Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Contrary to the belief that bubbles are based on hype, Gurley asserts they are a byproduct of a real technological breakthrough. The initial, genuine value attracts talent and capital, which then draws in speculators and 'fools' who create the bubble. The underlying technology's reality is the catalyst.

Related Insights

Speculative manias, like the AI boom, function like collective hallucinations. The overwhelming belief in future demand becomes self-fulfilling, attracting capital that builds tangible infrastructure (e.g., data centers, fiber optic cables) long before cash flows appear, often leaving lasting value even after the bubble bursts.

Like the dot-com era, many overvalued AI startups will fail. However, this is distinct from the underlying technology. Artificial intelligence itself is a fundamental, irreversible shift that will permanently change the world, similar to how the internet and social media became globally dominant despite early market bubbles.

According to author Bernd Hobart, bubbles aren't just irrational speculation. Sky-high valuations signal to all players—from power plants to chip fabs to software developers—that the "time is now." This encourages massive, parallel investments that might otherwise be too risky, effectively manufacturing the future just in time.

Bubbles provide the capital for foundational technological shifts. Inflated valuations allow companies like OpenAI to raise and spend astronomical sums on R&D for things like model training, creating advances that wouldn't happen otherwise. The key for investors is to survive the crash and back the durable winners that emerge.

History shows that transformative technologies like railroads and the internet often create market bubbles. Investors can lose tremendous amounts of capital on overpriced assets, even while the technology itself fundamentally rewires the economy and creates massive societal value. The two outcomes are not mutually exclusive.

Venture capitalist Seth Levine argues that bubbles are an inevitable, and even productive, part of the innovation cycle. While many investments will fail, the frenzy ensures massive capital flows into transformational technologies like AI, allowing the market to eventually find the winning companies and ideas.

The memo argues that the "hysteria of the bubble" compresses the timeline for building out new technologies from decades into just a few years. Patient, value-focused investing would never fund the massive, parallel, and often wasteful experimentation required to jump-start a new technological paradigm at such a rapid pace.

A genuine technological wave, like AI, creates rapid wealth, which inherently attracts speculators. Therefore, bubble-like behavior is a predictable side effect of a real revolution, not proof that the underlying technology is fake. The two phenomena come together as a pair.

Howard Marks distinguishes between two bubble types. "Mean reversion" bubbles (e.g., subprime mortgages) create no lasting value. In contrast, "inflection bubbles" (e.g., railroads, internet, AI) fund the necessary, often money-losing, infrastructure that accelerates technological progress for society, even as they destroy investor wealth.

Marks argues that speculative bubbles form around 'something new' where imagination is untethered from reality. The AI boom, like the dot-com era, is based on a novel, transformative technology. This differs from past manias centered on established companies (Nifty 50) or financial engineering (subprime mortgages), making it prone to similar flights of fancy.