With fewer traditional credit cycles, the most fertile ground for distressed investing lies in industry-specific downturns caused by technological or policy shifts. These "microcycles" offer opportunities to invest in good companies working through temporary, concentrated disruption.

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Unlike debt-laden startups, tech giants are funding AI buildouts with cash and can weather a downturn. They fully expect smaller, leveraged competitors to go bankrupt, creating a strategic opportunity to purchase their data center assets for pennies on the dollar, thereby reducing their own future capital expenditures.

Economic downturns, while painful, serve a vital function in tech hubs. They purge the ecosystem of 'tourists' and status-driven individuals who aren't truly committed. This leaves behind a core of dedicated builders, resetting the culture and creating better investment opportunities.

The classic distressed debt strategy is broken. Market dislocation windows are now incredibly narrow, often lasting just days. Furthermore, low interest rates for the past decade eliminated the ability to earn meaningful carry on discounted debt. This has forced distressed funds to rebrand as 'capital solutions' and focus on private, structured deals.

The theory of "creative destruction" suggests recessions can be beneficial by purging unproductive firms and reallocating their resources to more efficient ones. The goal isn't to engineer downturns, but to allow this natural, cleansing process to occur when they happen.

The traditional, long-term venture capital cycle may be accelerating. As both macro and technology cycles shorten, venture could start mirroring the more frequent 4-5 year boom-and-bust patterns seen in crypto. This shift would force founders, VCs, and LPs to become more adept at identifying where they are in a much shorter cycle.

Unlike the dot-com or shale booms fueled by less stable companies, the current AI investment cycle is driven by corporations with exceptionally strong balance sheets. This financial resilience mitigates the risk of a credit crisis, even with massive capital expenditure and uncertain returns, allowing the cycle to run longer.

With a background in commodities and finance, CoreWeave's leadership sees a potential AI market downturn as an opportunity, not a threat. They believe a contraction would create distressed assets and consolidation possibilities, allowing them to make strategic acquisitions at favorable valuations.

When considering debt, the most critical due diligence is not on deal terms but on the lender's character. Investigate how they have treated portfolio companies during challenging times. Partnering with a lender who will "blow you up" at the first sign of trouble is a catastrophic risk.

Sectors that have experienced severe distress, like Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities (CMBS), often present compelling opportunities. The crisis forces tighter lending standards and realistic asset repricing. This creates a safer investment environment for new capital, precisely because other investors remain fearful and avoid the sector.

The economy did not experience a single, unified recession. Instead, different sectors contracted sequentially over three years in a "rolling recession." This process concluded in April, quietly starting a new bull market and recovery cycle that remains underappreciated, presenting an opportunity in lagging market segments.