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Public markets are short-term 'voting machines' driven by powerful narratives, not underlying facts. This is why entire sectors, like SaaS, can be mispriced. An investor's opportunity lies in waiting for the long-term 'weighing machine' of actual results to correct the flawed story.
Public markets, fearing AI's disruption, value SaaS companies at low single-digit revenue multiples. Simultaneously, private VCs, driven by upside potential, fund early-stage AI startups at hundreds of times ARR, creating a massive valuation disconnect between the two markets.
Sectors like power generation can trade at low multiples for years. However, when a compelling narrative shift attracts a wave of generalist money, valuations can detach from fundamentals and reach "stupid" levels. This highlights how money flow can be a more powerful driver than traditional valuation metrics.
The sell-off in public SaaS stocks isn't driven by deteriorating financials, which remain strong. Instead, investors are spooked by the uncertainty of the companies' long-term terminal value in an AI-dominated future, mirroring how newspaper stocks collapsed before their earnings actually declined.
A significant market disconnect exists where public SaaS companies are selling off on fears of AI disruption, while venture capitalists are aggressively funding new AI-native SaaS startups at a record pace, suggesting two completely different outlooks on the future of software.
A company can beat earnings and still see its stock fall if its actions (e.g., high CapEx) contradict the prevailing market narrative (e.g., the AI bubble is popping). Price is driven by future expectations, not just present-day results.
Companies like Tesla and Oracle achieve massive valuations not through profits, but by capturing the dominant market story, such as becoming an "AI company." Investors should analyze a company's ability to create and own the next compelling narrative.
Fears of AI disruption have caused an overreaction in the market, depressing the stock prices of stable SaaS companies like HubSpot. Trading at just 3x forward revenue despite strong fundamentals, these firms represent a value opportunity driven by uncertainty, not just fundamental risk.
The stock price and the narrative around a company are tightly linked, creating wild oscillations. Investors mistakenly equate a rising stock with a great company. In reality, the intrinsic value of a great business rises gradually and steadily, while the stock price swings dramatically above and below this line based on shifting market sentiment.
SaaS business models derive value from long-term customer relationships. AI's disruptive potential makes the 10-year outlook for any software company extremely uncertain. This means the entire SaaS category is currently mispriced, though it's unclear if companies are over or undervalued.
A "SaaSpocalypse" is unfolding where public SaaS company valuations crater immediately following AI labs announcing new plugins or capabilities, regardless of the feature's actual market readiness. This shows the market is now trading on the perceived threat of AI disruption rather than on traditional financial metrics, creating immense volatility.