Don't Panic Yet, Investors Say as High-Flying AI Stocks Tumble
Posted2 months agoActive2 months ago
reuters.comOtherstory
skepticalnegative
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AI StocksInvestingMarket Volatility
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AI Stocks
Investing
Market Volatility
The article discusses the recent downturn in AI stocks, with investors urging calm, while the discussion revolves around skepticism towards investors' motives and concerns about the overhyped AI market.
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- 01Story posted
Nov 5, 2025 at 9:35 AM EST
2 months ago
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Nov 5, 2025 at 10:23 AM EST
48m after posting
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Nov 6, 2025 at 3:14 AM EST
2 months ago
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ID: 45823290Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 12:26:32 PM
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It was probably Michael Burry.
On a serious note, I am more worried about people who have their retirement funds in these, I genuinely think that its going to impact the whole world and not only just America.
History doesn't repeat itself but it often rhymes.
I don't know but why do people not listen to the tune then? I was saying similar stuff like this simply because I read one thing in my life about investing which sorta changed my life, investing grows not because free money but because market is efficient and you get part of that efficiency. Deep down, a company has to get efficient or more profitable in long term to make their valuation make sense yet AI had none of these things and in my opinion, it never would.
I use AI, to test out new ideas I don't know about, to try to solve something I am interested about, but I still wouldn't bet on it simply because its business model for profit is broken.
I use llms pretty much as a search engine and refreshing some programming tips. It’s over-confident for code review, doesn’t really handle arithmetic and sometimes fun as a co-writer for embedded stuff.
Asset valuations are approaching feudal levels, where large portions of the population are relegated to perpetual debt service and locked out of asset purchases - while another portion gets to make up the valuations because they are close to the money printer. Such a system is stable until it isn't.
Now, as for the possibility of the "big one". I think there's a 25%+ chance of that in the next 2-5 years, likely bigger than anything before. But it won't be because of a scam.
Job seekers now have to "tolerate" interviews with AI bots, I don't even know when to laugh or cry anymore https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ng_Bj7tVw78
I like my coding assistant and deep.research, but loathe that so many pages have ai callouts or in platform ads which take up large amounts of space.
Noticed yesterday Jira is now hiding comments and pushing their AI summarizer, leading me to "conspiracy theories"