot Drop | 1100+ Failed Startup Case Studies & Ideas to Steal

Explore 1100+ failed startups and learn from $40B+ in burned venture capital. Discover why they failed, their market potential, and how to rebuild them with today's tech

All these corporations investing into AI despite a failing market. Are these imbeciles too uneducated to remember the (dot)com crash of the 90's? Seriously? Anyone? #AI #dotcom #market #tech #marketcrash #90s #1990s #dotcomcrash #history #warning #thingstocome #techindustry
‘We are not Enron’: Nvidia rejects AI bubble fears

Chip giant disputes claims that it is artificially inflating revenues

The Telegraph
The AI boom feels eerily similar to 2000’s dotcom crash – with some important differences | The-14

The AI boom mirrors the dotcom crash as huge spending, soaring valuations and hype outpace profits, raising questions about real value, sustainability and risks

The-14 Pictures

What kind of AI bubble are we in?

This is very helpful by Dave Karpf about three prevailing narratives concerning the dot-com crash which are lurking in the background of current debates:

So those are our three potential narratives: (1) a startup bubble, (2) unrealistic capital expenditures, and (3) way-too-fancy financial chicanery. All three of these phenomena happened simultaneously, but the lessons we take from the dotcom crash vary depending on which story we emphasize.

As he points out Sam Altman means (1) such that his company will be the equivalent of Amazon arising from the crash. Whereas I think the most incisive critique of the current bubble concerns the parallels between the financial infrastructure of AI (e.g. circular financing, a push to ‘financial innovation’, deliberately opaque treatment of business fundamentals) and financialisation from Enron through to the great recession. I’ve not as convinced that the infrastructural build out is as self-evidently irrational as Karpf suggests here:

For the past year, the AI data center construction boom has given off strong Global Crossing vibes. Microsoft, Meta, Google, OpenAI, and X.ai are all spending billions to build massive data centers. I’m just a simple political scientist who reads old tech magazines, but I cannot fathom how the costs of data center construction are ever supposed to be recouped from a mass user base that pays between $0 and $20/month for the products. (Read Ed Zitron for much more on how little sense these numbers make).

Effectively they’re deploying their savings glut on a bet about who controls the future of planetary scale computation. The calculation is that this will be used for something and it’s a long term capital investment as much as a short-term bet on generative AI. I agree with him that it’s like the telecoms story with the exception that I don’t think this will bankrupt any of the major cloud computing players. OpenAI and Anthropic on the other hand….? This on the other hand seems like a deeply precarious basis for sustained growth:

But with the latest wave of multibillion- and trillion-dollar dealmaking among the largest AI players, the vibes are turning decidedly Enron-like. Nvidia announced it is investing $100 billion in OpenAI, which OpenAI will then use to purchase Nvidia products. OpenAI announces a deal to buy $78 billion in chips from AMD, and is awarded 10% of the company in the deal, effectively offsetting the purchase.

As he puts it in the closing paragraph: “But I’ll say this: the AI bubble isn’t predominantly giving off Pets.com or Global Crossing vibes anymore. It’s giving Enron vibes” 👌

This is something which the FT journalist Rana Foroohar drew attention to years ago in Don’t Be Evil. This is how Readwise summarises my highlights and notes oon her book:

Her systemic-risk argument:

  • Big Tech has become “too big to fail” by amassing giant, opaque bond portfolios and acting like unregulated banks (issuing cheap debt, buying higher-yield corporate bonds, anchoring deals). If those assets are downgraded or dumped, markets could be toppled.
  • Their dominance across critical “infrastructure” (ads, cloud, payments/logistics, data) makes them systemically important beyond finance, with failures or abuses spilling into politics, media, healthcare, and national security.
  • The tech–finance convergence (using privileged data to price and push credit/insurance) amplifies information asymmetries and offloads tail risks to the public, with the state likely as insurer of last resort.

So it’s not just big balance sheets; it’s balance sheets + market centrality + regulatory gaps that create new systemic risk.

#accounting #anthropic #capitalism #daveKarpf #dotComCrash #Enron #finance #openAI #politicalEconomy #risk

It's Giving Enron

On the AI bubble, and the various echoes of the dotcom crash

The Future, Now and Then
Bezos compares AI investment surge to internet bubble at Italian Tech Week: Amazon founder draws parallels between current AI boom and 2000 dot-com crash while emphasizing technology's societal benefits at Turin event on October 1, 2025. https://ppc.land/bezos-compares-ai-investment-surge-to-internet-bubble-at-italian-tech-week/ #AI #TechInnovation #Bezos #InternetBubble #DotComCrash
Bezos compares AI investment surge to internet bubble at Italian Tech Week

Amazon founder draws parallels between current AI boom and 2000 dot-com crash while emphasizing technology's societal benefits at Turin event on October 1, 2025.

PPC Land

@Centurion480

I put what I call #PeakCivilisation at the 2008 #FinancialCrisis, but the year 2000 #DotComCrash is another possibility. Some put it as early as the 1973 #OilCrisis. Everything past the peak is on the falling side of the curve.

Another financial crisis is coming for sure. Predicting exactly when it will hit is hard but I'm betting sooner rather than later. I'm also betting that higher inflation and increasing cost of living aren't going to go away, just get worse.

#Collapse #CivilisationCollapse #Overshoot #EcologicalOvershoot

Do you remember the good ol' days of the Dot-Com Bubble? And the Dot-Com-Crash that followed?

Back then, Sun Microsystems was one of the darlings of Silicon Valley. The company is credited with inventing Java, and many of the Internet's servers at the time ran on Sun hardware. Investors jumped in the bandwagon, which pumped the share price. People were buying the shares because they expected the share price to keep going up. This can look good — for a while.
A problem with speculative stocks is that the price ceases to bear a healthy relation to the company's potential future earnings. There's no way for the company to deliver enough profit to make the price you paid worth it. The fundamentals don't stack-up, and a crash is inevitable. With the benefit of hindsight, Scott McNealy, CEO of Sun Microsystems, was critical of speculative trading when the company’s stock price reached a whopping 10 times revenues.

You may think that was all just "tulip mania".
You may think sharemarket investors have learned from the dot-com bubble era.
You may think governments and banks would have changed the rules to prevent things getting so out-of-whack again.
You may think the "snake-oil salesman" tactics by Silicon Valley Tech-Bros couldn't create a disaster like that again these days...

Tesla's share price is being pumped by a fast-talking madman. Tesla's Price-to-Sales Ratio is currently about 9, and looks to be heading up to over 10 again, where it was from mid June to mid-July.

Nvidia's share price is being pumped by AI hype. Nvidia's Price-to-Sales Ratio is currently about 35, and looks to be heading up to over 40 again, where it was from mid June to mid-July.

#Tech #Bubble #TulipMania #DotComBubble #DotComCrash #DotComBoom #DotBomb #Tesla #NVidia #AI #AIHype

Is this worse than the Dot Com Crash (if you were around for that)?

#layoffs #recession #dotcomcrash #economy #economicdownturn #tech #techindustry

Yes
7.7%
No
57.7%
Don't know yet
30.8%
What's a "Dot Com Crash"?
3.8%
Poll ended at .