augstein 1 hour ago

For SpaceX (and possible the others):

Yes it can, since they changed the rules to force over $30 trillion in passive 401k and retirement money to buy SpaceX at IPO valuations.

From https://x.com/Hedgeye/status/2060435253928604065:

"Rule changes for the SpaceX $SPCX IPO:

Index providers waived the profitability requirement and cut the seasoning window from 90 days to 5.

This forces over $30 trillion in passive 401k and retirement money to buy SpaceX at IPO valuations.

Bloomberg Intelligence estimates S&P 500 funds must absorb 19% of SpaceX's float within 6 months.

Russell 1000 and Nasdaq 100 funds will absorb 24%.

The rules built to protect passive investors:

1. S&P 500 has required 12 months of trading and 4 quarters of GAAP profitability since 2002. Both waived.

2. Nasdaq cut its inclusion window from 90 trading days to 15.

3. FTSE Russell cut its to 5.

All three benchmarks are now structured to buy SpaceX at IPO pricing."

  • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

    > All three benchmarks are now structured to buy SpaceX at IPO pricing

    S&P has not finalized a rule change yet.

    • taurath 1 hour ago

      Ill bet all the decision makers wives have suddenly come into some nice island property recently though

      • gruez 1 hour ago

        If you have evidence of corruption, present it. Otherwise it's just generic cynicism leading to a thought terminating cliche.

        • dools 45 minutes ago

          At this point in US regulatory oversight I would have a harder time finding evidence of no corruption.

        • jimjimjim 6 minutes ago

          I think deep cynicism is the correct mindset to have in the current financial/political climate.

    • lovich 1 hour ago

      Do you think it’s more or less likely that they will make the same change as the other benchmarks?

      • JumpCrisscross 34 minutes ago

        > Do you think it’s more or less likely that they will make the same change as the other benchmarks?

        S&P has historically been more conservative. My personal guess is they won't adopt all of the proposals.

        • lovich 19 minutes ago

          But you think they’ll adopt some of these proposals that are in the benefit of these companies IPOing at the expense of large funds?

    • themafia 49 minutes ago

      Are you actually optimistic?

      • JumpCrisscross 46 minutes ago

        > Are you actually optimistic?

        Not particularly. When I posted the request for comment to HN it got crickets [1].

        Not enough people care about this. And the "safe" option has kind of shifted with the other index providers having moved first. That said, there were a lot of proposals and I'm not expecting all of them to be adopted.

        [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48054324

        • loeg 21 minutes ago

          There's no obviously correct answer here.

      • raincole 17 minutes ago

        A: posted a fact

        B: but what about your emotions

        Very glad to see HN stereotype being upended :)

        • AlexCoventry 6 minutes ago

          A: This has not happened yet. B: Are you actually optimistic that it won't?

          That's a request for an opinion, not an emotion.

  • Xunjin 1 hour ago

    If this is a bubble... The pop stage will be devastating...

    • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

      > If this is a bubble... The pop stage will be devastating...

      Why? It could be sudden. It could be slow and gradual. I've seen no reason it needs to be one versus the other.

      • tomrod 1 hour ago

        Because it is deliberately extracting cash from Mom and Pop into the robber baron's wallets?

        • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

          Okay? Why does that mean a devastating pop?

          • vermilingua 1 hour ago

            Where were you in 2008?

            • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

              It would be karmic if fleecing led to financial crises. It doesn’t. You’ve taken N = 1 and extrapolated it wildly.

          • michaelmrose 37 minutes ago

            Because traditionally the pop is delayed while those who realized most of the gains attempt to offload the risk to other parties. Whether this works or not at some point it becomes an inevitable and self reenforcing feedback loop.

            Just investing less in risky things on the run up means you personally perform worse so even in known bubbles you don't see reasonable slow downs instead of disastrous pops.

            • JumpCrisscross 32 minutes ago

              > traditionally the pop is delayed while those who realized most of the gains attempt to offload the risk to other parties

              What? Source? Plenty of investment bubbles pop before the bag is passed.

              This thread involves a lot of people looking at something they don't like and presuming karmic forces will give them what they deserve. There is no reason these companies, even if massively overvalued, have to "pop."

              That's fundamentally different from e.g. the financial crisis, or the 2023 bank collapses, or even the dot-com bubble. Those did not have the ability to self correct. There was no slow deflation other than through a bailout.

        • dragontamer 1 hour ago

          Why would that pop the bubble?

          Robber Barrons existed from like 1860 through 1915 and extracted the wealth of many people, including Native American tribe lands.

          Like this shit can keep going until we decide enough is enough and actually change our society.

          • tmp10423288442 1 hour ago

            Not related - many robber barons went bankrupt in the severe economic crashes of the time, such as the Panics of 1873 and 1893. The Gilded Age continued despite bubbles popping.

      • burnte 1 hour ago

        Irrational exuberance rarely transitions to a rational drawn down. The minute the first selfish-actor flood-liquidates, everyone else will too. That's now runs work.

        • chrisweekly 1 hour ago

          but this isn't "irrational exuberance", literally everyone I know paying and kind of attention has "rational dread".

        • hattmall 24 minutes ago

          But where else will people put their money?

          • thfuran 11 minutes ago

            I heard daffodils are where it's at.

    • HerbManic 1 hour ago

      I mean if the blow back wasn't so horrible for a lot of people, I kind of respect just how creative the pump is on this one.

      • applfanboysbgon 1 hour ago

        There is literally nothing creative about circumventing existing regulations. By definition of there already being rules in place to prevent them, the pump methods being used are already a known quantity. That those safeguards are being bypassed is just boring old corruption.

    • IAmGraydon 1 hour ago

      It’s never going to happen because too many people want it to happen.

    • 01100011 1 hour ago

      We don't let bubbles pop anymore. We print money and borrow from the future so that no one loses money on their homes and retirement accounts. The GFC changed the rules.

      • calvinmorrison 1 hour ago

        except the last bubble pop hit fast and hard with post covid inflation.

    • deadbabe 54 minutes ago

      One thing I have come to realize, is that worrying about bubbles will keep you poor.

      If everyone is in the bubble and it pops, everyone is in the same boat, so you’re not really going to be poorer than your peers by comparison.

      If it’s not a bubble and you are wrong, you will fall way behind everyone else and just watch people get richer and richer doing the exact same thing you should have done.

      Also, just because something is a bubble doesn’t mean it has to end in a devastating pop. Sometimes bubbles expand and then just get diffused. The exponential rise stops and prices plateau, but it just becomes a new normal and things stagnate for a while before resuming normal upward growth.

      • coliveira 46 minutes ago

        Ask Warren Buffet how concerned he was of "missing" on bubbles... He got richer than pretty much everybody else by just avoiding bubbles and then buying assets at fire sale prices when they inevitably popped.

  • grassfedgeek 1 hour ago

    This is such a scam.

    SpaceX used its massive IPO and listing fees (and the prestige of being the largest IPO ever) as leverage. Index providers and exchanges saw financial incentives: listing fees, trading volume, data sales, and long-term revenue from asset managers. Reuters reported that SpaceX advisers contacted major index providers (including Nasdaq) to discuss early index entry, and that SpaceX was leaning toward listing on Nasdaq only if it got early inclusion in the Nasdaq 100.

    The rules built to protect passive investors were waived:

    - S&P 500’s 12-month seasoning and 4-quarter GAAP profitability requirement → waived

    - Nasdaq’s seasoning window (90 trading days) → cut to 15

    - FTSE Russell’s seasoning window → cut to 5 days

    Meanwhile, Danish pension fund excludes SpaceX citing governance and valuation (Musk holds approximately 42.5% of the equity, but commands roughly 83-85% of total voting control): https://www.reuters.com/legal/transactional/danish-pension-f...

    • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

      > S&P 500’s 12-month seasoning and 4-quarter GAAP profitability requirement → waived

      S&P hasn’t announced a final rule change yet.

      • fluidcruft 44 minutes ago

        Yeah, right.

        • JumpCrisscross 39 minutes ago

          > Yeah, right

          Yes. Literally right.

          • fluidcruft 24 minutes ago

            Are you seriously under the illusion S&P is second guessing or reconsidering its plans? There's no evidence of that.

            • JumpCrisscross 19 minutes ago

              > the illusion S&P is second guessing or reconsidering its plans?

              There is no second guessing because no decision has been made. A consultation was put out. I’m expecting it will be adopted in parts. Like, the market hasn’t priced in a full rebalancing.

    • coliveira 44 minutes ago

      People buying into space x are basically telling Musk to do anything he wants with their money, no questions asked...

  • jmyeet 1 hour ago

    You forgot the part where NASDAQ already enacted a rule change that normally prohibits small floats from index inclusion (and thus forced purchase by index funds), which was normally 10% [1]. SpaceX is only floating ~4.3% of their stock and they're triple-weighting it.

    [1]: https://www.forbes.com/sites/garthfriesen/2026/04/25/spacex-...

    • jauntywundrkind 1 hour ago

      Also worth asking what SpaceXLAI's plan is to make money. $22.7T of their $28.5T Total Addressable Market is... Drumroll... Enterprise AI! That's the plan, that's what we are investing in: spacex and Tesla and Twitter are all side shows, to sell AI. That's what everyone's absurdly overpriced forced passive investment is going to. https://bsky.app/profile/segyges.bsky.social/post/3mnan7hr2j...

      There is nowhere near enough burning rage for this absurd fleecing of the public.

      • smallerize 36 minutes ago

        It's not only Grok, but also the robotics applications.

        • marcosdumay 5 minutes ago

          So... The US GDP in 2024 (the last one I found) was $27.8T...

          They are planning to capture 100.7% of it?

      • kevin_thibedeau 4 minutes ago

        AI in space, for all that sweet sweet latency.

  • spikehoppins 1 hour ago

    Do you have a source for the $30 million claim? It'd be nice to work out the math. Not _all_ of 401k funds / index funds are going to go to SpaceX.

  • gruez 1 hour ago

    >and cut the seasoning window from 90 days to 5.

    90 days or 5 days, it doesn't really matter because the float will be tiny due to the 6 month lockup. What kind of price discovery are we expecting that would happen in the other 85 days?

  • d--b 59 minutes ago

    Wow, didn’t know that.

    If SpaceX tanks and 401ks are left holding the bag, this could result in the biggest class action lawsuit ever.

    • Analemma_ 51 minutes ago

      Oh, SpaceX already has that covered: thanks to the TX legislature, SpaceX shareholders cannot file shareholder lawsuits, you can only complain to the "Texas Business Court" or get binding arbitration [0].

      [0]: https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/newsletters/2026-05-21/spa...

      • michaelmrose 42 minutes ago

        This is optimistic about binding arbitration providing protection from more traditional remedies

      • d--b 7 minutes ago

        People can surely sue the index publishers for removing the safeguards, or the index funds to take more risks than they were mandated.

        When money is lost in the order of billions, someone is getting sued.

    • s1artibartfast 43 minutes ago

      why? the cards are on the table. If you buy a turd from me after I disclose the composition, that is on you

      • newshackr 37 minutes ago

        You can't sell these ETFs without incurring capital gains, potentially large. So it isn't really a choice.

        • bobsomers 33 minutes ago

          If it's actually your 401k, sure you can. Just today I rebalanced my retirement funds away from large cap stocks to avoid this steaming turd that Elon is dumping on the public.

          • andsoitis 17 minutes ago

            > Just today I rebalanced my retirement funds away from large cap stocks

            Away from large cap stocks to what?

  • fragmede 44 minutes ago

    So the obvious thing to do, for someone that's got ~$3mm to play with, is to setup an ETF that is SP500 but with the old rules. If you can convince $40mm of other people's money to go into your not-specifically-Musk-less-but-just-happens-to-be ETF, they'd come out ahead.

  • willsmith72 10 minutes ago

    this is disgusting corruption, a direct wealth transfer from the many to the few. shame on everyone involved

    • kevin_thibedeau 6 minutes ago

      We need the opposition taking names for investigations in 2029. They're not all getting pardons.

ravenstine 1 hour ago

All these things are apparently valued at trillions of dollars these days. Where's the trillions, or hundreds of billions worth in improved quality of life? What has gotten better other than the ability to produce more crap?

  • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

    > Where's the trillions, or hundreds of billions worth in improved quality of life?

    I think these IPOs are going to mint tens of thousands of new millionaires or something. That, in turn, will generate massive tax windfalls for all levels of government.

    > other than the ability to produce more crap?

    This is a big "other than." (And to be clear, the jury is still out on whether AI will let us produce more in the long run.)

    • nixon_why69 1 hour ago

      It's not a pyramid scheme, it's a reverse funnel.

    • avmich 1 hour ago

      If jury is still out on positivity, long term, of AI, I'd really like to see arguments for that. Historically all - almost? - technical improvements were net positive; even some blunders had upside. AI is dangerous, yes, but e.g. fission was developed for the bomb, and now powers significant numbers of households worldwide - the tech less than 90 years old.

      • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

        > all - almost? - technical improvements were net positive

        I think it’s very likely AI is a technical improvement. But there is still a chance it’s a small improvement being massively overbuilt.

  • Avicebron 1 hour ago

    Raven, Raven.. that's for those who can borrow against that to know and you to likely never find out.

    What you thought your life would improve? Didn't you hear, wages are only increasing, why don't you invest some of that sweet cash into @JumpCrissCross' fund, it'll be alright. What were you going to do with healthcare anyway?

    • treyd 1 hour ago

      Meanwhile the federal minimum wage is still $7.25/hr.

      • fakeBeerDrinker 1 hour ago

        And how many earn this? Around 1% of hourly employees…if that. Not what I’d be concerned with right now.

        • georgemcbay 1 hour ago

          Why shouldn't we be concerned about it?

          A society should be judged by how it treats those at the bottom and by that metric our current society is pretty awful.

          • SubmarineClub 55 minutes ago

            ? Who are you to say they deserve more than that.

            • harimau777 26 minutes ago

              Who are you to say that they don't?

            • georgemcbay 21 minutes ago

              My own lived experience tells me they deserve more.

              The vast majority of people I've known who have worked for minimum wage were much harder workers and frankly just much better humans (who happened to have less privileged starts in life) than the vast majority of people I've known who are financially secure.

              But even if you don't believe they deserve more inherently, it would still be dumb for us to continue to let income inequality grow at the ridiculous rates it has been over the last 40 years. This pattern never turns out well for society.

            • adithyassekhar 9 minutes ago

              I come to this website everyday. And each day I lose faith in humanity a little more.

        • ipaddr 1 hour ago

          Why not raise it then?

          • fakeBeerDrinker 30 minutes ago

            I don’t know, ask the states that have lower wages on the books (even though federal prevails).

  • throwawa1 1 hour ago

    I think this is the story of tech in general. In my life, I've seen 3 really big steps down for the middle class: 2001, 2008 and then covid. Basic necessities are expensive today - people point to high GDP but what I see is high prices and poverty. And Tech, we've built a dystopian surveillance state.

    • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

      > Basic necessities are expensive

      There is going to be a well-deserved shitshow when these IPO proceeds start hitting real estate markets.

      • sailfast 1 hour ago

        A shitshow for whom? I see it as extremely unlikely for the United States of America to not allow individuals to purchase things for whatever money they can pull together.

        The only answer is to make it unacceptable socially, more costly economically (taxes, etc), or the third option which involves pitchforks (perhaps that also falls under "unacceptable socially") that I hope we can avoid at all costs. (is this the show you mention?)

        Feels like folks used to understand the balance a bit better - but I think I made that up. This next governance cycle is going to be a trust-busting, wealth-confiscating one I think.

        • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

          > shitshow for whom?

          I think there will be a tremendous political opportunity in the next 6 months to capitalize on rage in cities against new tech wealth driving up housing costs.

          • throwawa1 1 hour ago

            Housing prices aren't going up. They peaked in late 2022. Boomers are a huge generation, with homes millennials and Gen Z can't afford to buy. And they are smaller generations.

            • JumpCrisscross 56 minutes ago

              > Housing prices aren't going up

              Where? Rents and home prices are increasing in most American markets.

  • giancarlostoro 1 hour ago

    In terms of SpaceX (the space portion of it) they've produced the cheapest way to get any payload into space. If you pay anybody else, you will overpay drastically depending on who you want to take your payload into space.

    In terms of AI, we've seen even here on HN everything from mathematical problems that remaind unsolved, being solved, mathematical proofs being used to disprove theories, heck we even learned more about alzheimers, new antibiotics, precision targeting in oncology, using AI to flag healthcare anomalies in imaging. The benefits are easy to miss, but they're snowballing into place, there's definitely an explosion of useless crap, but you have to look for the real things and you will come to find, that AI is giving us things we otherwise either might not have discovered or wouldn't have within our lifetimes.

    • cowmix 1 hour ago

      You'll overpay -- but not by trillions.

      • waterheater 49 minutes ago

        On one order, correct, but it's still on the order of hundreds of millions to billions.

        Also, keep in mind that a stock price discounts expected future cash flows. Is it likely that SpaceX will have a near-peer competitor within a few years? No, it's not, and that market share is being priced-in.

        • hattmall 8 minutes ago

          Is it likely that SpaceX will have actual reasonable demand? Their major customer is Starlink. How legitimately confident are we in the numbers with regard to price reduction vs creative accounting to offload costs to Starlink and subsidize the launches to appear to offer huge cost reductions?

          If there exists sufficient demand for the product of space launches then it's probably reasonable to expect their to be a near-peer competitor soon, but that's only if SpaceX were to be profitable, which it isn't, even with the subsidization by Starlink on the order of many billions.

      • giancarlostoro 42 minutes ago

        Sure but SpaceX can get you into orbit for $1400 per kilogram, and future projection and goal is $100 per kilogram. The competition is at $15,000 per kilogram. I think it's a no-brainer for anybody trying to get anything into orbit. Unless someone figures out superior tech that surpasses SpaceX, I'm just not seeing why anyone would spend more for less capable and costly rockets.

    • themafia 45 minutes ago

      > they've produced the cheapest way

      Were we struggling to do this before? Was the overall percentage reduction in costs? Was some other achievement held back because we couldn't accomplish this? What is now enabled?

      > to get any payload into space.

      A limited set of payloads into space. No vehicle can get "any payload" to space at a fixed price.

      > The benefits are easy to miss,

      You've listed a bunch of reasons to publish papers. What is the actual ground level change that's occurred? Are those antibiotics produced? Do they actually work just as predicted? Why is that first world problems are exclusively listed but basic problems like world hunger are never even approached?

      > or wouldn't have within our lifetimes.

      And your life, your actual life, benefits, how?

      • JumpCrisscross 42 minutes ago

        > Were we struggling to do this before?

        We literally couldn't.

        > Was the overall percentage reduction in costs?

        Starship will bill NASA 1/20th what SLS does.

        > What is now enabled?

        LEO. Artemis. Out of all of these companies, being confused about SpaceX is super weird.

        • harimau777 29 minutes ago

          I think you missed the core of their question: What has actually gotten better in practical terms for the average American?

          • JumpCrisscross 23 minutes ago

            > What has actually gotten better in practical terms for the average American?

            Starlink has made connectivity cheaper and more available. Earth imaging has made various food production processes more efficient. Weather forecasts have become more accurate.

            If you’ve genuinely missed the massive economy that LEO has become, it will be a fun thing to catch up on.

        • alpha_squared 28 minutes ago

          Granted, I only skimmed some high-line numbers, but isn't their only profitable project Starlink? SpaceX is functionally a satellite internet company that happens to make rockets.

          • JumpCrisscross 23 minutes ago

            > isn't their only profitable project Starlink? SpaceX is functionally a satellite internet company that happens to make rockets

            Yes. The thing that’s going public is almost entirely an AI play.

    • rockskon 31 minutes ago

      Isn't AI routinely making significant mistakes in analyzing medical imaging?

      • stingraycharles 16 minutes ago

        My understanding is that it’s better than doctors themselves. But it’s probably the same as with autonomous driving: the bar isn’t just “be as good as humans”, it’s “be flawless”.

        • BobbyTables2 4 minutes ago

          I’ve seen the same. But I don’t see that as a glowing beacon of progress.

          A whole lot of doctors, if not most, didn’t pick their profession out of an interest in medicine…

  • olalonde 1 hour ago

    Comments like these make me feel like we're living in different worlds. I use LLMs multiple times a day and they've significantly improved my quality of life. They are also steadily becoming more useful over time (e.g. now solving math problems).

    • HerbManic 1 hour ago

      I suppose many do live in different worlds.

      I haven't found anything out of LLM's that has improved my life. It was a fun little toy but could never find a use case. But clearly, your mileage varies greatly from mine. That's cool.

      I just personally don't the use in more when what I think many need is less. But that comes from essentially this point of view - “Better than a thousand hollow words is one word that brings peace.” ― Buddha

    • thuuuomas 55 minutes ago

      Do you use Grok multiple times per day? Is Grok solving Erdos problems?

      • worik 42 minutes ago

        > Do you use Grok multiple times per day?

        No body who has a choice is using Grok

        > Is Grok solving Erdos problems?

        Mēh! At a slower rate than models a fraction of the price

    • threetonesun 48 minutes ago

      I’d love it if for once someone on here saying LLMs are some life changing apparatus would give a single example.

      • hedora 39 minutes ago

        We have some exotic chicks the kids picked out, and 4 were going to die of brooder pneumonia.

        An LLM correctly diagnosed it, and figure out that we could treat them with Nutri-drench Sheep Supplement, since Tractor Supply was sold out of the chicken version, and they are very similar.

        Of course it then immediately recommended we use hemp bedding that would kill them a different way, but the saleswoman sanity checked all of the above,

        100% survival rate.

        Everyone’s thriving. Chickens would follow the medical advice again, I guess.

      • olalonde 28 minutes ago

        I can give some recent examples.

        - Significantly increased my productivity as a software engineer.

        - Using it daily for Chinese-English translation. Significantly better than pre-LLM translation software. Also, great at teaching grammar, nuances, etc.

        - General Q&A. Like "Googling" but much faster. This is probably the most common use case for me.

        • alpha_squared 23 minutes ago

          > - Significantly increased my productivity as a software engineer.

          This is exactly the point that keeps coming up that folks are struggling to grasp, myself included. How are you measuring this? It certainly makes me feel productive, but I'm not sure I can confidently say it has actually made me more productive. It's made the easy stuff a no-brainer (e.g. boilerplate, simple logic) and the moderate stuff really hard. Never mind the hard stuff. Vetting the code has become a whole other job on its own. The only folks I've found who confidently claim it increases productivity appear to be online (and without evidence), because no one in person is willing to claim that and show it.

        • batshit_beaver 6 minutes ago

          > Significantly increased my productivity as a software engineer.

          You’re going to have to define productivity as it applies to software engineering. With LLMs we’ve primarily seen the number of PRs over time being discussed as a proxy for LoC, as well as the speed of bootstrapping a small project. None of these have a known correlation with economic output. They just feel good, to the programmer, their manager, or both.

          > Using it daily for Chinese-English translation. Significantly better than pre-LLM translation software. Also, great at teaching grammar, nuances, etc.

          Yes dealing with language is the one area LLMs are actually designed for. But what’s the TAM for machine translation?

          > General Q&A. Like "Googling" but much faster. This is probably the most common use case for me.

          And now you’re missing any kind of traceability for the information that you “learn,” since it all gets spaghettified and then recombined into a pile of plausible slop with no attribution. Where before you had to do slightly more work to find the information you needed, now it’s available faster but you’re at complete mercy of literally 3 American companies plus the CCP for the accuracy of that information. Most people somehow seem happy with this arrangement.

      • Cider9986 15 minutes ago

        Some guy vibe coded a tasks app client that I really like. Not life changing but I couldn't find one that suited my needs since de-iPhoning before this one.

    • hedora 44 minutes ago

      I do too, and pay $200/month, but anthropic’s margins on that revenue are negative.

      What’s the long term plan? Make it up on margin? 100% tariffs on Chinese open weight models?

      I don’t plan on pulling from my 401k for decades, so the long term plan is the part I care about.

    • dartharva 42 minutes ago

      Even if they are, it still doesn't justify the ridiculous levels of overvaluation. They are not essentials and their consumer demand is extremely elastic.

  • chasd00 1 hour ago

    Try to keep perspective, these valuations are just functions of the stock market the end result of some spreadsheet. They have nothing to do with quality of life. Why would you relate those two things in the first place?

  • wahern 1 hour ago

    Nominal global financial wealth is about $350 trillion. If you include real estate global nominal wealth is about $600 trillion.

    A good portion of that[1] is what alot of people might call fake money--valuation inflation, etc. And global wealth, even just financial wealth, isn't quite as mobile across borders as one might assume. So marshalling a trillion dollars stateside is gonna make at least some moderate waves. Still, in the grand, global scheme of things a trillion dollars is a rounding error. A trillion isn't what it used to be, and there's trillions to be had even without any realized productivity gains from AI.

    [1] I'm no financial analyst, but judging by the last few recessions and the overall trajectory over the past 30 years, I'd ballpark at most about 1/3 of that to go up in smoke if we had a severe downturn tomorrow. It's not all fake money. The whole world has industrialized over the past 30 years on a scale that is still unfathomable for most people today.

  • coliveira 32 minutes ago

    The stock market is just a game that rich people use to manipulate money. It is not a reflection of the real world. Consider for example Google, one of the companies with highest valuation in the market. If Google stops working now, the only problem we'll have is getting a few minutes back of our time. Nobody will have big issues in life because one cannot find a web page, view more ads, and watch silly videos! However they will swear that Google is the most important company in the world to justify the money people throw at it. I won't even go to Meta, which is like celebrating that people are using crack cocaine...

    • bdangubic 26 minutes ago

      you can replace “google” with every company that exists or has ever existed so no sure what the purpose of your comment is unless you are pitching abolishing the stock market. google is what they are because they make shitton of money and will continue to do so (more and more) into foreseeable future. that is stock market, always has been, always will be

      • whateveracct 13 minutes ago

        if kroger shut its doors, my life would be much worse

joegibbs 1 hour ago

Anthropic at $1t for an IPO vs Google at $23b in 2004 sounds insane but Google's revenue at the time was $2.7b while Anthropic's already at $47b, so a valuation at about 20x vs 10x revenue. Anthropic also has very high revenue growth (50x since 2024), it doesn't seems quite as insane as it could be.

  • testrun 1 hour ago

    That is revenue. What is the net profit?

    • giancarlostoro 1 hour ago

      They reported 559 million in Q2 of this year. OpenAI on the other hand, is nowhere near this.

    • jandrewrogers 1 hour ago

      If you are growing revenue at a high rate then taking profit is a misallocation of resources. That is short-term thinking. It is much better to reinvest in revenue growth.

      You can take small profit now or much larger profit later. Insisting that companies need to be profitable even when growing revenue rapidly is failing the marshmallow test.

      • smallerize 56 minutes ago

        I guess net isn't the relevant measure, but what are the unit economics? Are they actually making money selling tokens?

      • nixon_why69 56 minutes ago

        The point is that the unit economics are way worse because inference is expensive. Cost of goods sold matters, even if you're reinvesting profits.

      • themafia 43 minutes ago

        > That is short-term thinking.

        Then why IPO? Isn't that even shorter term thinking?

  • SilverElfin 1 hour ago

    What’s defensible about Anthropic’s revenue? It seems like OpenAI and others are equivalent. Open weight models are catching up. Google has ads networks, video platforms, and so much more.

    I am skeptical that Anthropic and OpenAI can defend their dominance for long enough to make meaningful gaap accounted profits

    • giancarlostoro 1 hour ago

      Anthropic is profitable unlike OpenAI though. Sure they'll owe a lot of money for probably decades, but if they remain profitable moving forward, it will be worthwhile.

      • georgemcbay 1 hour ago

        The question still remains whether they will be defensively profitable when things settle down.

        I don't think open weight models are likely to overtake or match frontier models in the next year or so when it comes to doing the most difficult tasks, but I do expect a lot of people who are currently funneling wheelbarrows of money to Anthropic to realize that they can achieve the vast majority of things they are doing with LLMs just as well with much cheaper open weight models.

    • Spooky23 1 hour ago

      Anthropic seems to have clawed its way to being the best AI and charging for itself. Microsoft had to slash the Anthropic budget… which it exceeded while being the exclusive host of OpenAI.

      Google seems to have a good B2B and internal leveraging AI to make $. OpenAI/Microsoft seems to have squandered an early product lead.

      And then you have the Muskiverse, where we have an rocket ship company that buys surplus cyber trucks, operates a space ISP, an AI company that produces virtual fetish porn and makes money renting GPUs to Anthropic, a rando dying social network and a tunnel company to cock-block public transit.

      I may be underestimating the market for AI anime porn, but I think Anthropic is probably the best in class product right now. Google and AWS are probably the best positioned sellers of AI. SpaceXAI is the dark horse because they are likely enriching the dear leader more. OpenAI is fucked.

    • coliveira 27 minutes ago

      They will defend it the way any good monopoly always does: buying the competition. Case in point is Facebook: it is just a social network, the way they really stay on top is buying other companies and paying for people to spend even more time on their properties.

chopete3 7 minutes ago

One other angle to think of is the midterm elections.

There will be chaos and potential stall for another 2 years following the elections and if the democrats win. There will be natural vested interest in showing economic decline or bad things to win next elections.

Both parties do it.

This is the best time to get to a safe place for all these companies.

rconti 2 hours ago

So they're not just racing to gain dominance in AI, they're also racing to IPO before the music stops?

IPOing and getting a bunch of cash, even if your stock subsequently suffers in the crash, is a lot better than being unable to get that capital infusion before the house of cards collapses.

  • Avicebron 2 hours ago

    Better for whom?

    • SecretDreams 2 hours ago

      The company. Worse for the investors. It's a classic bagholder play, but it can give the companies a comfortable runway post IPO.

      Typically, you IPO when your private funding is drying up and/or some of your early lenders want to cash out.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

        > The company. Worse for the investors

        It's worse for the new investors. (If it crashes.) It's great for the old investors. They got an opportunity to sell if they wanted. If they didn't, they still own their shares, except in a company that has that IPO cash sitting in its account.

        • SecretDreams 2 hours ago

          Yes, correct. Although, even for some company folks, if it crashes, they get burned since they typically have blackouts post IPO.

          Of course, some special souls are excluded from blackouts lol.

          • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

            > if it crashes, they get burned since they typically have blackouts post IPO

            In the alternate timeline they would have held shares in a private company. They're still not really getting burned other than getting a tax bill.

  • bickfordb 2 hours ago

    The only reason I can think of for the accelerated S&P 500 inclusion of SpaceX is a pump and dump

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      > the accelerated S&P 500 inclusion of SpaceX

      To be clear, S&P hasn't announced a decision on this yet.

      • jackyinger 2 hours ago

        Perhaps they’re afraid announcement would trigger divestment

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

          > Perhaps they’re afraid announcement would trigger divestment

          S&P don't get a choice around whether they announce their methodology or not.

          That said, the rule change at the NASDAQ 100 doesn't seem to have impacted pricing or allocation. I can't imagine that many people are that concerned about this. (I posted the public-comment request from S&P to HN [1]. The response was crickets.)

          [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48054324

        • LostMyLogin 58 minutes ago

          I imagine the vast majority don’t care. All they care about is trying to hit their 401k or Roth IRA contributions for the month.

  • paulpauper 2 hours ago

    People keep predicting "house of cards" and keep being wrong. AI bubble was supposed to burst as far back as 2023. When was the last time since 2009 there was a $500+ billion tech valuation that lost 90% or more? After a certain point , 100% market penetration is achieved and these products become mainstream and profitability follows. See Uber and Tesla for examples.

    • hungryhobbit 2 hours ago

      Read history: people always think everything is fine ... until it isn't.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

        > people always think everything is fine ... until it isn't

        History is also replete with people constantly predicting collapses that don't come. Timing the market is very hard with numbers, it's total nonsense if one is just going off vibes.

        • za_creature 2 hours ago

          Most bank runs tend to be driven by vibes, not numbers though.

          The good news is that these folks seem to be in possession of a vibe-rator.

          • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

            > bank runs

            Anthropic, SpaceX and OpenAI are not banks. (Also, we had the largest bank runs in American history three years ago. The ordinary American barely noticed.)

            • za_creature 2 hours ago

              They're not profitable either, so the money has to come from somewhere, no?

              • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

                > the money has to come from somewhere, no?

                Yes. Equity investors. The ones who buy hundreds of billions to trillions of dollars of American stocks a quarter.

                • za_creature 1 hour ago

                  And these equity-investors, do they use their own money to buy the (presumably non-voting) stocks?

                  Cause if that's the case, I see no reason for a government bailout should things go south. Nobody's pension would be affected by some private investor losing money on a bad investment.

                  But if that's not the case, then someone somewhere along the chain is acting as a bank, subject to a vibe-driven run.

                  • dboreham 1 hour ago

                    If much of the money comes from passive funds, presumably the other stocks in those funds will need to be sold?

                  • JumpCrisscross 59 minutes ago

                    > these equity-investors, do they use their own money to buy the (presumably non-voting) stocks?

                    Yes [1].

                    > Nobody's pension would be affected by some private investor losing money on a bad investment

                    ...pensions also invest in the stock market.

                    > if that's not the case, then someone somewhere along the chain is acting as a bank, subject to a vibe-driven run

                    You're confusing deeply unrelated concepts. Whether or not someone who loses money is politically sympathetic has nothing to do with whether they're at risk of a bank run.

                    [1] https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/20260319/html/f22...

                    • za_creature 23 minutes ago

                      I made no mention of anyone being politically sympathetic or otherwise. A private investor is _private_ and thus not subject to a government bailout. The argument for government bailouts used to be that "grandpa would lose his pension", I merely stated the terms that would make this non-applicable.

                      If pensions invest in the stock market, then they are de-facto acting as a bank. And last I checked, in the land of the free, you get to withdraw your 401k should you vibe with the decision to do so [please don't do this based on this post alone].

      • aurareturn 2 hours ago

        Nasdaq is 5.4x higher now than peak dotcom.

        So just buy the dip if it actually crashes.

      • Karrot_Kream 2 hours ago

        This is one of those arguments that is so vacuous you can apply it to anything and always be right.

        > "There's no way you'll hurt yourself walking to the living room"

        > "Read history: people always think everything is fine ... until it isn't."

      • olalonde 1 hour ago

        And people are right most of the time. For every actual bubble, there are easily a dozen "bubbles" that aren't in fact bubbles.

    • bunderbunder 2 hours ago

      The old saying goes, the market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.

      I’m not necessarily expecting a crash any time soon. (But we average a major correction, what? every 8 years? So if you keep predicting one long enough you will eventually have been right all along.) But I do feel comfortable saying OpenAI and Anthropic are overpriced. For more or less the same reason Cisco was overpriced in the late ‘90s. It’s not that what they were making wasn’t valuable; it’s that we got out over our skis a bit over how much of it the world could actually manage to consume in the immediate future.

    • fnordpiglet 2 hours ago

      If note the dotcom boom lasted from about 1995 until 2000. Housing bubble longer. Theres no time table on when the bubble bursts, and the web didn’t die and neither did housing when the burst happened. It is just a reset and consolidation of overtly excessive speculation. It’s not like the bust leads to an end of civilization.

    • lmm 2 hours ago

      > After a certain point , 100% market penetration is achieved and these products become mainstream and profitability follows. See Uber and Tesla for examples.

      Groupon got to pretty much 100% penetration, still crashed and burned right after IPO. I think Zynga followed a similar trajectory.

    • _fizz_buzz_ 1 hour ago

      In 2004 people were predicting that the real estate bubble would burst and then nothing happened. Until it did.

  • aurareturn 2 hours ago

    I don't think OpenAI or Anthropic are predicting that the AI market is going to collapse. In fact, I think both are bullish that the public still isn't pricing in exponential growth.

    I think what is happening is that OpenAI is racing to IPO before Anthropic because their growth isn't as impressive. If you are the weaker company, you should IPO first to lock up the cash.

    • Avicebron 2 hours ago

      What are they offering the public (not me and you writing code in our free time)?

      • aurareturn 2 hours ago

        They are offering the public an opportunity to become shareholders and they are giving their investors and employees liquidity.

        • Avicebron 2 hours ago

          I mean as a long-term product, not as a offer to join a hype cycle.

          • aurareturn 2 hours ago

            Automating a large portion of existing white collar work, accelerating scientific discoveries, brain for robotics, etc. These are compelling offers.

            • Avicebron 2 hours ago

              Sure, how does that benefit the public?

              • aurareturn 2 hours ago

                I don't know. Some will benefit, some will not. The topic here is the IPOs.

              • justapassenger 2 hours ago

                What have the Romans ever do for us?!

                • undersuit 39 minutes ago

                  Their ruins are great tourist attractions.

              • ArmadilloGang 1 hour ago

                Short term, nations with a high rate of white collar employment and fewer social services will suffer greatly.

                Eventually, and likely in the lifetimes of most people living today, we would have to see something akin to universal basic income (UBI) that covers the necessities in order to stave off massive civil unrest.

                If the white collar labor of human beings can’t compete with the output of AI, we either all become blue collar workers or we re-invent the concepts of work and play.

                I’m not aware of any existing or proposed economy framework that adequately accounts for the automation that is nearly here at scale. We are not just automating away jobs - we are automating away the value that human beings have within a productive community. Before the mass starvation will come the mass suicide. Our culture teaches us that a feeling of self worth is derived from our perceived productivity. If we cannot feel successful, we may lose our wills to live.

    • bunderbunder 2 hours ago

      I can’t imagine them actually being bullish about exponential growth, when both seem instead to be stagnating. I’m more inclined to believe they’re just maintaining a level of hype in public because that’s what you do.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

        > when both seem instead to be stagnating

        What's the evidence for Anthropic stagnating?

        • Eufrat 1 hour ago

          The same evidence that they are growing. Tea leaves.

        • bunderbunder 1 hour ago

          They’ve claimed a big revenue run rate for this quarter. But it’s non-GAAP, so you kind of have to assume shenanigans. Earlier this year they were telling a court their revenue was like 1/4 of what they had told the public. I consider the number they came up with when they had to worry about committing perjury to be more trustworthy (because I’m a pill), so that would also indicate shenanigans. My guess is they are inflating that revenue run rate figure by booking token pre-payments from enterprise contracts now instead of spreading it over time as GAAP would mandate. And at the same time their big enterprise clients are talking about scaling back their usage.

          So we’ve got a combination of signs that they’ve been inflating their revenue growth, and signs that their customers are losing their appetite for contributing to that revenue growth. I suppose it’s not a slam dunk, but it feels to me like as strong an indicator as one could hope for a private blitzscaler startup like this.

          • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

            Oh, to be clear, I'm not saying there is evidence they're all a-okay. I just hadn't seen any evidence that they were stalling out. (I have for OpenAI.)

    • 2ff 1 hour ago

      "I think both are bullish that the public still isn't pricing in exponential growth."

      So youre saying they will both become the economy whilst Google, Apple et al let them?

      Man the idiotic statements on here are insane. Why do you fools pretend to know a subject well enough to spout such nonsense?

      • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

        > youre saying they will both become the economy

        They said exponential and you read unlimited.

        • christophilus 53 minutes ago

          An exponent on $1T isn’t unlimited, but it is an uninvestible thesis in my book.

JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

Net buying of corporate equities by American households, trusts, funds and non-profits has averaged $660bn per year for the last few years [1]. $200bn is not fundamentally a stretch for the American equity markets, let alone capital markets more broadly.

[1] https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/20260319/html/f22... line 16, 2023 to 2025

  • idiotsecant 2 hours ago

    A third of all spending is not fundamentally a stretch?

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      > A third of all spending is not fundamentally a stretch?

      Where did you get spending? That's net buying of stocks by non-financial Americans. It's the new money that has, on average, gone into the U.S. stock market from that section of investors every year. A third of it going into these new issuances doesn't need to break anything.

      • djeastm 1 hour ago

        Dumb question here, but would it necessarily mean the other stocks they might've bought (i.e. the rest of the market) will not get the cash infusion and will thus likely drop in valuation?

        • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

          > would it necessarily mean the other stocks they might've bought (i.e. the rest of the market) will not get the cash infusion and will thus likely drop in valuation?

          ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.

          Almost certainly, to some degree. But that doesn’t mean anything has to drop. Just not rise, or not rise as much as it would have. Or potentially some other company that would have gone public or sold shares doesn’t do it now.

      • themafia 41 minutes ago

        > A third of it going into these new issuances doesn't need to break anything.

        Other than it not going somewhere more productive. Are you willing to just bury 1/3 of your income in the back yard?

  • soared 2 hours ago

    A 30% increase in one year, across only 3 companies, seems like a of a stretch. Especially given current economic/etc climates.

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      > 30% increase in one year

      30% above the average. Households bought $1.6 trillion in Q3 of 2025, for example. (Foreigners bought a further $650 and $700 billion in Q3 and Q4, respectively.)

      American capital markets are ridiculously deep.

      • coliveira 25 minutes ago

        > capital markets are ridiculously deep.

        American market valuation is more than twice the entire US GDP. So ridiculous is a good description of what's going on.

timmg 2 hours ago

The way I've been thinking about it: there is too much money trying to pour into the market. That's why valuations are so high.

Maybe getting more of these big private companies public will bring valuations down a bit.

(Just my impression. No math or financial studies behind it :)

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    > there is too much money trying to pour into the market

    Keep in mind that inflation ran over 7% annualized in April [1].

    [1] https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm

    • philipallstar 2 hours ago

      Inflation is a measure of the cost of living. It's not got loads to do with large-scale, institutional investments.

      • 9question1 2 hours ago

        That depends. Inflation is a measure of the cost of living in terms of currency. It can be high either if goods and services required for living become scarce, or if currency supply increases. Currency supply increasing does affect asset prices.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

        > Inflation is a measure of the cost of living

        The faster your cash loses value, the stronger your incentive to trade it for something else. That something else can be financial assets.

        > It's not got loads to do with large-scale, institutional investments

        For investors, particularly retail investors, the consumer price index is most relevant. But for whatever it's worth, producer prices are up over 16% in April (7% excluding "foods, energy, and trade services," which jumped over 50% annualized) [1].

        To be clear, I'm floating a hypothesis here. I have seen no evidence linking inflation to demand for these companies' shares. (If anything, it should be the inverse.)

        [1] https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ppi.nr0.htm

      • thrawa8387336 2 hours ago

        Inflation then is already higher. Cost of living is driven mostly by rent

    • Alive-in-2025 1 hour ago

      From that doc, prices went up 0.6% in one month, multiple by 12 get 7.2% annual inflation rate.

    • Auracle 1 hour ago

      The vast majority of that was fuel.

      • JumpCrisscross 50 minutes ago

        > vast majority of that was fuel

        Everything else is up around 3% YoY. And if energy and transportation are up double digits, and producer prices are up double digits, other consumer prices will follow.

      • themafia 40 minutes ago

        Yea and the cost of fuel has zero downstream effects on the economy.

  • hungryhobbit 2 hours ago

    No, the crash (that we all know is coming) will do that. Until then, history teaches that we'll just keep going up and up

    • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

      > the crash (that we all know is coming) will do that. Until then, history teaches that we'll just keep going up and up

      Stock prices don't have to crash. They can just stagnate while profits catch up and multiples compress.

      Debt binges, on the other hand, tend to go bust with a bang. But after the recent private-credit scare, the AI build-out has been predominantly financed with stock. (I think.)

      • layoric 2 hours ago

        Hasn't there been a _lot_ of debt to buy up Nvidia GPUs? I follow this stuff somewhat closely and it feels intentionally confusing, so I've likely lost track.

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

          > Hasn't there been a _lot_ of debt to buy up Nvidia GPUs?

          I believe that's been concentrated at the hyperscaler layer, and subsided when the aforementioned private-credit scare reared its head. (I haven't heard a big datacenter debt deal announced in a while. Though of course that doesn't mean they aren't being done.)

        • aurareturn 2 hours ago

          And we're still extremely compute constrained. We need more Nvidia GPUs, RAM, power.

      • hn_throwaway_99 2 hours ago

        > Equity bubbles don't have to crash. Prices can just stagnate while profits catch up and multiples compress.

        Is there is historical evidence for that? As someone who used to follow Jeremy Grantham a lot (he considered himself a "bubble historian"), IIRC every bubble he studied always mean reverted, and it usually (maybe always, can't remember) overshot on the downside during the correction.

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

          > IIRC every bubble he studied always mean reverted

          This really depends on how we're defining these things. Let's call a stock-market bubble a period of elevated multiples. That can mean revert by prices decreasing while earnings stay constant or by prices staying constant and earnings rising. (Alternatively, both earnings and multiples can rise and fall.)

          • hn_throwaway_99 1 hour ago

            Yes, for equity prices in particular he talks about P/E ratios (among some other metrics like corporate profit margins), and so you're right, it would be possible for this to mean revert by prices holding stagnant and earnings catching up. However, as far as I can remember (primarily because a big emphasis of his was how unchecked bubbles can cause a lot of damage on the downside) all the historical bubbles he studied (something like 50) always crashed with a big price drop. Not 100% sure though, which is why I was curious if you had any contrary examples.

    • irjustin 2 hours ago

      This is one of those "everyone who dies, breaths air" statements.

      It's frustrating people who parrot it think they're smart by saying it to others with no basis and finally when it does happen they're like SEE SEE!?

      > Until then, history teaches that we'll just keep going up and up

      And this is the more important part. As long as you're <40 you SHOULD always buy SPY or VOO, even at the very top.

      People have been saying the crash has been coming since 2022. If you believed this and acted on it, you would've missed 3-4 +10%/yr returns.

      As Buffet says: You can't time the market; be in it.

      • aurareturn 2 hours ago

        I was old enough to remember the 08 crash. Then the market starting recovering in 2011/2012 and the sentiment was that the system would crash again soon like 08. Turns out, it was an amazing time to invest.

        Post 08 crash, all sorts of conspiracy websites like Zero Hedge were popular saying how the world economy would keep crashing.

        • cogogo 2 hours ago

          I am old enough to have had multiple career changes since starting on a major firm’s rates floor in 2008. These IPOs are tiny compared to the overall stock market and the stock market is absolutely tiny compared to debt markets. People consistently underestimate the size of the world economy or even their local economy. The world may look small from an orion capsule near the moon but almost every aspect of human society is bigger than most people can reason about. It is possible these IPOs have an outsized impact on sentiment for weird reasons. But it won’t be an actual outsized impact on capital markets.

          Edit: I should add the AI bubble can absolutely burst but there is no reason to believe these IPOs are the end of the ride. If I knew I would be…

        • nm980 1 hour ago

          Without massive government intervention it probably would have

        • sailfast 1 hour ago

          The only reason this happened was due to taxpayers bailing out financial institutions. This only exacerbated an insane amount of moral hazard already present in the market following previous bailouts.

          Unfortunately, the US Government continued to run themselves into the ground spending-wise and may have a difficult time with another bailout, unless everyone pretty much agrees that we cannot have a USG failure, so they all pretend like nothing happened.

          Eventually the merry-go-round stops, I'm just not sure what the catalyst will be, and it might be 100 years from now.

      • munk-a 2 hours ago

        Right now SPY not be such a great idea with SpaceX launch upcoming since it will be included into it immediately. Retail investors will be bearing that particular flop's cost.

      • bdangubic 2 hours ago

        no one is going to get wealthy buying SPY/VOO. you might get rich, but not wealthy. things have changed now in a sense that handful of companies are large percentage of the stock market to the point where one has to question why invest in “s&p 500” vs “s&p 25-ish”

        while going with the tried&true makes some sense, I think we have to open our eyes to a different reality of our stock market… and this market concentration into few companies is going to get a lot worse…

        • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

          > things have changed now in a sense that handful of companies are large percentage of the stock market to the point where one has to question why invest in “s&p 500” vs “s&p 25-ish”

          A small number of companies have always driven most stock-market gains. Betting on size isn't fundamentally a bad bet. But it is a bet against value and the historical tendency for small companies to be higher risk and higher reward.

          • bdangubic 1 hour ago

            you may be technically correct but today’s concentration in say top 10-15 companies is historic and by significant margin. I have been self-employed for a long time and somewhat “forced” into being “an investor” and starting in 2021-2022-ish I took my money out of all the “funds” … while I do not disagree that it is “a bet” - it is a calculated bet. things are different now even if historically you are right, no question

      • manoDev 2 hours ago

        It doesn’t seem Berkshire is that much in the market right now.

        • ElProlactin 1 hour ago

          Just to add some color using real numbers: Berkshire's Q1 cash pile was $397.4 billion, which is nearly 60% of its investable assets.

      • caspper69 2 hours ago

        One of my favorite phrases is “the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.”

        Even if all signs point to impending doom, at the end of the day if people are still buying, stocks will hold their value.

    • TechSquidTV 2 hours ago

      I very much disagree that it's coming. I think we need to completely reset our expectations of how the market works. There's been nearly an entire generation working in this "new" bull market, where things like EPS mean absolutely nothing and speculation no longer requires actual returns.

      • ElProlactin 1 hour ago

        > There's been nearly an entire generation working in this "new" bull market

        You mean 0DTE babies?

      • djeastm 1 hour ago

        >I think we need to completely reset our expectations of how the market works.

        Is this not just "It's different this time" thinking? I remember it being used all the time during the dotcom boom

  • 1270018080 2 hours ago

    There is nowhere else for that money to go

skybrian 29 minutes ago

From Matt Levine’s column today:

> The index demand is not 100% of the stock available in the IPO, or 110%, or even 50%. But it’s plausibly more than 25%. It’s not a short squeeze, but it’s a lot. Add a reported 30% allocation to retail, and arguably a majority of the IPO is being sold to price-insensitive investors. That is one way to get a high IPO price.

d_burfoot 2 hours ago

> Firms in the broad Russell 3000 share index have a total market value of $79trn

I sometimes try to get people to worry about the catastrophic state of American public finances by pointing out that the net national debt, including unfunded liabilities, is estimated to be $175T [0]. The government could appropriate all the equity from the top 3000 largest companies, and also the entire real estate market, and it still would not be able to pay its debt (RE market is $55T).

[0] https://balajis.com/p/americas-175-trillion-problem

  • ElProlactin 1 hour ago

    The thing is that at these levels of debt, repayment is never the goal.

    • LPisGood 1 hour ago

      How can you use a word like “never” when this debt is literally unprecedented in the history of the world

      • avaer 1 hour ago

        It can never be repaid. Presumably the people in charge of generating it are not oblivious to this fact.

        "If you owe the bank $100, that's your problem. If you owe the bank $100 million, that's the bank's problem."

        • sarchertech 1 hour ago

          It goes beyond that. $175 trillion includes all future entitlement spending not debt, it’s crazy to call all future entitlement spending for every living person debt. By that metric there’s essentially no such thing as a solvent government anywhere in the world and there never has been in modern history.

    • testrun 1 hour ago

      Well, will be interesting to see how this play out. The US federal debt repayments is already above $1trillion a year.

    • 827a 58 minutes ago

      Repayment isn't a goal that anyone in the system should reasonably want. Federal debt is not like credit card debt. Debt is a product that the US Government sells. Me, being a big corporation or human, go to the USG and say "I need somewhere to park my money that is safeish from inflation". The USG sells me debt at X.Y% interest. The money now generates safe interest, which means its safeish from inflation. A world where the USG "repays the debt" is a world where this essential product is no longer available.

      High levels of debt only signals high demand for this product.

      This is super-counterintuitive, but the debt has little to do with the deficit. We could run a surplus and still be in the same level of debt (in fact, this would be a tremendous place to be). We could run a deficit and have no debt (just print money, duh). The decisions that go into column A generally do not impact the decisions our leaders have to make in column B, though there are of course convenient relationships between the two.

      • ElProlactin 29 minutes ago

        > Repayment isn't a goal that anyone in the system should reasonably want.

        Repayment to $0 isn't a reasonable goal but there are a lot of problems with your argument.

        The biggest question is about sustainability. Is the debt-to-GDP ratio stable/manageable and is the interest rate on the debt below the economy's growth rate? If the answer is no, you have a problem.

        > High levels of debt only signals high demand for this product.

        This is backwards. The amount of debt is set mostly by government supply, which is driven by deficits. The demand signal is the price, which in this case is the yield. If the demand was high, yields would drop as the amount of debt grew. Instead, we have rising debt and rising yields, which means supply outstrips demand.

        The US no longer has a AAA sovereign credit rating for a reason. When Moody's (the last agency to downgrade the US) stripped the US of its AAA rating, it cited "rising debt and interest costs 'that are significantly higher than similarly rated sovereigns.'"

        The biggest issue at this point isn't the principal, it's the interest. Interest is the fastest-growing line item in the federal budget. It's almost at $1 trillion/year now and expected to nearly double by 2035. You either have to cut from other spending or borrow more to pay the interest.

        Your comment implies that this doesn't have a real cost, which is silly.

  • carlosjobim 1 hour ago

    Government debt isn't like personal debt or business debt. The treasury can choose to not honur it, and there's nothing anybody can do about it. Of course they're not going to find a market to sell more debt to after that, but wouldn't you say they already have enough?

    No sympathy for people and institutions who make deals with the devil and expect the government to forever enslave taxpayers to honour those deals and pay back with interest.

    • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

      > Of course they're not going to find a market to sell more debt to after that

      Argentina is doing fine. The real constraint would be that defaulting on the debt would cause a credit crisis and bank collapses.

      • Avicebron 1 hour ago

        Pretty sure this is why the bankruptcy guy from NY was sent in

    • flerchin 1 hour ago

      The way I understand my money market settlement account at vanguard, is that it's all, or nearly all, treasuries. Treasury not honoring government debt would be the worst bank failure in the history of the world.

    • sarchertech 1 hour ago

      We also don’t have anywhere near $175 trillion in debt. That’s a crazy made up number.

    • donavanm 1 hour ago

      As mentioned defaults do shockingly little to change future funding. Its been years since i looked but its something like a few years of “cool down” on issuance and a few points of coupon premium. The economist has done some great, very accessible, articles on this over the years.

      Second, its critical that treasury bonds are denominated in USD. The us gov controls the monetary policy and can choose to inflate away the debt over time. This is in contrast to EM debt where they get trapped with foreign denominated bonds. See also the tensions around EU debt, greece, etc.

  • 827a 1 hour ago

    The $175T number is unfair because it treats Social Security and Medicare/aid as a liability instead of the service that they are. You might as well say the US is in infinite debt, because we'll always be paying something for our military every year, so infinity years * any dollars = infinite debt.

    Also: All of those numbers you use to scare people are way, way off.

    • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

      > it treats Social Security and Medicare/aid as a liability instead of the service that they are

      It's a liability because the U.S. has promised to pay it. We haven't committed to a level of military spending backed by our full faith and credit.

      EDIT: Never mind! Apparently we can just cut social security payments.

      • sarchertech 1 hour ago

        The NATO treaty says that we have to maintain our ability to resist armed attack, so there is some minimum. And we’ve made public commitments to spend at least 2% of GDP (though that isn’t part of the treaty).

        • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

          Neither of those are full faith and credit guarantees. Congress can nullify them in a way it Constitutionally cannot actual debts.

          • sarchertech 1 hour ago

            SS and Medicare aren’t debts either in that sense. Congress can reduce benefits if they please.

            In Flemming v. Nestor SCOTUS ruled that SS benefits are not guaranteed contractual rights but are instead statutory entitlements that Congress may modify or revoke.

  • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

    ...what does this have to do with these IPOs?

  • alex_young 1 hour ago
      The U.S. Treasury publishes a daily total of the national debt, which as of May 2026 was $39 trillion.
    
      a little less than half of the total national debt is owed to the "Federal Reserve and intragovernmental holdings"
    
      In December 2020, foreigners held 33% ($7 trillion out of $21.6 trillion) of publicly held U.S. debt
    

    [~] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_debt_of_the_United_St...

  • Anon1096 1 hour ago

    Including all of the Social Security obligations for the current population is nonsense. For one it is money that will be paid from now for another ~60 years, and for 2 it's something that probably will just get cut as the trust fund starts getting into dire straits. It's not really an obligation if it's one act of congress away from being fixed (and without doing something like a debt jubilee that would destroy the dollar).

    The rest of your article is complete bogus and the economic equivalent of climate change denial.

  • jonahbenton 28 minutes ago

    This misunderstands the power of monetization, or mistakes "dollars" having some kind of fixed "value." They do not. Whether one agrees with that or not, thinking of this as a "debt" problem where a hypothetical move is to appropriate equity- setting aside the fact that equity ALSO is not in a fixed unit of measure- anyway, thinking of appropriating equity to solve a public debt problem is a category error. That is how accounting works for business structures that exist within a monetary system but NOT for government and currency printers that define the monetary system. The MMT people are right about this. Public debt is a measure of private sector wealth. That is how the machine works.

BLKNSLVR 43 minutes ago

Is SpaceX going to eat Tesla? As in, are a bunch of Tesla investors going to be migrating across to SpaceX since that seems to be getting more of Elon's attention these days, especially with xAI barnacled onto the side of it?

The money to participate in the IPO has to come from somewhere...

SomaticPirate 2 hours ago

No doubt these companies are woefully overvalued. But this won’t stop me from putting in orders for several thousand dollars of shares with at market open. There will undoubtedly be plenty of buyers and I expect them to gain rapid entry into the indexes which will unlock a flood of additional capital from 401ks and pensions

megadragon9 1 hour ago

I don't think the market will swallow the stock offerings until we see early signs of GDP growth attributable to these entities. But until then, I think the cost is higher than the benefit, which "The dead economy theory" essay covered it well [0]

[0]: https://www.owenmcgrann.com/p/the-dead-economy-theory

  • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

    > don't think the market will swallow the stock offerings until we see early signs of GDP growth attributable to these entities

    Investors in these companies are going to be looking for revenue and pathway to profitability. I'm not sure anyone needs to see an impact on GDP to invest.

golden-face 1 hour ago

Feels more like: can the bond market handle any potential outflows as money is rotated into these IPOs?

  • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago

    > can the bond market handle any potential outflows as money is rotated into these IPOs?

    Yes. Even if this capital is just rotated out of the equity markets, it would be fine. The bond markets are orders of magnitude deeper.

worik 35 minutes ago

What is the value proposition for Space-X?

As far as I can tell it is in machines they cannot make work, servicing markets that do not exist for a service that will not matter for 20-years.

That and a third rate AI company that no body wants, except to get rid of.

This will probably go swimmingly at the start - but as time goes by and they raise more capital, Musk snorts more K and the glory fades, what then?

SilverElfin 2 hours ago

Can the stock market remain legitimate after such a brazen example of dumping? Regular everyday people can’t access private shares and participate in upside even if they want to. They don’t have the connections like VCs, and aren’t accredited investors. And companies ban secondary transactions, which should be forced by law to be always allowed.

And then after all that, the public have to deal with their index funds, ETFs, mutual funds, pensions, 401ks, etc buying up these overpriced stocks. You have a space company that also acquired a failing social media platform and failing AI company with little revenue justification for the valuation, and a lot of other obligations that make it financially a disaster (like payments owed for spectrum). And two frontier labs with no real moats, each looking for regulatory capture based on safety or ethics or whatever.

To the everyday person, the stock market after the fast listing rule, these three IPOs, and AI job loss, will feel no more legitimate than prediction markets or crypto.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    > then they have to deal with their index funds, ETFs, mutual funds, pensions, 401ks, etc buying up overpriced stocks

    Only about a third of American stocks are held by passive capital [1]. Out of that, index funds are about 16%, and most of those in America reference the S&P 500, which has not yet announced whether it is changing its rules.

    [1] https://alexchinco.com/double-what-you-think-it-is.pdf

    • vmbm 1 hour ago

      Sure, but it's the Americans that can least afford to be stood up as exit liquidity that have the most exposure here relative to their net worth. The ultra wealthy are going to be heavily overrepresented in the active basket. Meanwhile the folks lower down on the income scale are more likely to have their money in passive funds.

paulpauper 2 hours ago

Why wouldn't it? There huge demand for these shares. It's not like $3+ trillion is dumped at once. It's a tiny percentage of it, and the high multiple does the rest of the work.

  • asjgGa6 2 hours ago

    There was a huge demand for the World Online IPO in The Netherlands in the late 2000 bubble. Retail investors bought it thinking they got a unicorn.

    Turns out it was a scam and shares fell on the first day. Soon after the entire bubble burst.

    That said, I don't even see "huge demand" for the AI triocorns right now. Unlike in 2000, most people are skeptical.

    • aurareturn 2 hours ago
        World Online IPO
      

      €64 million revenue on €91 million losses.

      Meanwhile, Anthropic is adding ~$10-$15b ARR every month.

        That said, I don't even see "huge demand" for the AI triocorns right now. Unlike in 2000, most people are skeptical.
      

      I personally think there is massive demand. I think Anthropic will easily eclipse $2 trillion marketcap on first day of trading.

rvz 1 hour ago

How long have the SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic investors been waiting for an IPO (excluding tender offers)? 24 years, 10 years, and 5 years.

You really think they are going to hold off against selling for multi-millions for another year, especially SpaceX?

OpenAI (and especially) Anthropic are at risk from being undercut by the Chinese labs and their open-weight models and may cause their valuations to be questioned.

If that doesn't cause a correction, then SpaceX will do it for them. There is no lock up for the 5% of shares being available.

jmyeet 2 hours ago

So what people seem to be unaware of or are purposely ignoring is that OpenAI and Anthropic have invested trillions in a rapdily depreciating asset. There was a HN post from a day or two ago where someone bought a V100 for 150 pounds and connected it to their computer. Well that was a $10k GPU in 2017. That's the fate of H100/B100 GPUs in 5-10 years (and I suspect closer to 5). What do you do if you've invested $1 trillion that will be worth $100 billion or less in 5 years? I think it'll be worse than that because modern hardware at that time will still probably be the same Wattage but have much higher performance so you'll be getting much higher performance-per-Watt and that's going to really matter.

The only company I'm confident will survive this hardware crunch and still be relatively successful in this space is Google.

OpenAI in particular is a bet that there will be an AI moat and that OpenAI will "win". I don't think there will be a moat and China is a big reason why (eg DeepSeek).

SpaceX is a little different. Yes, launching rockets is a business but it's not a trillion dollar business. 100 Falcon 9 launches doesn't even break $10 billion in revenue. Plus, Starship faces cost overruns, delays and significant headwinds.

But the real kicker is that SpaceX was used to bail out Elon from the Twitter purchase and the xAI investors from the first Twitter bailout. That's a problem because xAI is burning $1 billion a month in a company where that really matters and I don't think Grok will "win" here. Like, at all. SpaceX would be a significantly more attractive company without xAI.

The big potential growth area is Starlink. For that to justify this valuation I think you need handheld Starlink phones. That requires a lot of satellites at a relatively low orbit, which also means they have a relatively short life (because they burn up in the atmosphere). And for that Starship must succeed.

All the AI data center in space stuff is complete bullshit. It makes no sense. It'll never be viable. It's not going to happen.

EDIT: let me clarify because I was careless in my wording. So, Anthropic individually has not spent "trillions". That was more of a general statement on AI spending. Anthropic has raised ~$100B, the last round of which was $65B (at $965B post-money IIRC). This industry as a whole needs to recoup trillions.

Anthropic seems to be in a better position (as a business) than OpeNAI is but I do think the it's a race to cash out before depreciating assets, well, drepreciate and there's the real risk as compute becomes cheaper and the AI craze wears off, Claude just may not have the growth trajectory that is built into the price.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    > What do you do if you've invested $1 trillion that will be worth $100 billion or less in 5 years?

    I think the aim would be to generate at least $900bn of cash flow from those assets.

  • qaq 2 hours ago

    "OpenAI and Anthropic have invested trillions in a rapdily depreciating asset". Anthropic raised a bit over 100B and has 47B ARR. Where are you getting trillions from ?

  • aurareturn 2 hours ago

    Source on the trillions invested?

  • tristanj 2 hours ago

    Starlink Mobile (i.e. Starlink direct-to-cellphone without modifications) is already happening, and fast. Phones that have the recently announced Qualcomm X105 modem will support Starlink Mobile 5G at speeds up to 150Mbps, direct from satellite. The Qualcomm X105 modem will be in most Android flagship phones coming later this year, and by 2027 most new phones will support Starlink direct-to-cell. The next iPhone that supports the 3GPP Rel-19 standard will too.

    The rollout relies on Starlink V3 sats, which can only be launched Starship, but Starship progress is going well and is already able to deploy satellites from orbit. SpaceX is capable of launching Starlink V3 on the current iteration of Starship, but they want more testing. We'll probably see Starlink V3 launching late this year or early next year.

  • paulbgd 1 hour ago

    As I was reading the start of your argument, I thought you were gonna call the models a depreciating asset! Totally agree about GPUs too, but literally everything they’re spending money on has to be rebuilt to stay competitive. They have to go for the moonshot of training a full new model when better tech comes, they have to upgrade GPUs to keep their data centers efficient.

    • jmyeet 1 hour ago

      Technically, the model is a depreciating asset too. Just consider the difference between a model you need a B200 cluster to run vs one you can run on a Raspberry Pi. One's going to have a moat around it that gives it value and the other isn't. It's a hyperbolic argument to be sure but the nature of "enthusiast" hardware is that we're currently running, say, ~27B parameter models on hardware for a few thousand. What's that going to look like in 2 years?

      Anthropic/OpenAI really need to train ever-bigger models to keep their moat. But that assumes there isn't a law of diminishing returns and also that a compressed model isn't sufficient for what many people need.

      You mihgt say that the training is a barrier. And it is, kind of. Notice how it's Chinese companies coming out with open-source models like DeepSeek and Qwen? That's no accident. As soon as DeepSeek came out I knew what was going on: China is going to make sure no single Western company "owns" AI. It's in their national interest for that not to happen.

      I wouldn't be surprised if the rush-to-IPO is motivated, at least in part, by getting ahead of Chinese AI commoditization.