▲ | Imustaskforhelp 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Okay so I appreciate your comment once again. I hope that this discussion can happen in good faith and lets really continue it as I think that I can learn something new. I can be wrong, I usually am. That being said, My question to you is: Do you believe that it is an excuse if I don't invest in mag7 while they are most profitable and well run because I believe that their stock price is highly overflated and past performances aren't indicative of future performances unless we are talking over an aggregate time which the general markets do have. Now the question is, Do you think its an excuse if I don't want to invest in mag7 because I am worried that its an AI bubble and that worry is backed up by the fact of this AI craze. If AI doesn't deliver on its prices, can you wager that MAG7 would actually do good? Of course it wouldn't. What do you mean to think that AI would deliver to its prices as it seems to be either only hyper applicable in tech and all other AI tech is seemingly run at a loss and I can see no way how they might force normal users when there is so much foss ai to actually pay for ai... What is the monetization plan? Is it to churn the money that you get from stocks into AI to get a higher evaluation of stocks and do some passing around the circle from one company to other and repeat? Well run is another questionable term given how Magnificient7 includes tesla but maybe we can talk about it later. I believe that time in the markets beats timing in the markets, so your experiences shouldn't be with a market that feels bubbly y'know? Otherwise, you might just stop it alltogether and I feel like that things might fall down quicker than we think as AI is kinda scrambling through, A lot of people felt disappointed in gpt-5. Reality is settling in, but is reality settling in those magnificient 7 stocks? I consider myself to be an average investor in the sense that being a superior investor is insanely insanely difficult and its much easier to think you are a superior investor because you might get lucky and then lose more money than you could've made over a long term of time and you try to recoup previous money and previous money.... I definitely don't want to experience it in first place to keep my experiences somewhat moderate y'know? This is HN so I presume you don't get bored with this response as I love this talk & trying to understand your point in good faith! | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | rapsey 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I believe that their stock price is highly overflated and past performances aren't indicative of future performances You are confusing a popular, cover my ass legal statement with market truth. Past performances absolutely are indicative of future performance the vast majority of the time. They are of course not a guarantee. Inflated price is also not a particularly good indicator of future performance. A stock generally has a high valuation for a reason. > What do you mean to think that AI would deliver to its prices as it seems to be either only hyper applicable in tech and all other AI tech is seemingly run at a loss and I can see no way how they might force normal users when there is so much foss ai to actually pay for ai... Google, Microsoft and others run real world AI and I doubt it is at a loss. They make a ton on money on infrastructure. OpenAI operates at a loss, but it is a private company. > I feel like that things might fall down quicker than we think as AI is kinda scrambling through, A lot of people felt disappointed in gpt-5. Reality is settling in, but is reality settling in those magnificient 7 stocks? You consider yourself to be an average investor, yet you disagree with the market, thus you think you are smarter than the market. This is cognitive dissonance. The market is a public consensus of the future. Stocks that are more valued have a higher price, because people are willing to bet money they will do better in the future. This is not toolip mania, or even the dotcom bubble. Bull markets are always caused by investment cycles. Before AI it was mobile and cloud. Those were not bubbles. Neither is AI, because the real world usage is undeniable. The user growth trajectory of ChatGPT was unprecedented. Google deepmind founders got a nobel prize for their work, for something that happened just a few year prior, but was so groundbreaking it deserved it. Also I am not some investing guru, I just listen to some great investment podcasts. The Real Eisman Playbook (Steve Eisman is the person portrayed by Steve Carell in The Big Short) and Compound and friends. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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