| ▲ | Sparkyte an hour ago | |
This tactic is wearing thin on investors. All companies doing layoffs as of recent have started to lose share value. AI or not. I think investors are starting to see stress on the market for fewer working people contributing back as customers and investors themselves. This creates depreciation in share value as no one is willing to invest. | ||
| ▲ | gofreddygo 15 minutes ago | parent [-] | |
It helps to think of investors in tiers. The lower tiers mimic higher ups. Each tier has two orders of magnitude deeper pockets than the lower tier. At the very top are the big investment banks and fund houses, berkshire. Second are smaller institutions and third retail/individual. The top two layers demand a steady return, never losing money on average in any 36 month window. Otherwise it triggers a selloff top down to cover for it. The bottom follows the top so the selloff or buy just gets mimicked, with the top tier never losing (the bottom layers make sure of it by following blindly) With wild indicators already set a massive selloff should have already been in motion, but its not. The top tier is getting more greedy. No one is betting on AI long term. Everyone's in for the ride. As always the bottom will feed the top. | ||