▲ | mikhmha 4 days ago | |||||||||||||
Its not a good argument against him. I read his articles and he is absolutely correct about the state of things. Predicting the crash is a fools errand. I don't use that as a argument to discredit what he actually writes regarding the raw economics of the AI industry. I say this as someone who has been holding NVDA stock since 2016 and can cash out for a large sum of money. To me its all theoretical money until I actually sell. I don't factor it into financial planning. You don't see me being a cheerleader for NVDA. Even though I stand to gain a lot. I will still tell you that the current price is way too high and Jensen Huang has gotten high off his own supply and "celebrity status". After all, we all can't buy NVDA stock and get rich off it. Is it truly possible for all 30,000+ NVDA employees to become multi-millionaires overnight? That's not how capitalism works. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | locallost 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
I am all against bubbles and irrational valuations etc. but I think in this case the prospect of future growth was fully justified. There are never guarantees, but Nvidia's price went up 10x or more in three years and e.g. their PER stayed mostly flat. But their PER of 50 three years ago would be 5 today, which would be extremely undervalued. I would say the "market" got it correctly this time. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | nextworddev 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
He’s been absolutely wrong on most things but spreading FUD is how he makes money, like Gary Marcus | ||||||||||||||
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