269 comments

  • cmiles8 3 hours ago ago

    Market signals on an impending AI bust are broader than just Oracle’s woes.

    For example, Amazon just had a challenging bond offering where the market is clearly starting to seriously question the ROI on all this money being pumped into AI buildout. That does not bode well at all for AI-only companies without broader cash flow from other businesses. And when the cash dries up this whole thing comes crashing down like a house of cards.

    • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

      > Market signals on an impending AI bust are broader than just Oracle’s woes.

      It's worse than that - I believe that Oracle is one of the (many) companies right now that, if their AI experimentation fails, will stop the music, and everyone will be running for a chair.

      Oracle is one of a few foundational components in the circular-investing group of AI companies. If they fail to make their commitments they're the first domino to fall.

      • dibbsonline 15 minutes ago ago

        Takes a lot of IaaS to support the GPUs and workflows, all of that kit is immediately re-useable as general purpose compute to exit the commercial DCs they operate out of today.

        Much of their current debt fuelled expansion isn't singular to AI. The circular narrative ignores this.

        • surgical_fire a few seconds ago ago

          Without the massive investiment in GPUs, what is the excessive IaaS going to support?

      • someuser54541 3 hours ago ago

        What's the best way to hedge against this, considering many of us have significant savings in the market?

        A few puts on SPY dated a year or two out?

        • chasd00 an hour ago ago

          > What's the best way to hedge against this, considering many of us have significant savings in the market?

          honestly, if you're >= 10 years away from needing that money (retirement or whatever) then the best hedge is to ignore the news and just keep contributing to your investment as always. I got caught up in a couple moments (tarif drama April before last was one) where i panicked and sold and then it only took a few months to get back to even meanwhile 18% of my capital gains were now due to the taxman. I wrote a check to the IRS for 10's of thousands for no reason except over reacting and ignoring every financial advisor's advice.

          if you're going to need your investment money within 10 years then you need to get advice on how to start reducing risk (and therefore reward) because you don't have time to survive and repair from a crash.

        • cmiles8 2 hours ago ago

          Stay well diversified, keep investing each month, and take a nap.

          There are almost surely severe bumps ahead for the AI space and that will likely spill over into the broader market. But unless you’re retiring in the next few years don’t worry about it. You can’t time the ups and downs and the only proven strategy is to just keep investing in a broad indexed portfolio and just ride out. You’ll take a short term hit but also end up buying on the dip because you don’t stop investing.

          • someuser54541 2 hours ago ago

            I suppose I'm just a little worried about a 10 year sideways market. The run-up has been absolutely insane the past year...some graphs are just a literal straight line up. I didn't get to participate in much of that and concerned the prevailing wisdom on these larger timescales may no longer hold true.

            • jryan49 an hour ago ago

              Stocks are long term investments, 10yr+ So you should expect the possibility of a sideways market.

            • fny 2 hours ago ago

              If you didn't participate in it, what are you hedging?

              • kazinator 2 hours ago ago

                I would guess, longer positions held from before the past year to date period.

                (As for me, I'm just hedging my rhetorical front lawn.)

              • magicalist 2 hours ago ago

                > If you didn't participate in it

                But that's not what they said?

                >> I didn't get to participate in much of that

        • pid-1 2 hours ago ago

          Hold short term debt (e.g money market funds or SOFR ETFs). Then you will have cash in hand if either stocks fall or yelds raise.

          Never buy derivatives as a non institutional investor.

          • rich_sasha 2 hours ago ago

            It's worth adding that conventional wisdom says, you can't time the market. On average, people shifting between cash and stocks to time shocks lose out over just holding a fixed portfolio.

            • pid-1 an hour ago ago

              Absolutely 100% agree.

              At the same time, one can make financial decisions based on risk rather than longterm expected returns.

              For instance, I'm happy with fixed income yields rn.

              What would scare me is losing a big chunk of my portfolio in a downturn, exactly when I'm also most likely to lose my job.

            • dboreham 2 hours ago ago

              Sometimes conventional wisdom stops being wise. Also 90% of the people in charge of conventional wisdom have their personal wealth depend on retail investors not selling.

          • fhdkweig 2 hours ago ago

            I moved 80% of my money out of Vanguard's Target Date Retirement funds and into a money market on June 1st. In the 1.5 months since, the remaining Target Date Retirement fund has fluctuated up and down by about 0.1%. It has basically plateaued. I don't think I am losing out on potential short term gains. I like the idea that I have cash available to buy in on the day of the crash.

            • le-mark an hour ago ago

              Good luck dude! This kind of move can pay off big or not, clearly. I’ve personally talked to fable about this a lot, suggest everyone does.

              There are a lot of failure modes. The dot-com bubble looked obvious in 1997; it popped in 2000. Anyone shorting in '97-'98 was carried out on a stretcher before being vindicated. In fact 2000-2002 fell in three brutal legs over two years, and anyone who leveraged up after the first 25% leg was destroyed by the next two.

            • BeetleB 16 minutes ago ago

              Honest question: Do you expect the AI crash to have a bigger impact on the economy than a global pandemic that shut everything down did?

              • fhdkweig 3 minutes ago ago

                I don't know, but they aren't really in the same category either. The pandemic didn't shut down everything. It didn't really shut down much, people worked from home and got deliveries instead of doing things in person. There were sectors that were hit bad, but certainly not everything.

                The AI crash is about stock market indicator ratios matching those that preceded other major crashes. That's what got me spooked. I don't want to be heavily invested in those companies when/if something bad happens.

            • wil421 an hour ago ago

              My boss has already done this several times over the past couple years because of some impeding market crash. Then he goes back and buys a week or so later.

            • chasd00 an hour ago ago

              > I moved 80% of my money out of Vanguard's Target Date Retirement funds

              which target date fund exactly? You can increase risk/reward buy choosing a target date fund far in the future or you can reduce risk/reward by choosing a target date fund closer to the present. The point of those funds is to gradually reduce your risk as you get closer to your planned retirement date. I moved my 401k into a target date fund about +10 years from my planned retirement (I'm 50). So a little bit on the risk++ side but not much.

            • jghn an hour ago ago

              what if you buy on the day of the crash only to discover that was day one of a year long crash?

              • fhdkweig 43 minutes ago ago

                I feel that even if that happens, at least I wasn't fully exposed to the first drop.

          • marojejian 2 hours ago ago

            Why should a retail investor never buy derivatives? spreads?

            • pid-1 an hour ago ago

              Retail investors do not have access to systems that calculate risk, margins, pnl, etc... and generally also don't have the necessary knowledge and market data to price such instruments correctly.

              Most ppl are better off KISSing and lowering risk by selling equity for fixed income.

            • inigyou an hour ago ago

              You almost always lose a lot of money if you're seeking safety. Protection from downside risk on your S&P500 investments may cost 20-30% of your investment at which point you're better off just selling the investment and hoping it doesn't go up by that much.

            • baq 37 minutes ago ago

              It’s scaremongering, you can learn all this stuff.

              However! If you don’t want to learn and want to get rich quick instead, stay away.

            • dboreham 2 hours ago ago

              Not the parent but I'm guessing: a) it's expensive and b) you can shoot your feet off.

            • baal80spam an hour ago ago

              It's all about getting a call from the dreaded Margin.

          • georgeecollins 2 hours ago ago

            100% this is great advice!

        • moduspol 2 hours ago ago

          I thought that a year or two ago. Thankfully I did not. I have no idea how long the music will keep playing.

        • the__alchemist 2 hours ago ago

          #1: Great question, and I would love to hear the answers (And am learning from the ones posted)

          #2: What I've done so far: Haven't bought stock in a year. Have moderate short positions on Palantir, SpaceX, and Tesla. Have big short positions in the most popular Quantum computing companies. (Scams IMO). I have sold most of my positions ("profit taking"?) in stocks which have gone up a lot in the past year. (Nvidia, Broadcom etc), and am no longer using margin; about 1/3 of my brokerage value is now "cash", generating ~3% interest.

        • inigyou an hour ago ago

          Just sell all your ETFs and buy them again when the market goes up or down. You're very likely to lose money with options and you will definitely lose a lot of money if you buy enough options to hedge your full exposure.

          • jr3592 an hour ago ago

            And risk missing out on the gains in the market that can and likely will happen between then and now.

            Most researchers have shown that attempting to play the market is likely to fail in the end. Set it and forget it. Ride the wave.

            • inigyou 27 minutes ago ago

              You will definitely lose less in opportunity cost than the actual cost of hedging your position, because hedging is extremely expensive and cancels out almost all gains. If it was cheap, everyone would do it.

          • chasd00 41 minutes ago ago

            unless you're doing this in an IRA or your 401k remember the IRS wants its cut of any gains you may lock in. That's a painful check to write let me tell you.

        • arielcostas 2 hours ago ago

          Wouldn't it be wiser to get out of the market into fixed rate assets like government bonds? Maybe have some into puts on SPY (or QQQ since tech would probably have bigger losses) too, but mainly getting out of long positions on what seems a really overvalued stock market

          • nsagent 2 hours ago ago

              Wouldn't it be wiser to get out of the market into fixed rate assets like government bonds?
            
            I did that earlier this year ahead of the April earnings reports. I was a bit too early to the punch, but I prefer that versus being too late.

            I just hope the companies aren't considered too big to fail. Bailing them out would be a bad idea.

            https://www.openmarketsinstitute.org/publications/no-bailout...

            • CamperBob2 20 minutes ago ago

              I just hope the companies aren't considered too big to fail. Bailing them out would be a bad idea.

              They will be. When the SHTF, you'll see Rubio in the room^H^H^H^H circus tent, sitting right next to Bessent, arguing that propping up OpenAI is as much a national security interest as bailing out GM was.

        • glaslong 2 hours ago ago

          Bet on Chinese tech sector to eat everyone's lunch with cheaper, faster, smaller, open-weight models?

        • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

          What's the best way to hedge against this, considering many of us have significant savings in the market?

          I dunno.

          "The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent"

        • linsomniac an hour ago ago

          Reminder: Serious people have been predicting a market crash "within the next 3 months" for 3 years now. In that time, the "market" has gone up around 70% (66%-86% depending on the what part you are looking at).

          A friend of mine and I go out to lunch every 3 months and talk about, among other things, investing. We've made a trope of it, calling out the people who are predicting an imminent market crash every time we have lunch.

          I'm not saying that it doesn't look like it's going to crash, but I'll also say that there's also a very sizeable downside potential for getting out of the market.

        • steve1977 2 hours ago ago

          Gold maybe? (no investment advice)

        • bsimpson 2 hours ago ago

          It's tempting to sell a bunch, but then you've got cash. What do you do with cash when the government keeps printing money and assets are all overpriced?

        • gruez 2 hours ago ago

          >A few puts on SPY dated a year or two out?

          You think the hedge funds selling SPY options don't have this priced in already? Of course, you can still make money on this bet, just like you can win money at a roulette table, but unless you think have some special insight that hedge/quant funds don't have, buying options should be negative EV.

          • turbonaut 2 hours ago ago

            The ask was not how to make money, it was how to hedge.

            I’d argue that it is very normal for hedging to be giving up expected value in return for a reduction in volatility of returns.

            If you have a lot of exposure to the market already one could say not buying the option is more akin to roulette.

          • someuser54541 2 hours ago ago

            > but unless you think have some special insight that hedge/quant funds don't have

            Of course not, but it is a hedge, is it not? What would be your preferred hedge in this scenario?

          • sitzkrieg 2 hours ago ago

            agree, mostly true. always better to find a credit spread for your desired exposure

      • notatoad an hour ago ago

        My understanding of the ai circular financing racket is that not everyone will be running for a chair.

        Nvidia owns all the chairs, and they’re letting other companies pretend to for a while, but if it all falls apart the backstop to the collapse will be nvidia.

        • ndsipa_pomu an hour ago ago

          Doesn't Nvidia's success depend hugely on AI money pumping up demand for their products? If/when AI companies run out of money to keep investing in data centres, the bottom will fall out of the market and hopefully we can go back to buying reasonably priced graphics cards.

          • notatoad a few seconds ago ago

            nvidia's continued sky-high valuation depends on that, yes. but they're not debt-financing on funny money like the other companies are, they're collecting real actual money for the chips they're selling. if it all goes bust, they'll keep that money.

      • kazinator 2 hours ago ago

        It would be great if they open sourced the proprietary bits in the VirtualBox suite before that.

        • simoncion an hour ago ago

          Other than having a nice management UI, what does Virtualbox do that qemu doesn't these days?

          • kazinator 16 minutes ago ago

            Run your years-old VirtualBox images? If I were to guess; maybe QEMU does that too.

      • echelon 2 hours ago ago

        Everyone in the tech and media world is dead set on this being a bubble.

        Yet, even now, Fable is able to do the work of 4-5 engineers when used by a single senior engineer. Teams can and will shrink.

        Look at all the production and advertising companies switching over to Seedance. I know ad firms bidding 1/4th their typical contract price (pharma, P&G, etc.) and winning contract after contract.

        This isn't dotcom "dark fiber" before demand. The demand is here now, big legacy firms are just struggling with deploying it. Nimble small teams are making a killing.

        • xboxnolifes 2 hours ago ago

          A financial bubble has almost nothing to do with how good the product is. It's about how much of the value the company can capture, and what the ratio of that capture is compared to the investment.

          It doesn't matter to investors if OpenAI or Anthropic can build AGI if a year later 10 competitors have similar models and eat into the revenue. OpenAI and Anthropic needs years, if not decades, of significant market dominance, post-enshitification, to justify their investment spend.

        • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

          This:

          > Everyone in the tech and media world is dead set on this being a bubble.

          is completely orthogonal to this:

          > Yet, even now, Fable is able to do the work of 4-5 engineers when used by a single senior engineer.

          The industry being in a bubble or not is irrelevant to the tech being good or bad. The dot-com bubble popped (and was a bubble) even while the tech was fit for purpose.

        • chasd00 2 hours ago ago

          I think the "bubble" is more about return on investment and not usefulness of the technology. So much money has been invested on the assumption that so much return is going to materialize. The more money going in the bigger the expectation of return, that's the bubble.

        • sofixa 2 hours ago ago

          > Yet, even now, Fable is able to do the work of 4-5 engineers when used by a single senior engineer. Teams can and will shrink.

          If that's true or not, it's a bit irrelevant. Maybe teams won't shrink because of Jevon's paradox, or maybe tech debt will catch up.

          But it doesn't matter because the people calling this a bubble mostly believe that the companies burning money cannot have the return on investment needed. This can be for a variety of reasons, but my favourite one is just that open source AI models are good enough, cost a fraction of what the frontier ones do (with predictable costs), can be fine tuned, and can be relied upon (no orange tweet banning your acces to the model you've been using). So for me OpenAI and Anthropic will really struggle to merit their valuations.

          And then companies like Oracle are just a dumpster on fire. GPU hosting is a commodity business; expensive one, for sure, but there's no way in hell they'll make actual returns on the money burned with zero moat. And things are even worse when you consider the political involvement of the CEO and his nepo baby, which can easily burn good will.

        • dboreham an hour ago ago

          Yes, but all bubbles (except the tulips...) have a real, valuable, new technology at their core. That it's amazing technology doesn't stop the financial side of it being a bubble. In fact it all but ensures it is.

    • tptacek 2 hours ago ago

      This is a pretty Oracle-specific situation, isn't it? They bet the company on an AI infrastructure buildout and levered hard to do it. Google, Amazon, and Microsoft aren't in comparable situations. Oracle is transforming itself into a value-added CoreWeave (not just in terms of product packaging but also the financial structure of the company), in a way the other hyperscalers aren't.

      This story has been playing out for years now, and reads to me like the market simply recognizing that Oracle is not in the same business as it once was. It could succeed, wildly, at this new thing, but its risk isn't going to be valued based on the business it was 10 years ago.

      • echelon 2 hours ago ago

        Fable and Seedance are wildly good products, and they're creating lots of opportunity for disruption.

        Oracle is in a weird shape.

    • Ancalagon 3 hours ago ago

      And none of the major model makers (not counting SpaceX) have IPO'd yet

      • dragonwriter 2 hours ago ago

        Pretty sure Google fits any definition of major model maker that SpaceX does, and had their IPO long before SpaceX.

        Meta and Microsoft both are also significant makers of GenAI models that are public, though neither has a big tentpole LLM line that they sell access.to commercially like OpenAI, Anthropic. Google, SpaceX, which I infer might be what you mean by major model maker.

        • KerrAvon an hour ago ago

          Meta had Llama, which set a lot of things on fire in a good way, and then disappeared from the scene as tech advanced.

          What does Microsoft have?

          Not sure SpaceX counts. Nobody sane uses Grok. It's untrustable due to reality-distorting political bias training, and it's strongly associated with CSAM production. Not what you want in a reliable corporate utility.

      • xnx 3 hours ago ago

        Google (and to a much lesser degree, Facebook)

        • Ancalagon 2 hours ago ago

          Google's "IPO" is an extra raising round

          Is Meta even in this race anymore?

      • Maxatar 2 hours ago ago

        Is Gemini really that unpopular?

        • Avicebron 2 hours ago ago

          If you don't count the autosummary/gen answer at the top of googling an answer I would say so. Outside of the more technically inclined crowd I think the sentiment is if you aren't at the forefront (opus/fable/chatgpt) then your last or at least indistinguishable from all the rest of the lesser models.

          If you're selling deterministic output, just use traditional code. If you product is inference, it has to be the best inference. This becomes more apparent when you bounce between powerful models and smaller cheaper ones, the cheaper ones _feel_ worse to use.

    • Aurornis 2 hours ago ago

      > And when the cash dries up this whole thing comes crashing down like a house of cards.

      The problem in this market is that too many players are trying to play a winner-takes-all angle.

      For the companies that pull it off, it could be very lucrative.

      In a real market we’ll get a couple of big winners rather than one, but there isn’t enough room for all of these moonshot efforts to land.

      I don’t see the whole thing coming crashing down, but I do see a consolidation coming that leaves some companies in a very bad state.

    • jagged-chisel 3 hours ago ago

      I was at the ophthalmologist for the second time in two weeks - my new prescription wasn't quite right, new lenses should be here this week.

      All that to say: I had to move my focus around a bit and re-read "...pumped into AI buildout." several times, because I thought I was reading Ed Zitron :D

    • richwater 3 hours ago ago

      Hi there, how do you know Amazon's bond offering was "challenging"? Curious to learn more. Thank you.

      • cmiles8 3 hours ago ago

        A bunch of press on this today you can look up. Demand on the offering was much lower than expected and what materialized in prior rounds. Amazon had to sweeten the deal to get the money loaned.

      • ifwinterco 3 hours ago ago

        Low bid to cover ratio - it's rare for bond auctions to out and out fail (that would be fairly disastrous), but you can have an auction where they successfully sell all the bonds they were trying to sell but with much less demand than they were hoping for.

        That's not a good sign and it's a blatant red flag for the market

    • semiquaver 2 hours ago ago

      Nothing says “full of shit” like someone saying “market is signaling an impending X”. Why not make a huge levered bet and get wildly rich if you think so?

      • xienze 2 hours ago ago

        Knowing "what" will happen is different from knowing "when" it will happen.

        • dragonwriter 2 hours ago ago

          Also, even knowing both what will happen and when is a separate thing from having access to capital. You can't really tell that someone posting that hasn't already also taken the biggest leveraged position they can (unless that person is so rich that doing so would itself visibly move the market, which most people who might post comments are not.)

        • cmiles8 2 hours ago ago

          Bingo

        • s1artibartfast an hour ago ago

          Then you don't know it's impending

    • pocksuppet 3 hours ago ago

      IMHO these signals have more to do with the market than AI. They aren't finding AI to be have less ROI than before - they are requiring higher ROI than before, because there is less money remaining to be invested.

      Managing the total amount of money so that investment bubbles peter out before they get excessively big is supposed to be the central bank's job.

      • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

        > They aren't finding AI to be have less ROI than before - they are requiring higher ROI than before, because there is less money remaining.

        What ROI? There was no return, and there currently isn't any return on investment, because those companies did not exit yet!

        The exit plan is to offload overpriced shares, that they paid billions for, onto the public market. If they don't IPO, those investors get nothing.

        • s1artibartfast 3 hours ago ago

          ROI on bank loans to Oracle and corporate bonds. Those will have interest rates and returns.

          If Oracle is highly leveraged or betting the farm on AI, then their credit worthiness goes down.

          Alternatively, if money floating around to make loans is drying up, companies have to offer better terms to attract the dwindling supply

          • quickthrowman 2 hours ago ago

            > ROI on bank loans to Oracle and corporate bonds. Those will have interest rates and returns.

            Those are intrinsically linked to ORCL equity. ORCL needs an ROI to service their debt.

            • s1artibartfast 2 hours ago ago

              what point are you making? I was clairifying what ROI the parent was discussing.

              There are different ROIs which are not the same, even if related.

        • ericmay 3 hours ago ago

          > The exit plan is to offload overpriced shares, that they paid billions for, onto the public market. If they don't IPO, those investors get nothing.

          I keep seeing these unsubstantiated claims. They’re out to get us and just pump and dump on public markets!

          Yet, before they IPO they have to go around and do what? Who sets the IPO price? Who buys the shares? If the shares tank, the valuation of the company goes down and locked up shares lose value. It’s not really in anyone’s interest for IPOs or investments to fail and while pump-and-dump schemes certainly exist they are not the norm. The conspiracy theory level of distrust and cynicism is not healthy and makes one a very poor investor.

          If individual investors are buying shares and getting blown up, that’s their problem. Invest and due your own research. Broad market funds exist and have so for decades. Most financial advisors even will put you in to those funds and corporate 401k plans while increasingly allowing for more investment flexibility (freedom is good) default and educate employees by default on target date funds and index funds. There is a wealth of information out there.

          • csoups14 2 hours ago ago

            > If individual investors are buying shares and getting blown up, that’s their problem. Invest and due your own research.

            This is simply absurd. Of the investment banks that helped SpaceX IPO, Goldman Sachs has their price target at $205 (139x implied price to sales), JP Morgan at $225 (152x implied P/S), Deutsche Bank at $255 (173x implied P/S), Morgan Stanley at $300 (203x implied P/S), and Raymond James at $800 (542x implied P/S). It's the 1920s all over again; publicly pump and privately sell into the demand you're creating. I'm guessing you're perfectly fine with this behavior from the largest market participants?

            • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

              > It's the 1920s all over again; publicly pump and privately sell into the demand you're creating.

              It's not the 1920s all over again.

              > Of the investment banks that helped SpaceX IPO, Goldman Sachs has their price target at $205 (139x implied price to sales), JP Morgan at $225 (152x implied P/S), Deutsche Bank at $255 (173x implied P/S), Morgan Stanley at $300 (203x implied P/S), and Raymond James at $800 (542x implied P/S). ... I'm guessing you're perfectly fine with this behavior from the largest market participants?

              Who do those investment banks sell to? How familiar are you with, for example, Goldman Sachs finding buyers for SpaceX shares? The minimum account requirement at Goldman last I checked was something like $10mm - do you really care if such investors are buying shares in overvalued companies or, like me, declining to purchase?

              You are just throwing things around and not providing a coherent argument. Everyday investors don't have to buy these shares. They can continue to follow industry standard advice to buy total market index funds, or target date retirement funds or whatever. Investment banks sell to high net worth individuals who are by definition sophisticated investors - they know and accept the risk of such offerings. So no I don't care even a tiny bit if a Morgan Stanley client decides to buy what you consider to be overpriced shares in a "pump-and-dump" scheme based on your own certainly flawed and unsophisticated valuation of SpaceX or any other company.

              • csoups14 2 hours ago ago

                Every day investors absolutely buy these shares; these price targets are publicly available and SpaceX shares are equally publicly available. You've claimed everyone who is disagreeing with you in this thread is not providing a coherent argument. Have a great day mate.

                • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

                  > Every day investors absolutely buy these shares; these price targets are publicly available and SpaceX shares are equally publicly available.

                  And you can just not buy the shares. It's very straightforward.

                  • ceejayoz an hour ago ago

                    > And you can just not buy the shares. It's very straightforward.

                    Sure, but the SEC exists, in theory, to make that decision one you can make an informed decision on, because con artists don't typically put a disclaimer in that says "this is bullshit".

          • ceejayoz 3 hours ago ago

            > If the shares tank, the valuation of the company goes down and locked up shares lose value.

            "Oh no, my $10B became $5B!"

            They'll still be happy.

            > If individual investors are buying shares and getting blown up, that’s their problem.

            Having the general populace fleeced by bad actors is everyone's problem, eventually.

            • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

              The flaw in your thinking here is that you’re assuming these greedy people that you are creating in your head would prefer to lose half the value of the shares instead of doubling them. The entire proposition that you are putting forth has no real basis in reality, and doesn’t even match the expected behaviors of your trope of strawman investors.

              > Having the general populace fleeced by bad actors is everyone's problem, eventually.

              Sure. Creating false narratives and parroting unsubstantiated misinformation and fear mongering is everyone’s problem too.

              • ceejayoz 2 hours ago ago

                > The flaw in your thinking here is that you’re assuming these greedy people that you are creating in your head would prefer to lose half the value of the shares instead of doubling them.

                The flaw in your thinking is assuming it's actually worth the IPO price.

                If I'm a bullshit artist, $100 is great, $50 is good, and I'm just trying to avoid the $0 scenario.

                • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

                  > The flaw in your thinking is assuming it's actually worth the IPO price.

                  Then don't buy it at the IPO price? The bullshit artist will have to lower their price until there are takers in the market.

                  > If I'm a bullshit artist, $100 is great, $50 is good, and I'm just trying to avoid the $0 scenario.

                  They're not bullshit artists, they're greedy. If you think you're pulling one over on someone $100 is great but $200 is better - might as well see if you can get $200. Since we're just making up random people and motivations.

                  • ceejayoz 2 hours ago ago

                    > Then don't buy it at the IPO price?

                    I think you're getting lost here.

                    If I invested $0.50/share, I know my company is worth realistically $10/share, and I can convince you to buy at $100/share, and it plunges to $50/share before I can offload, I am still a pretty happy camper.

                    Retail investors are the marks, not the scammer here.

                    > They're not bullshit artists, they're greedy.

                    Those aren't mutually exclusive.

                    Musk is both, for instance.

          • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

            My point was that there is no ROI until the investors exit!

            IMO, those shares are overpriced even at private investment levels, but my opinion is still irrelevant to the fact that there is no ROI until the investors exit!

            • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

              And when do those investors exit?

              Nobody forces you or any other individual investor to buy shares in their “pump-and-dump company” when it lists.

              • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

                > And when do those investors exit?

                Who knows? Who cares? My point is that until those investors exit, there is no ROI.

                The comment I originally responded to was talking about investors getting ROI from AI companies. I'm pointing out that no such thing will happen until the investors exit.

                • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

                  > My point is that until those investors exit, there is no ROI.

                  Ok well they can just exit in private markets before these shares are "dumped" on public markets. Therefore there is an exit and ROI. QED.

                  Anyway your overall point, which was a bad one I'm sorry to say, was about investors dumping shares of overvalued companies on public markets.

                  You are ignoring things like lockup periods, vesting schedules, and other general machinery that specifically exist to prevent day 1 or short-term dumps of shares. It's not in the interest of the company that is IPOing or the bank - how can the investment bank go to investors and market securities and then on Day 1 those securities (because it's a pump and dump remember?) drop by 10% - 20% - 30% or more. That's bad business and investors will leave investment firms that did that.

                  When one of these "overvalued" companies IPO (and let's be honest, you don't know how to value these companies anyway so your accusation of them being overvalued is faulty from the start), someone has to buy those shares. If everyone starts selling, the value of the company and the value of the shares drop unless there are buyers. This doesn't really serve anyones interests and even better, you as an individual investor don't have to be a buyer! If someone wants to buy because their own model says it's worth it, that's up to them to decide, not you. Fortunes are made betting against the market (and betting in the general direction of the market). If someone wants to forgo buying, that's fine too.

                  For investors who don't know about the values or models of valuations of securities they can just take industry standard advice and buy index funds or target-date retirement funds. Stop infantilizing people and assuming that because you lack the knowledge that others must too, or that everyone is just out to scheme and "dump" on public markets, especially without any evidence or without considering how the IPO machinery typically works, who buys these shares, or the incentives.

                • s1artibartfast an hour ago ago

                  In terms of Oracle, the topic of this thread, lenders are already getting paid out. Oracle borrows money and issues corporate bonds at fixed percentage rates.

                  Oracle paid out 5 billion in interest last fiscal year.

              • CamperBob2 15 minutes ago ago

                Nobody forces you or any other individual investor to buy shares in their “pump-and-dump company” when it lists.

                Well, they certainly tried to, with SpaceX.

          • 3848484894 3 hours ago ago

            With a couple million dollars, you can buy many many articles on the financial times and barron's. With a couple friends, you can get other friends in pension funds to allocate into you. With other friends, you can get beneficial messaging from all sorts of public and private channels. Banks and funds can pump your offerings for something in return if you went to the right bar mitvah. Of course this only lasts for some time, but if Billy the boomer and the Korean teachers pension fund bought in, you are already half way there.

            Information is only relevant in the long term, in the short term the stock market is about FRIENDSHIP.

            • ericmay 2 hours ago ago

              Sure, but this applies to any sufficiently advanced conspiracy theory and wouldn't be limited to markets. Secondly you the individual can just not buy the shares if you think they are overvalued. You're confusing your own interpretation of the valuation of some company with "the right valuation". Maybe you're just wrong and they're not over valued? Maybe you're right? It doesn't matter much, except you can buy shares in companies that your investment thesis and modeling suggests you might buy.

              • 3848484894 an hour ago ago

                What I'm saying is that it's a very small world. There's no conspiracy here just friendship and love.

      • cmiles8 3 hours ago ago

        The bond market is measuring the risk of repayment though not the success ROI of the dollars invested by the company (that impacts the stock price but not so much the bond price). The bond markets are hiccuping on AI because there’s growing concern that these loans simply won’t get repaid.

      • jstanley 3 hours ago ago

        > there is less money remaining.

        In what sense?

        This may be related to the commonly-held fallacy of "cash on the sidelines". Cash is always on the sidelines. Cash is not created or destroyed by buying and selling stocks or bonds. Cash is simply handed from one party to another, but the cash has to be held by somebody.

      • qeternity 3 hours ago ago

        > is supposed to be the central bank's job.

        What? No it's not, and never has been.

        Without even getting into the practical vs. theoretical of Fed dual mandate (funding deficits), even the most uncharitable take on modern CBs wouldn't suggest this.

      • s1artibartfast 3 hours ago ago

        Challening bond offerings and higher yields can be a funtion of supply.

        Downgrade of credit worthiness is different. That depends on how leveraged the company is

      • toomuchtodo 3 hours ago ago

        Kinda cool to be at a point in the hype cycle where the capital markets are almost exhausted due a to a speculative bubble, pushing up yield demand. Move over tulip mania.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulip_mania

        > No of course there isn't enough capital for all of this. Having said that, there is enough capital to do this for a at least a little while longer. -- Gil Luria (Managing Director and Analyst at D.A. Davidson)

  • chasil 3 hours ago ago

    And they terminated 30k employees to achieve this?

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonmarkman/2026/04/06/oracles-m...

    • LaurensBER 3 hours ago ago

      When we tried to do a pilot with their cloud we couldn't even sign-up. None of the corporate credit cards were accepted.

      In addition to that the form basically only worked in Edge. We emailed support, they changed something on the backend. It still did not work. We gave up.

      In retrospective that was a very clear warning sign that their priorities were misguided. I'm glad we did not waste any further time and effort on them.

      • Aurornis 2 hours ago ago

        I signed up for Oracle Cloud. I couldn’t get any of the free trial options to work due to capacity limits. I couldn’t get my payment method added so I could pay for real servers.

        Then they terminated my free trial early with no explanation. I tried to add a payment method again and it didn’t work.

        It turned into a bigger joke when Oracle sales people started emailing me to ask how my trial was going. They must have been given a list of email addresses and no information about the accounts. I would ask them for help getting my account unlocked or adding a payment method, they would send me emails for a couple weeks saying they were looking into it, then they’d ghost me.

        Then a month later a new sales rep would email me and start the process over.

        I checked Reddit and there were dozens of stories with the same experience.

        • url00 an hour ago ago

          Similar experience. It was surreal coming from the (relatively) simple waters of Azure and Digital Ocean.

      • jorl17 37 minutes ago ago

        Every couple of years I try Oracle Cloud and nothing ever really works. It feels like it was built by people who literally cannot see the final result of what they work on. Signing up, adding cards, clicking links in e-mails -- nothing worked! Nothing has ever reliably worked!

        I hate Oracle with a passion for everything they've done throughout the years, I hope they burn in hell. Of course I don't want that for most of the people working there, but those making the decisions? Kindly go the way of your cloud and vanish from relevance.

      • Analemma_ 3 hours ago ago

        Oracle Cloud sometimes feels like an elaborate prank that I'm not in on. I know people and companies on AWS (obviously), Azure, Google Cloud, Hetzner, CloudFlare's various PaaS offerings, etc., but I can't name a single thing running on Oracle Cloud. Somebody out there is clearly using but I'll be damned if I know who it is.

        • neo_doom 2 hours ago ago

          We host more than 200 customers in OCI (because we have to). Its terrible. The service is terrible and they are breaking stuff all the time. Amsterdam down for a few hours today alone. We spend millions with them and can’t even get someone to join a bridge. It’s baaad

        • tmp10423288442 2 hours ago ago

          TikTok for US users

          • bhouston 2 hours ago ago

            When your customers are government mandated, are they really customers or hostages?

            • dragonwriter 2 hours ago ago

              Uh, while the sale to the Oracle-led group was government mandated, the use of Oracle Cloud for hosting by the new US TikTok is just self-dealing by the new ownership.

              Of course, when your “customers” are just self-dealing, that’s also not a great sign.

        • xorcist 2 hours ago ago

          Keep in mind that Oracle can be deliberately nebulous about what their cloud offering is (pun intended).

          Any hosted service can be bent into the shape of a cloud. Large parts of Oracle Cloud balance sheet is probably just hosted PeopleSoft and similar.

          They have this in common with IBM which, at least on paper, have a large cloud business.

        • alephnerd 3 hours ago ago

          > I can't name a single thing running on Oracle Cloud

          CrowdStrike and Uber

          > Hetzner

          I don't know of any upper market EMEA customers on Hetzner. I've met Scaleway, OVHCloud, and even STACKIT users but never Hetzner.

          • ethbr1 2 hours ago ago

            I think the market for Oracle Cloud is the same for early GCP: companies with large enough needs and strong enough engineering teams that they can leverage "X runs on Oracle Cloud" into deep discounts. And then cover the gaps with engineering.

            • wil421 an hour ago ago

              A company I worked at knowingly bought very sub-par oracle products just to get discounts on the Oracle ERP and DB stuff.

            • alephnerd 2 hours ago ago

              Partially. It's basically only enterprise and upper market organizations that were hit by billing re-negotiations by AWS, GCP, or Azure and want a high touch experience.

        • cyberpunk 3 hours ago ago

          zoom. uber. airbnb. openai. bunch of banks. samsung, apparently..

          • seattle_spring 2 hours ago ago

            I know at least one of those only uses Oracle for internal/HR "cloud" purposes, while their main customer-facing business is on AWS. Not sure about the others, but when I think of a business using "Oracle cloud" I don't interpret it as just their marketing/HR.

            • soared 2 hours ago ago

              A lot of internal stuff ends up on Oracle cloud since it’s easier, jira, confluence, etc

      • UltraSane 3 hours ago ago

        That is crazy. One of the main rules of business is to always make it as easy as possible for customers to give you money.

        • dmix 2 hours ago ago

          Enterprise companies typically don’t just add credit card forms, they push you through a sales process and don’t care much for small accounts.

      • csomar 3 hours ago ago

        Good to know it's not only problematic on the free tier. I wanted to sign up to get the free credits but couldn't finish the setup. I tried again now and it accepted/charged my card ($1 verification test) but then after the account was created it said I need a credit card?

        • BoorishBears 3 hours ago ago

          For the longest time they were a piñata for free compute with people making multiple accounts for their free ARM instance, but with the AI crunch they're clamping down.

          I'm guessing they don't care if actual business gets caught up in that because from their POV actual business comes from an account manager, and self-serve is just them cargo culting AWS/GCP

      • Ancalagon 3 hours ago ago

        They couldn't integrate a payment provider and expect to build out the data centers for AGI?

        Uh, good luck guys.

  • pgn674 4 hours ago ago

    Title is inaccurate. They're BBB- now, not BBB.

    • wyrdcurt 3 hours ago ago

      True. The linked article's title says that. I wonder if that was a typo by the OP or one of those HN quirks where the title was automatically changed when it shouldn't have been.

    • abirch 3 hours ago ago

      I think there's an errant space in between the BBB and the - but yes, the title is wrong with that space

      • dmurvihill 2 hours ago ago

        I bet the author submitted "to BBB-, one above junk" and an ignorant editor turned the minus into an em dash

    • fuzzfactor 3 hours ago ago

      I would say that the more a company still has plenty of old-fashioned intangible positive corporate goodwill, the bigger the notch.

      Wouldn't want to be negative at a time like this.

  • dralley 3 hours ago ago

    Here's hoping this screws up the collateralization of the Paramount takeover deal, and the whole thing unravels.

    • harmmonica 2 hours ago ago

      I looked this up yesterday triggered by their threat to move the combined company out of CA. Oracle’s stock price, at least, which is way off its 52-week high, is about the same as it was at the time the WBD deal was announced.

      What does that tell me? Just one of many things about the prospects of the deal still happening. That one in particular says to me they won’t be deterred. Bond rating may suggest the opposite. Lots more complexity than those two things but “fun” to speculate.

    • segmondy 3 hours ago ago

      I hope not, that would further weigh them down.

  • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

    Ed Zitron must be feeling quite validated :-)

    • bpavuk 2 hours ago ago

      he is correct on most counts and for the rest I lack the competence to vouch for or denounce his research. a rare sight!

  • Reptur 3 hours ago ago

    This site is shady as hell. You try to decline marketing in their pop-up and it hides maybe a 100 providers and expects you to click each one individually.

  • SwellJoe an hour ago ago

    Good riddance. Maybe if the trash-tier AI plays get knocked out I'll be able to buy memory and GPUs again.

  • hobonation 4 hours ago ago

    Is it me or do none of the AI companies have a "moat" in the Ben Grahmm sense.

    I use their services, but I frankly don't care who provides it. I'll chase the chepest/best and have no issue switching from one to another.

    The only moat I can see is Microsoft providing its services to companies in its Azure system. Nervous IT departments probably like that it's not leaving their control if Bob in the SAP team spins up some AI crap.

    • RansomStark 3 hours ago ago

      I've been thinking for a while, there's not real winners here except the incumbent technology providers. Hear me out: all models are converging towards the same level, gains are getting smaller and harder to come by. The models are commodities nothing more.

      This is the leap, nobody really wants to front a model for someone else. If i build an agent, or a service that requires a model, I'd prefer to push the model onto someone else, preferably at no cost. This is a leap as I'm sure right now, most people / businesses are thinking actually i do want to own / front the model.

      However, if you accept the leap the easiest way to do this is to make the model the users problem.

      From a business point of view that makes things really easy, from a customer point of view, they simply have to accept whatever their vendor of choice is pushing down their throats.

      So as a business I build for whatever model Google makes available to android, and whatever model windows bundles, and whatever model Apple bundles, and, excluding the long tail of Chinese vendors and Linux (sorry, its always left out) and that's it, problem solved, and the customer picks up the tab for the tokens

    • pseudosavant an hour ago ago

      I've found that there is value in consuming AI services from your existing cloud provider. Customers and auditors have less of an issue with "we use AI services from AWS/Azure/GCP" if the data was already in those clouds and it doesn't expand the risks of data being breached, or trained on, by some other provider.

      When you are already trusting 100% of your data, and computing on that data, to someone like AWS, it doesn't meaningfully increase risk to use an additional service, even if it is an AI service.

    • crims0n 4 hours ago ago

      Google has a bit of a Network Effect going... my vehicle got an OTA update to use Gemini. Between that, search, storage, and the YT Premium bundle it was enough to convince me to float a subscription.

      • ceejayoz 3 hours ago ago

        > my vehicle got an OTA update to use Gemini

        G. A. H.

        edit: Y'all downvoters want genAI in your cars?!

    • boron1006 3 hours ago ago

      I think anthropic with its enterprise strategy and google with its integration in everything have a bit of a moat.

      But I switched from ChatGPT to Claude 3 months ago because my account was down for like 6 hours. I haven’t used it since. It’s too easy to switch away from chatbots on a whim. There is no moat for that.

      • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

        > I think anthropic with its enterprise strategy and google with its integration in everything have a bit of a moat.

        But... Anthropic doesn't have a moat. It's clear at this point that SOTA models are not a moat, and Opus 4.6-level (or GLM 5.2) is sufficient.

        Google, though... they own the entire vertical, from the semiconductors to the end-user software. They may have a moat.

        • LarsDu88 2 hours ago ago

          The narrative that superintelligence is imminent is partially at fault here.

          There are competing definitions of what intelligence even is, and the one that I find most striking is from Francois Chollet which is that intelligence can be boiled down to skill acquisition efficiency. This type of definition makes intelligence more akin to polishing a ball than growing a watermelon.

          The superintelligence doomers warn that the watermelon is going to start growing exponentially and crush everyone. But what might actually be happening is that we are not growing a watermelon but rather polishing the ball until its really smooth and shiny. There's a point where you can get it to micron levels of polish but for most tasks (white collar text domains tasks), it's smooth enough! You will be able to go to the ball store and buy a low cost made in china ball for most tasks.

          The real challenge is actually branching out domains and modalities to tackle things like blue collar labor. Over time, white collar work automatable or able to be made hyperefficient by LLMs will see LLM commoditization.

        • Vexs 3 hours ago ago

          Observationally, for people that /aren't/ using models to code but to just do their white-collar job, claude.ai /is/ AI, now. The entire perspective for how to use AI is through claude skills, claude projects, claude cowork, etc. They've massively won the corp buy-in at the moment I believe.

          • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

            > The entire perspective for how to use AI is through claude skills, claude projects, claude cowork, etc

            But as they have repeatedly pointed out, creating software is almost zero-cost now, so software cannot be a moat.

            After all, all of the Claude software can be vibe-coded by any competitor; that's the dream that Anthropic has been selling anyway...

          • rsoto2 2 hours ago ago

            doesn't matter. that just means they've incentivized all competitors to enter the market and let's be honest none of their tools are that novel.

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2J2Fb1bBufA

        • boron1006 3 hours ago ago

          I guess I’m thinking a lot of companies seem to be getting Claude code subscriptions. It usually takes some time and effort for an org to switch away from one solution. In the meantime a lot of workflows get more and more tied to Claude in particular.

          It’s not much of a moat, but it’s more than a lot of orgs have.

        • bpavuk 2 hours ago ago

          obligatory correction: the semiconductor layer is still owned by TSMC and Samsung. Google sketches chip designs for them to implement - that's the lowest layer they control. I am not denying that this is impressive.

      • rsoto2 2 hours ago ago

        google might have tons of integration. But if it invested too heavily into AI then it will also suffer when increased competition causes returns to fall:

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2J2Fb1bBufA

    • nradov 3 hours ago ago

      The moat is shifting from technology to access to proprietary training data. It doesn't matter how good your LLM platform is if you don't have good data to feed the training run. Public Internet data and published media is already mined out. Now the frontier LLM vendors have shifted to licensing proprietary data that's locked up behind corporate firewalls, and even hiring human domain experts specifically to create new training content in target verticals. You'll see the effects of this next year, although it might not be obvious to those who mostly only use LLMs for coding tasks in popular programming languages for which there was already a lot of training data.

      • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

        > Now the frontier LLM vendors have shifted to licensing proprietary data that's locked up behind corporate firewalls, and even hiring human domain experts specifically to create new training content in target verticals.

        That's a losing proposition for any token provider - it's expensive and slow, and when you're done everyone with money to rent a last-gen H100 is going to distill your "closed" model anyway.

        • dragonwriter 2 hours ago ago

          > That's a losing proposition for any token provider

          The specialized models for targeted verticals being discussed may well not be sold by tokens, but instead be behind the scenes powering dedicated packaged solutions where the customers don't have raw access to the model. Token providers still won’t have a moat, but AI isn't just selling tokens.

    • solatic 3 hours ago ago

      AWS and Google at least own their own hardware (Trainium and TPUs, respectively). It's a moat in the sense that designing, building, and deploying your own chips at scale is quite a feat and not easily replicated. The vertical integration will allow them to continue to be profitable once the models get good enough and competitors' prices race to the bottom. Google has Gemini; AWS may not deploy its own models (yet?), but that's not necessarily a losing position, as long as the market is able to run models sourced elsewhere on Trainium and the price is right.

      • foobiekr an hour ago ago

        Their "own" as in built by Marvell and Broadcom. Especially Trainium but also TPU4.

      • amlib 3 hours ago ago

        Isn't specialized hardware also a big risk? GPUs are more amenable to any big changes that may happen in the next 5, 10 years of AI research. Maybe we won't even be talking about LLMs anymore. Maybe matrix multiplication won't even be the main primitive.

        • moduspol 2 hours ago ago

          If matrix multiplication isn't the main primitive, I think we have a lot of pain coming our way.

          • amlib 2 hours ago ago

            Maybe that is far fetched, but I could see them specializing for some super high dimension multiplication and meanwhile 5 years later turns out "all you need" are 3x3 matrices and suddenly 90% of your specialized hardware is now dark silicon :)

      • rsoto2 2 hours ago ago

        That's exactly what giant train corporations thought. "We own all the railways, we've squashed the competition"

        and they STILL went out of business because they over-estimated the demand for their shitty rails they built to the middle of nowhere. Same with "AI."

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2J2Fb1bBufA

    • selicos 3 hours ago ago

      The adoption of standards like skills and agent setup helps a ton. Nobody wants to be locked into an AI vendor like with cloud systems in general. And companies can't hold on to the #1 spot across multiple areas for very long, so users are even more motivated to move their process and stack between coding tools and AI companies behind them like Claude code.

      Vendor lock in cannot happen, or you're bankrupt.

    • twoodfin 4 hours ago ago

      Amazon Bedrock is probably middlemanning an insane amount of token consumption these days for the same reasons.

      • unreal6 4 hours ago ago

        Is Bedrock a "middleman?" I believe that they run all inference inside of AWS data centers, on their own infrastructure.

        Their new endpoint even promises zero operator access [0]

        [0] https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/machine-learning/exploring-the-...

        • twoodfin 3 hours ago ago

          Sure, but fundamentally they’re acting as a distributor of someone else’s product in the form of the frontier models. That’s a classic middle-man.

          No value judgement. I think this is a fantastic strategy.

        • wmf 3 hours ago ago

          Weights are worth far more than data centers.

          • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

            > Weights are worth far more than data centers.

            I dunno, hey. After all, I can't distill my competitors datacentres :-)

          • jimbokun 3 hours ago ago

            Why?

            Seems like open weight models keep catching up to state of the art within a few months, at most. Doesn’t seem like much of a moat to me.

            • twoodfin 3 hours ago ago

              If/when open-weight models do catch up (i.e. become the dominant product in demand), Amazon transitions from a middle-man to the supplier with the best economies of scale.

              Great business either way. You could even draw an analogy to Linux/OSS & the origins of AWS. They started as basically an infra middle-man for other people’s technology. But as the core tech commoditized, they transitioned into selling their own higher level services at scale—like Bedrock.

    • mikeweiss 3 hours ago ago

      You may not care, but a lot of people I know care what brand chat bot they use personally,. usually it's tied to trust and reputation more than anything else. People are fickle.

    • unreal6 4 hours ago ago

      > I use their services, but I frankly don't care who provides it. I'll chase the chepest/best and have no issue switching from one to another.

      For the hyperscalers, there is an ease of remaining in the Azure/AWS/GCP fabric from a data provenance perspective, particularly for regulated industries or large, risk-averse enterprises. There's also, of course, a certain network egress tax in most cases.

    • anon291 3 hours ago ago

      Nvidia has a moat. Hardware is hard. No one really competes with them for general compute

      • foobiekr an hour ago ago

        Nvidia's moat is the IBM, Microsoft moat:

        I am about to spend $20M, if I buy anything other than Nvidia, and things go wrong, I am going to get blamed, and if things go right I will get no credit. This is why AMD is making no progress outside of very narrow cases and supercomputing.

      • FuriouslyAdrift 3 hours ago ago

        AMD Instinct is their direct competitor for compute and they are better per dollar, better per watt, and out competing on raw performance.

        Only thing holding them back is fab capacity which nVidia keeps buying in bulk to keep them small.

        • HDThoreaun 3 hours ago ago

          AMD is held back by their interconnect and firmware disadvantage compared to nvidia. They’ve been trying really hard to create their own cuda, but rocM and HIP still aren’t very popular especially for research.

          • pocksuppet 3 hours ago ago

            And their repeated refusal to either implement CUDA or reimplement everyone's CUDA libraries on their own platform. They say that AMD never misses a chance to miss a chance.

        • anon291 3 hours ago ago

          Have you ever actually had anyone work with these chips? Developer ux on amd is terrible.

          • FuriouslyAdrift 2 hours ago ago

            Yes. We have a quad MI300A server and run several inference models on it. For $107k it has saved us so much money on tokens already and it's a heck of a lot faster than cloud services.

          • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

            > Have you ever actually had anyone work with these chips? Developer ux on amd is terrible.

            Just how much of dev ux do you need? A foundational library, of course, but as the AI companies keep saying, their models can vibe-code what's needed for those chips anyway.

      • nradov 3 hours ago ago

        I thought that Nvidia's moat was more in CUDA? Hardware is hard but we've already seen other companies like Google design neural processors with compute efficiency close to Nvidia.

      • dsl 3 hours ago ago

        General compute is also the worst solution to the problem.

        Nvidia's entire business is dependent on Google not being able to make TPUs fast enough.

        • foobiekr an hour ago ago

          Google would have to start selling them (the real ones, complete with interconnect) to third parties. If google does that, though, Nvidia is done.

          Unlike AMD, Google can actually ship software. AMD has never shipped good software other than drivers (maybe) in the entire history of the company, including both ATi's history and true AMD. They have always relied on Intel to provide the software.

      • therobots927 3 hours ago ago

        Oh great, good to know the shovel seller has the market cornered.

        Now back to the conversation, do any of the gold miners have a moat? Or is this a race to the bottom?

    • rawgabbit 4 hours ago ago

      Uhh. I actively and vocally avoid all things Microsoft. I see Microsoft and I immediately think buggy software with zero security.

      • esikich 3 hours ago ago

        That's fine, but your inexperience with large companies that are MS's bread and butter doesn't really give you any credibility here. It's the standard for a reason.

        • hobonation 3 hours ago ago

          Can concur. I hate them with a passion, but corps love them, and I hate to say it... with good reason.

          They're the only player in the Identity-Document-Email-VM-Storage space that's even remotely unified.

      • dragonwriter 2 hours ago ago

        Maybe so, but you clearly aren’t a representative sample of corporate decision-makers when it comes to AI (or broader IT) services.

  • teepo 3 hours ago ago
  • u1hcw9nx an hour ago ago

    Oracle LFCF (ttm): -24.54B

    Levered free cash flow (LFCF) is the cash remaining after a company has paid its debts and operational costs. Oracle has 167.43B debt. $43 billion in last fiscal year.

    Google, Meta, Microsoft, Amazon will be fine if AI bubble bursts. Oracle will be among first to go down in flames after OpenAI.

  • minraws 2 hours ago ago

    It's still a bunch too high should be below junk imho

  • measurablefunc 4 hours ago ago

    What happens when Oracle can't pay the interest on their loans?

    • ceejayoz 4 hours ago ago

      They'll use their purchases of TikTok and Paramount to campaign for a bailout.

      • llm_nerd 3 hours ago ago

        Campaign? They're friends of the administration, and the US is firmly in the kleptocracy stage now (the last wrungs of democracy are about to be undone this Thursday evening).

        They'll give a bribe to Trump, they'll offer up 5% of the stock to Chairman Trump as the People's Stock now that the US is basically a bizarre oligarchy form of communism, and Oracle will be declared a state enterprise that cannot lose money.

        The super rich simply do not fail, and they utterly control every aspect of the US now, exactly as the people apparently wanted.

        Americans are in a state of profound denial, but things are about to become very real, very quickly.

        • ceejayoz 3 hours ago ago

          The administration isn't fully immune to public opinion yet.

          • triceratops 3 hours ago ago

            Public opinion seems immune to reality though.

          • platevoltage 3 hours ago ago

            If you look back to what he has been able to get away with, and still get re-elected, I'd say he is.

            • ceejayoz 2 hours ago ago

              Nah, they tried the invulnerable thing. They tried really, really hard to avoid the "chaos in the White House" firings from the first term. Noem wrecked it.

        • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

          > They'll give a bribe to Trump, they'll offer up 5% of the stock to Chairman Trump as the People's Stock now that the US is basically a bizarre oligarchy form of communism, and Oracle will be declared a state enterprise that cannot lose money.

          A little bit dangerous for a US administration (any US administration) to do a bailout of unloved companies just before a midterm.

          Not that Trump won't do it, just saying that he'll think twice about it if he wants to hold on to the power that the American people have given him. It's one thing to boast that he can shoot someone in the street and the public won't care, quite another to tell the masses that he's funding their upcoming unemployment using their tax money :-)

          • platevoltage 2 hours ago ago

            The Republican strategy has moved away from swaying public opinion for a while now. Now their strategy is to manipulate voting maps, intimidate voters and suppress votes in areas likely to vote against them.

            The Iran war is unpopular, but they did it anyway.

            • tialaramex an hour ago ago

              It doesn't matter anyway. The US is done. The empire's peak was towards the end of last century. That's one reason the nostalgia play works so well. A Trump supporter in 2026 can see that their past looks better than their future, they're just wrong to imagine that they can do anything about that.

              I think it's interesting to analyse Xi, who unlike Trump is aware that the US is failing and that most likely China will dominate a future global economy, but who must by now be wondering what an inevitable decline looks like for China. Can he postpone it somehow? Are its seeds ultimately in something he will do, or worse has already done? That's not a happy thought is it?

              • saturn8601 22 minutes ago ago

                The UK empire is considered by many to have ended in 1947 with the independence of India. Others say it was finally finished in 1997 with Hong Kong. Either way the UK is still around and while things aren't rosy, they still trudge along and will continue to do so.

                Meanwhile the US's "supposed upcoming ending" puts them in a better position than the UK was in many different categories. It still has massive resources, amazing talent and a citizenry with an "ambitious" can do attitude vs the "tall poppy syndrome" of the UK. Its difficult to argue that there is an exact end date thats occurring now. To say its all over and that there isn't a second story coming seems premature.

                Re China: This is a country that has overexpanded in infrastructure which will come home to roost sooner or later, has a terrible demographic structural collapse looming with no realistic way to correct(unlike the US which has options to correct), has overinvested in so many industries that they are experiencing massive (25%) youth unemployment with deflation occurring. They have serious problems coming in the next few decades.

          • llm_nerd 2 hours ago ago

            > A little bit dangerous for a US administration (any US administration) to do a bailout of unloved companies just before a midterm.

            You think there will be a free and fair election? Do Americans realize that Trump has openly floated pardons to anyone in his circle? What do you think all of his "every election that I/we don't win is corrupt" rhetoric -- dangerous, grossly unacceptable, anti-democratic horseshit -- is all leading to?

            Trump has done brazenly criminal things, repeatedly. He is pardoning anyone who bribes him. He lies with every utterance from his garbage mouth. He doesn't even attempt to pretend that he's delivering his promises now. Congress has completely abdicated any and all responsibility. His entire administration is just shockingly, unbelievably incompetent, from Epstein-Island Nutlick, to Kegsbreath the ChatGPT warrior weakling dipshit.

            Remember how outraged everyone was about Hunter Biden selling a painting, or Pelosi trading stocks? ROFL, how bucolic and corruption-lite that is compared to having a crypto-rug pull, inside trader and his family of halfwit runts running around destroying the US for their own family fortunes.

            This Thursday evening is going to be eye opening for a lot of Americans that have tried to delude themselves into thinking they're getting lulz for a couple of years. It is shocking that people still pretend you're a democracy, or even capitalist for that matter. The US is post capitalism, and the plutocrats have decided to be done with this whole democracy farce.

            It remains shocking that Americans would re-elect this garbage racist self-dealing criminal imbecile again. And I would like to say "you get the government you deserve", only the US is now a worldwide menace so the entire planet will suffer from this idiocracy.

            Trump is currently having an armoured facade installed on the front of the Whitehouse, alongside the very well documented bunker complex. Do Americans really not realize what this is actually for?

    • mjcl 4 hours ago ago

      They can sell the software business to broadcom.

      • panzagl 3 hours ago ago

        The result would turn into that concentrated evil black lump from Time Bandits

      • dj_axl 4 hours ago ago

        They can rent out their AI infra to The Hyperscalers.

        • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

          > They can rent out their AI infra to The Hyperscalers.

          I can't tell if this is supposed to be sarcasm or not :-/

          Aren't all the token providers right now over-provisioned? They aren't trying to use up all their capacity, they're selling it to one another.

        • monocasa 4 hours ago ago

          I think the hyperscalers are smart enough to not let Oracle be their landlord.

          • throwa356262 3 hours ago ago

            Are they?

            Anthropic is renting compute from a competitor, that also is known for their blackhat business practices.

            • monocasa 2 hours ago ago

              Anthropic isn't a hyperscaler, but instead a hyperscaler customer.

              And I've seen first hand hyperscalers go to extremely large lengths to eradicate any use of Oracle (which mainly comes in these days through their acquisitions).

    • rawgabbit 4 hours ago ago

      They will ask tax payers for a bailout?

    • voidfunc 3 hours ago ago

      Their competitors eat them. I would not be surprised to see Oracle's cloud business get absorbed by IBM or Microsoft. Maybe Amazon. The extra DC capacity is valuable to a couple companies right now.

    • DrProtic 3 hours ago ago

      The lenders will then just report missed payments as revenue on their books.

    • noncoml 2 hours ago ago

      We will be able to afford RAM and SSD again

    • kibwen 4 hours ago ago

      Whatever happens, I can assure you that the Ellisons will remain multi-billionaires and the American taxpayer will manage to end up poorer, courtesy of their friend in the White House.

  • chaitanyya 3 hours ago ago

    in all our hearts they were always rated CCC

  • steve1977 2 hours ago ago

    Oh no.

    Anyway...

  • ratelimitsteve 2 hours ago ago

    people have been burning investor money for heat in re: AI for a few years now and it's starting to get chilly...

  • therobots927 3 hours ago ago

    This is surprising to me. Judging by what appears to be the common sentiment here on HN - which is that AI inference is already profitable, and OpenAI is fairly valued by private markets.

    Given that Oracle and Microsoft are major counterparties of OpenAI, it seems odd that their stocks have been performing so poorly recently. Can anyone square this circle for me?

    • cmiles8 3 hours ago ago

      The general fallacy of the “but inference is profitable” argument is that it tends to ignore all the costs of building and training the model. Given the fact that 1) that’s not trivial, and 2) the arms race underway means one can’t stop training, then it ruins the financial picture.

      It’s like saying a new apartment building is “profitable” because the monthly income covers the monthly running costs, but ignoring the giant mortgage that covers the cost of building the building. That thinking is a good way to go bankrupt in real estate and a good way to go bankrupt in AI.

      • an0malous 3 hours ago ago

        > The general fallacy of the “but inference is profitable” argument is that it tends to ignore all the costs of building and training the model. Given the fact that 1) that’s not trivial, and 2) the arms race underway means one can’t stop training, then it ruins the financial picture.

        Or that it’s all hearsay and no one has released financials yet?

        • marcosdumay 44 minutes ago ago

          xAI financials are public, and OpenAI financials leaked a short while ago.

          That's the best possible interpretation of them.

          The other possible interpretation is that they are manipulating the numbers (that they have to show to investors) and inference isn't actually profitable either. If they are not manipulating the numbers right now, both companies have a serious case of uncontrolled operational costs that they have to solve too.

        • cmiles8 3 hours ago ago

          Well there is clearly also a lot of non-GAAP style “trust us bro” things going on too which generally boil down to “if you ignore all the reasons why we’re not profitable then we’re profitable.” It’s WeWork’s “community adjusted EBITDA” messaging repackaged.

      • CamperBob2 3 hours ago ago

        If the company who holds the mortgage wanted to own the building, they would have just bought it themselves. They don't, for whatever reason, so to some extent they have an incentive to help their customer succeed.

        That's why it's so hard to get a residential mortgage, for example. It's more of a partnership, with more mutual vulnerability, than most people think. Same thing seems to be true here.

    • twoodfin 3 hours ago ago

      Good question.

      Given what happened with xAI’s excess capacity lease to Anthropic, and Meta’s noises about doing the same, seems likely that the demand for inference will continue to slope upwards for a while. If I’m Oracle, I’m not worried about being able to utilize the data centers I’ve built for some price, almost certainly a profitable one.

      I’m guessing, though, that Oracle made their capital investments on assumptions of a higher price & return. Possibly because it wasn’t clear when these decisions were made how much competition OpenAI would have at the frontier.

      I don’t think this math is all that hard. Capital markets have everything they need to start to figure it out, most especially a year or two of history to project forward.

    • chasd00 25 minutes ago ago

      it is isn't enough for inference to be profitable, the whole organization has to be profitable enough to keep investors from looking elsewhere for a return.

    • jimbokun 3 hours ago ago

      HN has been split on this question, with both pro and con strongly and vigorously argued.

    • darkwi11ow 3 hours ago ago

      Inference might be profitable, but it does not mean the profits of AI datacenters will rise in future. Open weight models and local AI already put the pressure on the AI datacenter profit margins, and local AI is set to become much more efficient in the future.

    • lbrito 3 hours ago ago

      I think those are just the loud minority. I wouldn't be surprised if they're like 20-30% if a poll were made here

    • 3848484894 2 hours ago ago

      That sentiment only seems to pop up in Anthropic / OAI threads, wonder why

  • Zsfe510asG 3 hours ago ago

    There is AI data center overcapacity already. The KOSPI crashed last week, and it's a leading indicator for the cyclical hardware industry. It already had been that indicator in the 2000 bubble.

    I don't know what possessed Ellison to ruin a functioning company, but it will be interesting if he gets a margin call for ORCL's other debt exposures, which are Ellison's massive loans against his ORCL stock.

    • tmp10423288442 2 hours ago ago

      The KOSPI went up already 125% in the past year, so some sort of correction was inevitable, even if the underlying companies are healthy. The crash has been exacerbated by South Koreans levering up heavily in the past few months and now getting wiped out.

    • lelanthran 3 hours ago ago

      > I don't know what possessed Ellison to ruin a functioning company,

      Same thing that drives all these execs of large companies - naked greed!

      "If only we can fire all workers, imagine how profitable we'll be!"

      They are attempting to set civilisation on fire with the intention of being on top when they no longer need humans.

    • therobots927 3 hours ago ago

      Well it seems like he bought the “AGI is 2 years away” line. As did… pretty much everyone in Silicon Valley.

      • SirFatty 3 hours ago ago
        • ben_w 3 hours ago ago

          I remember one thing that struck me when skim reading that the first time:

          it only "works" if the government actively does everything in its power to support the boom. No restrictions on new power sources, on pylons and transformers, on new factories to make power sources and compute, on data centres.

          This was never going to be the world we live in.

          Still surprised by the admin actively punishing politically incorrect power supplies (renewables) and then starting a stupid war with Iran, but even without that nonsense, we were never going to see the US do a command economy pivot, and even if we had something would've broken like it usually does with noobs (and even most politicians are noobs) trying a command economy pivot.

        • lelanthran 2 hours ago ago

          > yeah.. https://ai-2027.com/

          That site is too funny :-)

          > [mid-2026] But China is falling behind on AI algorithms due to their weaker models.

          • KerrAvon an hour ago ago

            Wow. That has aged hilariously poorly indeed. OMG.

            > But China is falling behind on AI algorithms due to their weaker models

            They wrote this shit in April 2025. And they put their names on it. Beyond hubris.

        • pphysch 2 hours ago ago

          This AGI silliness is predicated on a flawed "Platonic" view of epistemology. The notion that there is some well-defined "idea space" and therefore superintelligence can explore that space faster than any human. In fact, there is no such space. There is a "token space" that can be explored, but that has only fleeting overlaps with reality.

          • therobots927 2 hours ago ago

            It also completely ignores what we know about evolution. Our brains are the result of billions of years of natural selection. The amount of “training data” that resulted in our neural structures is on a completely different scale than the training data used for today’s LLMs. And this isn’t even up for debate.

            The assumption that this process can be “distilled” from written word is completely insane. I’m not sure how people trick themselves into thinking it’s even remotely possible.

        • AlexandrB 3 hours ago ago

          If/when the AI bubble pops, this website will be really funny. I guess it's already funny. This is what it shows for Apr 2026:

          > Reliable Agent copies thinking at 13x human speed

          Still waiting for a reliable agent to think at any speed.

      • AlexandrB 3 hours ago ago

        The ability of Silicon Valley to hype itself up into a frenzy is unparalleled. Apparently nothing was learned from "blockchain for everything" and "we're going to live in the metaverse".

        • wil421 an hour ago ago

          Don’t forget Big Data!

          • therobots927 an hour ago ago

            Big data was the progenitor of this mess

  • xyst 3 hours ago ago

    I can’t wait for Ai bubble to bust already. Maybe it will happen in October/November like the crypto hype.

  • Apocryphon 3 hours ago ago

    Imagine if their acquisition of TikTok had gone through.

    • pocksuppet 3 hours ago ago

      Wait, they don't own US TikTok? Who does?

      • thewebguyd 3 hours ago ago

        TikTok USDS Join Ventures LLC owns 80%, ByteDance still owns a minority stake.

        Oracle holds 15% & is the hosting provider, Silver Lake has a stake, MGX (UAE state backed firm) owns some as well.

        But Oracle still manages the content recommendation algorithm and the infrastructure so I'd argue they still have the biggest impact on the platform.

      • Apocryphon 3 hours ago ago

        I thought it was only 15% of the company.

  • tflinton 4 hours ago ago

    [flagged]

    • groundzeros2015 3 hours ago ago

      Bond rating is about financial solvency, not goodness.

  • kittikitti an hour ago ago

    “We don’t mind losing customers” Former Oracle CEO on their unwavering support for Israel.

  • qurren 3 hours ago ago

    Wasn't Tesla rated an F while it was in its hyper growth phase?

    • zaik 3 hours ago ago

      Most sensible Tesla valuation.

  • pedrosuave an hour ago ago

    Is just wild to me people thinking ai is tulip fever or a massive bubble when every part of my life ai is entering. Even these forums 35 percent of posts are ai or vibe code related. At work (medical field) ai is replacing scribes and it can read an ecg better than your average doc. TSMC and chip companies are using in their pipelines. Pharm and bio companies are using. Archeologists are using to decode scrolls and find new petroglyphs. Education and tutoring will never be the same ... kids got lucky having YouTube but now you basically have your private tutor. Vfx is being infiltrated. Computer security. I look around and robots are delivering my food and waymo is picking me up. I turn on the news and in the last couple months Ukraine is now using ai targeting on their drones in addition to the machine vision. My apartment complex recently had a renovations and paint job and my landlord showed me how they designed the color scheme and renovations with chat gpt before getting a crew to do the work. I made an app for my family photography contest for the first time something I never dreamed of at 40 years old with no programming knowledge. I updated my framer website faster than I ever have with Ai.

    So please explain to me how this is a bubble especially considering that most of these feature are based on llm and not even on how we primarily interact with the world ...visually. the bubble will happen after I can turn on a webcam and the program watches me draw or do a golf swing and gives me realtime tips or i put on some ar glasses and it coaches me at work .

    The amount of compute needed for graphics real time info is astronomical compared to llm . We are so far from the top of a bubble. The problem with ai in my opinion invest with the mindset that what goes up must come down and if it went up big it must come down hard soon. That's not a rule of nature or anything somethings are bedrock and keep going up. I'm sure when electricity was invented and reached every house maybe some people thought the bubble was over but we keep needing more and more. There is zero evidence now that we will need less ai compute.

    I think it's logical to be skeptical of chatgpt IPO etc but the sector as a whole is crushing and maybe because of fear will have some hiccups but will certainly prevail for a long time imo

    • ductsurprise a few seconds ago ago

      Should(or When) said 'bubble' 'pop', AI isn't going away or expected to lose relevance.

      If you were around about the time of the Dot-Com bubble, you can better make sense of the saying.

      The web never stopped being useful, it was the ridiculous and speculative valuations of companies, and outlandish claims that couldn't sustain themselves and eventually 'popped'.

    • Schiendelman an hour ago ago

      People whose job is writing code want it to be a bubble. It's probably not.

      LBMs will eat robotics, and that alone will eat a double digit percentage of labor.

    • jghn an hour ago ago

      People said similar things leading up to the dot com crash. The commercialization of the internet was indeed a watershed moment. That didn't mean it wasn't a bubble. Both can be true at the same time.