/
© 2026 RiffOn. All rights reserved.
  1. Masters of Scale
  2. Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market
Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale · Oct 23, 2025

Journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin draws parallels between the 1920s and today, warning of an AI-fueled bubble driven by leverage and risky government intervention.

True Innovation and Market Speculation Are Inseparable "Siamese Twins"

Speculation is not an evil byproduct of innovation but its necessary component. Groundbreaking ventures like SpaceX are impossible without investors willing to bet on seemingly crazy ideas. The goal for policymakers shouldn't be to eliminate speculation, but to manage its excesses without killing the innovation it fuels.

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market thumbnail

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale·4 months ago

The "Democratize Finance" Narrative Is a Recurring Precursor to Market Crashes

The rallying cry to give retail investors access to elite opportunities is not new; this same narrative fueled mass participation in the leveraged 1920s stock market bubble. Today, similar rhetoric surrounds cryptocurrency and private equity in 401(k)s, serving as a potential historical warning sign.

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market thumbnail

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale·4 months ago

Leverage is the "Magic Ingredient" Fueling Both Economic Booms and Busts

Widespread credit is the common accelerant in major financial crashes, from 1929's margin loans to 2008's subprime mortgages. This same leverage that fuels rapid growth is also the "match that lights the fire" for catastrophic downturns, with today's AI ecosystem showing similar signs.

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market thumbnail

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale·4 months ago

Today's AI Boom Is Fueled by Circular Financing Where Deals Inflate Stock to Fund Themselves

Tech companies are acquiring essential AI hardware through complex deals involving stock warrants. The deal announcement inflates the chipmaker's stock, giving the warrants immediate value. This value is then used as capital to complete the original purchase, creating money "out of nothing."

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market thumbnail

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale·4 months ago

CEOs in Regulated Industries Should Comply with Coercive Government Deals to Survive

When facing government pressure for deals that border on state capitalism, a single CEO gains little by taking a principled stand. Resisting alone will likely lead to their company being punished while competitors comply. The pragmatic move is to play along to ensure long-term survival, despite potential negative effects for the broader economy.

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market thumbnail

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale·4 months ago

The Modern Media Consumer Has Become Their Own Editor, Seeking Grains of Truth from Biased Sources

The primary challenge for journalism today isn't its own decline, but the audience's evolution. People now consume media from many sources, often knowingly biased ones, piecing together their own version of reality. They've shifted from being passive information recipients to active curators of their own truth.

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market thumbnail

Andrew Ross Sorkin: How to make sense of today’s market

Masters of Scale·4 months ago