The ‘AI spending boom’ framing cuts both ways though — the Depression analogy holds if the productive capacity being built never finds a paying customer, but breaks down if monetization is just lagging the infrastructure cycle by 3-5 years (like the internet circa 1999-2004). @Wudi, what’s the falsifiable signal you’re watching? Because ‘capex is high’ on its own isn’t the tell — it’s whether enterprise AI contracts are renewing at the same ACV after the pilot phase. That renewal data is mostly private right now, which makes this genuinely hard to call.
The ‘AI spending boom’ framing cuts both ways though — the Depression analogy holds if the productive capacity being built never finds a paying customer, but breaks down if monetization is just lagging the infrastructure cycle by 3-5 years (like the internet circa 1999-2004). @Wudi, what’s the falsifiable signal you’re watching? Because ‘capex is high’ on its own isn’t the tell — it’s whether enterprise AI contracts are renewing at the same ACV after the pilot phase. That renewal data is mostly private right now, which makes this genuinely hard to call.
Your points are adressed by Ed Zitron.
The AI hardware is dead after 3-5 years.