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Google own 5-6% of the shares of SpaceX. SpaceX is seeking a valuation of $1.77T which means Google's shares would be worth $88.5B-$106.2B. I'm not a skeptic of AI/LLMs but this makes me deeply suspicious of these circular deals. What happens when the music stops?
There are no dark GPUs. Compute translates directly to money for these frontier labs.
I think everyone is reading way too much into this. Sure there is some circular transactions that are sus, but this ain't it.
I want to make a comparison with a car rental business and say that it would be like valuing Hertz entirely on the basis of the number of cars they own, as opposed to how many they rent out, but cars have a much longer depreciation period, if there are no customers they’re not costing you more money, unlike your computer which you are using for training and sucking up massive amounts of energy, and those cars do maintain decent value even after they’re of little use to the car rental company, unlike the compute here.
That's the default assumption but in the new GPU+Memory constrained age isn't true.
Time on 4 year old H100 servers costs more now than when they were new (!!)
Same with GPUs. There is also a huge market for used GPUs from 1-2 generations ago. The A100 is a six year old chip at this point and is still running strong, especially for inference. Like cars, chips can be refurbished and repaired. A hyperscaler or even mid level player here isn't going to hold onto chips for their entire usable lifespan.
There's a reason old 3090's went from $600 in 2022 o to over $1K in 2026.
So are you using the computers or not? I'd argue that if you're using them for training, then it's not wasted capacity. And if you're not using them, then you can turn them off, so you're not sucking up energy.
I don’t know but this dude at my son’s school has a 32GB RTX 5090 and it’s worth more than what he paid for; and he did the same trick with the RTX 4090 before that.
Until shortages are the rule, these assets are appreciating
the comment you replied to is word-by-word what people hyping canadian telecoms were saying before the dotcom crash!
There is depreciation, which is taking the purchase price and dividing it across N number of years (typically 5). That's the D in EBITDA and is mostly used as a profitability calculation.
The depreciation of a GPU also gets mucked up in the current GPU financed market as well. DDTL loans. The people running the GPUs often don't even own the GPU, they lease it, so there is nothing for them to depreciate (D).
The analogy that a GPU is like a used car makes zero sense. There is no oil or tires to change on a GPU. They don't wear out in the same way that a rental car would. They are housed in climate controlled locations with clean power. They just don't fail the way that is portrayed in the press.
Useful life of a GPU is based on profitability. When does opex cost more than profitability?
Some companies, like mine, also have support contracts. Anything goes wrong with the GPU (or any part of the system), Dell comes and fixes it at no extra charge. We just migrate customers and workloads to hot spares while the parts are replaced.
As for compute going down in value... the 122TB of enterprise nvme and 2GB of ram in each server that I bought 2 years ago is now worth vastly more than I paid for it. I'm also renting my GPUs out for more money now due to supply being so tight and demand being so high.
The frontier labs are shifting from pricing grounded in the price of compute, to pricing grounded in the intelligence provided, or more specifically the economic value of that intelligence downstream.
The margins on that allow them to pay a hefty premium on compute and still come out ahead.
As they buy more compute at high prices, they're also pricing out competition from cheaper models. It's already become materially more difficult to get compute to run open weight models at competitive prices as a result of frontier labs in the last year.
Let us pin this comment and see how it ages
This might not be true. Someone was comparing Nvidia's production rate with known data center capacity, and they do not match. Their conclusion was that people (possibly even Nvidia) were hoarding GPUs- in the very short term this might be a good strategy, but GPUs go EOL fast. There are other stories about paused datacenter builds that match with this.
TSMC is definitely fully allocated, based on current 40 wk lead times for FPGAs..
This is a reference to the 1990's dot com bubble where internet infrastructure companies overbuilt network capacity, leading to the term "dark fiber". That was an indicator of a bubble because it showed that capacity was larger than demand. OP is saying that this is specifically NOT happening in the case of GPUs yet, indicating that demand still outstrips supply of compute.
>GPUs go EOL fast
We are seeing the opposite of what was expected, GPUs are actually getting more valuable because demand is so great, something that basically never happens. Even older chips have become more valuable.
>paused datacenter builds
It doesn't seem that datacenters have been paused because of lack of demand for AI, it seems mostly that there is a lot of pushback by cities to build these things and also there is a shortage of power to run them.
IMO none of these things point to a AI being a bubble (over-hyped, demand does not match the stated value). It mostly points to the opposite, there is massive demand for AI and every layer of the supply chain is struggling to keep up with that demand.
Sundar Pichai at Q4 2025 earnings call: “We’ve been supply-constrained".
Satya Nadella, 2026: Microsoft would increase total AI capacity by over 80% in the year and roughly double total datacenter footprint over two years.
Microsoft CFO, 2026 earnings call: “We’ve been short now for many quarters. I thought we were going to catch up. We are not. Demand is increasing.”
So yeah, either top management of hyperscalers are doing a 'bit' for the last few years, or Aschenbrenner 'Situational Awareness' is going roughly as predicted and hyperscalers are desperate to acquire compute even at higher cost.
There are actually lots of GPUs in storage somewhere waiting for data center megawatts to put them in.
The NVIDIA GPUs, HBM, land-use permits and power-supply agreements xAI nailed down are absolutely not commodities.
I think xAI is a mess. But let’s call a spade a spade, they speculated on AI compute and they are currently right.
It's sheer brute force, tons of waste, seems like very little thought going in to fitting the implementation to the problem.
The value of compute can drop significantly in the event of users figuring out how to optimise for their particular need. And yep, there are wasteful applications that can burn whatever compute is available, but how much demand for that is there when it's properly priced?
Extreme example. Generating novel 4K VR video on demand. I'm certain there's a market for it, at $10/hour probably quite a healthy one, at $100/hour not so much.
To reap massive profits before depreciation is just plain smart. LLM space, model generation is just plain crowded now too. And everyone thinks a crash is coming.
They could also build out their own end-user infra, but letting someone else which already sells direct to the public do so, is sensible.
I know of the desire to show profit for the IPO, but my point is, this is a good move on its own.
"you have compute, i need compute, i'll pay you for some compute.".
Google itself has a good reputation as a facilities operator. SpaceXAI is operating gas turbines emitting exhaust at ground level.
- https://cloud.sustainability.watch/explore-issues/example-go...
- https://www.sfgate.com/national-parks/article/mount-hood-wat...
They also seemingly dropped their net-zero climate goal:
https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/google-quietly-re...
but it's really bad news for the industry capacity if your best option is unproven space datacenters.
In fact, for all these companies to do what they're going to do, they need a massive, massive massive amount of data centers, a highly improbable number of data centers that need to be built in an highly improbably short amount of time.
And the capitals about to dry off in about a year. So it's a race between these improbable timelines on data center construction, with capital evaporating.
Alphabet/Google profits:
Q1 2025: $34.54 billion
Q2 2025: $28.20 billion
Q3 2025: $34.98 billion
Q4 2025: $34.46 billion
<<Q1 2026: $62.58 billion>>
Amazon profits:
Q1 2025: $17.1 billion
Q2 2025: $18.16 billion
Q3 2025: $21.2 billion
Q4 2025: $21.19 billion
<<Q1 2026: $30.3 billion>>
Both Alphabet/Google and Amazon have invested recently into Anthropic and are doing all sorts of financial chicanery.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-bjNrGFiAI4
Nah, man, it's all fine, they're just going to take down the entire global financial system doing this crap, and by global, I mean <<everyone's>> pensions are going to take a hit, even "fully funded" pension systems.
bko didn’t say there isn’t circular financing going on. They’re just saying this isn’t an example of it. They’re right.
It’s a potential conflict of interest. And if the agreement is fake—if Google cancels without paying the cash—it could be market manipulation. But the influencer space likes to latch onto jargon, and the one it’s overapplying right now is circular financing.
See "M2SL" or "TOTBKCR" on tradingview if you want to see inflation live.
(note: Allied Irish Banks and Anglo Irish Bank are different organizations with the same initials; the latter is the massively fraudulent one run by Sean Quinn who did eventually see a small amount of jail time)
Should the government bail them out or somehow stop the collapse? Arguable. Will they anyway? Almost certainly. These companies have engineered themselves into a position where being allowed to fail would wreak catastrophic damage to the national (and global) economy precisely so that the taxpayer will be left holding the bag if and when it all comes crashing down.
Capitalism is rotten to the core and there's no fix for it.
The fiat economic system is irreparably broken, and we are circling the drain. Another bailout is _probably_ inevitable. But the cycle sure as hell isnt resetting and we are speeding towards something... what it is is unclear though, and when is also unclear.
The part people cant wrap around is the scale of it and the time it takes to go through the super cycle. Theoretically, it all started with the Dot com bubble, which indirectly cause the housing bubble, which caused the GFC. Which caused whatever happened in 2019, which caused QE in 2022 under the guise of COVID, which is causing whatever the hell is happening now.
Capitalism has become uncorked, and money is irreversibly flowing to the top at an increasing rate. The logical next stage is that like 75% of the world's population is literally not even part of any economy. And that doesnt really make any sense
When COVID was ongoing there was a term floating around I liked, "Psychosis" was it. The spell is like that of, denial? Terror & shock?
Trauma might be better?
Looking at trauma responses and how to detect it in humans is an interesting perspective to look at all this with. Personally, if I look at it from "people are afraid, traumatized, defending themselves" and use that to extrapolate how most people (the masses, the non-rich) would act and also the rich - that points me to why theres such a sudden hastening of action and pace of wealth up towards the top in the name of AI & war.
It's very hard to know how much the deal actually increases SpaceX market cap, but unless Google exits their SpaceX position soon it doesn't even make much sense as a circular deal.
If you want to understand how companies behave you really need to look at things from the perspective of people making the decisions.
Except they're not. Anthropic's claims of temporary profitability line up exactly with when SpaceX is giving them discounted compute, OpenAI's such a shitfest they threw the CFO off the glass cliff for daring to push back against the IPO. "Profitable on inference" is an unsubstantiated rumour.
Just look at the copilot changes. Demand switching to other providers immediately when prices rise, and there's not even certainty that the new copilot prices cover costs.
> They might not make back the money from training
This is an understatement. With all the datacenter buildout, they need trillions. For the investors get their money back and the bubble to not implode, they functionally need to unemploy everyone in the US.
If the AI dream is real, society just breaks.
So is "unprofitable on inference".
Thankfully we should find out for real as soon as those S-1 documents arrive.
More like $75/mo per user for the next 5-10 years if they can get 5% of the global population to pay that.
These companies are going all in and growing rapidly, because they want to dominate the market and since it is difficult to differentiate between competitors, even being third place is a terrible place to be in the consumer facing AI space.
The demand is finite. There is clear evidence that it has limits. When costs become great, the consumers set limits, create budgets and seek alternatives. Consumers are still figuring out where the cost/benefit lines are, and we can all see that the lines at least exist.
They're not and it's not clear why you seem to believe that. The immense capex for buildouts, training costs, etc. are not rolled into inference costs. Moreover, companies are already rapidly starting to re-evaluate token spend.
It will likely take a few years for supply to fully catch up, which means xAI will eat well for a while.
I can see a world where a few data centers come on line this year and reduce margins a bit, but it's crazy to think the margins will go to "cost of electricity plus a few percent" anytime soon.
It's a fairly sweet deal for everyone involved. Anthropic/Google get to sell more tokens and xAI gets a war chest for another bite at the apple. I don't have much confidence that they'll do anything with it but that doesn't mean these deals don't make sense for them.
* LLMs are useful
* Company valuations around LLMs are not realistic
Both can be true, much like they were during the Dotcom bubble. The internet turned out to be a pretty real thing. A couple examples below might feel familiar in the next couple months/years.
> Blucora (then InfoSpace): Founded by Naveen Jain, at its peak its market cap was $31 billion and was the largest Internet business in the American Northwest. In March 2000, its stock price reached $1,305 per share, but by 2002 the price had declined to $2.
> Broadcast.com: A streaming media website that was acquired by Yahoo! for $5.9 billion in stock, making Mark Cuban and Todd Wagner multi-billionaires. The site is now defunct.
> eToys.com: An online toy retailer whose stock price hit a high of $84.35 per share in October 1999. In February 2001, it filed for bankruptcy with $247 million in debt. It was acquired by KB Toys, which later also filed for bankruptcy.
> GeoCities: Founded by David Bohnett, it was acquired by Yahoo! for $3.57 billion in January 1999[20] and was shut down in 2009.
> MicroStrategy: After rising from $7 to as high as $333 in a year, its shares lost $140, or 62%, on March 20, 2000, following the announcement of a financial restatement for the previous two years by founder Michael J. Saylor.
** Some scams transcend time **
Great link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_affected_by_...
Cisco was over 400 at one point and Nvidia is around 30. Not quite the same.
Other players today: - Digital Realty 48x - Equinix 75x - CoreWeave (still losing money)
There is likely a bubble of some type here, but I don't think this is the same as the Dotcom bubble.
What caused the crash was Yahoo! being unable to do anything with their acquisitions and Google coming out with a better search engine, undermining Yahoo!'s core product. Google basically pulled the rug from under the dot com bubble.
The situation we're in now with LLMs is different, if I'm right we're actually pre-bubble, the bubble hasn't even started yet.
Nvidia is not losing anything if their stock falls.
So whats left? The typical candidates of course: We poor people. 401k, ETF, etc. we pay the bill.
The real suffering comes from whatever effect there is on the rest of the economy due to a recession, more layoffs, etc.
But the S&P 500 is currently trading at over 2x its average long-term CAPE: https://www.multpl.com/shiller-pe
So it can reasonably be expected to drop more than 50% to return to average long-term valuation levels.
And the "nonfinancial market cap to gross-value-added" ratio is even more insane, I have a site tracking this number: https://sharperatios.com/market-cap-gva.html
And some others might need to pull out when its down.
Money doesn't appear out of thin air.
Why would it lead to recession if a handful of big companies lose money they have?
It will show that the USA is in a recession for sure, but otherwise
Note that a pension plan that invests for you blindly is no better - either the returns are so bad that they are a scam, or they are investing in stocks anyway and so you get the same results but less control. Similar for things like social security, they are either worse options or you need to pump stocks.
We are not going to come up with a market-based solution to fix income inequality. The solution, as much as people in the dwindling middle class resist it, is a strong social safety net coupled with a hard reset on taxation and housing policies. Nobody should be homeless, nobody should be allowed to starve, but you might have to accept that your 401K goes down in exchange for a government guarantee of housing and food.
This is hard for people to accept because they currently have equity in their home or a 401K to save them from starving. But those are transient, individualistic solutions. You can lose your house. You can lose your 401K. Society should be taking care of each other in a broader way than letting everyone accumulate a little, private pile of money.
Also, selling shares puts them in a better position to survive a downturn (more cash, less debt).
Whatever financial games they play in the background, doesn't matter when you make that much per 2 quarters alone.
https://youtu.be/sL9hq7Qj1qc?t=252
shows why the boat is about to go down.
The sci-fi SpaceX S1 talks about asteroid mining and other imaginary chimeric stuff like space data centers... while 80 to 90 of the case is about AI. But their AI case is like BMW bragging about their thriving auto business...while renting all their car factories to Toyota.
If it looks like a bubble and waddles like a bubble and quacks like a bubble what is it?
This is precisely what makes the movie the Big Short interesting: we see that people did identify, within a reasonable time frame, when people would start defaulting and how that would cascade into a true crisis.
It's pretty clear that while the fruits of AI are quite useful, the entire thing is rife with very questionable financial engineering... but I still don't know what it is that makes all of this break. For example, it's obvious that the SpaceX IPO is a massive wealth transfer program, but it's not obvious that it will immediately end in a crash. Given how irrational the stock market has been, I don't see a reason it can't continue to be irrational for long after the bag has been handed over to the retail investors and retirement funds.
And it is far and away the world leader in satellite launch capacity and satellite internet.
Does that justify the massive valuation? Probably not. But it's a factor.
"To big to fail" + money printing going brr-r-r-r
When these companies get in to the index and into the pensions, their share price will become a political problem.
It gets weird when people stop looking at the books and ignore the circularity.
It also increase risk by reducing resiliency.
It's also 'cleaner' then the Nvidia style deals with OAI who are customers.
'Google Finance' is investing in a company.
Just so happens that company leases something to Google. Not so bad.
Nvidia invests in OAI so that money comes right back as sales <- much more conspicuous, looks like 'vendor financing'.
It's not even subtle at this point, what with the attempt at S&P rules changes, the insane valuation, the attempt to change the trade-through rule, and more.
The problem is the valuations assume astronomical growth... that is likely impossible for all of them to simultaneously achieve. Which means something's got to give.
Great deal for Google but they end up basically just paying spacex to pay them back, right?
Circular investing is a thing that is happening with all of these companies related to language models. Google hoping for a ROI isn't a great example of that.
Circular deals aren't bad; what's potentially bad is if those deals are misinterpreted by active investores.
Maybe we've come to celebrate unethical behavior and its become so normalized that we forget to ask ourselves what should be allowed.
Government hands Wall Street another bailout to the tune of trillions of dollars. Wall Street executives and hedge funds use funds to enrich themselves as usual. Main Street and tax payer get fisted again. These massive data centers go bust. Get gutted during bankruptcy and foreclosure proceedings Public deals with the fallout with no help from government.
That's a problem for your kids to figure out ~ those currently getting enriched from these schemes.
Bubble bursts, somewhere between 2008 housing crisis and the dotcom bust.
Really dependent on if there are any OTHER structural problems to compound a fast re-valuation of tech stocks. There's plenty of noise about banks holding large amounts of bad private credit debt. There could be a lot or only a little collapse. There's so much uncertainty and the combination of war, high oil prices, and uncertainty about tarriffs that the market struggles to value anything as international fear drives investment into the US and high prices confusing whether growth is growth or just inflation.
Definitive peace in Iran combined with some sort of sobering AI news signaling the end to the infinite growth party could crush the markets.
This and auto loans. I have NO IDEA how people are affording $770 per month car payments _on top of_ $4.50+ per gallon gasoline.
Either way, as always, we'll do it the American Way: Privatize the profits, socialize the losses.
Eh. There's too much money. Covid response involved printing a lot of money and it all ended up somewhere. The chaos of the current administration has made everything considerably harder to price and the coincidental rise of the LLM has put us in strange situation that is legitimately difficult to price things correctly.
Also the current president of US is Trump and they are in a war that is pumping the energy prices.
Why not bigger than dotcom burst?
This is still only big enough to cause funny banking collapses not actual 2008 scale financial disasters. Banks hold a lot of bad debt, but it's isolated from consumer accounts. Might not want to hold equity in SoftBank though.
> There's so much uncertainty and the combination of war, high oil prices, and uncertainty about tarriffs that the market struggles to value anything as international fear drives investment into the US and high prices confusing whether growth is growth or just inflation.
The big concern lies in what the Trump admin will do. Things could end up merely a bad recession, like the Dotcom and Telecom bubble.
Or they can attempt to keep the bubble going once it collapses, crashing interest rates, and doom the US economy.
Banks are lending to these private funds that are packaging questionable loans into securities (as opposed to banks giving loans or companies issuing bonds). This is the post-2008 place for people to get highly leveraged loans and they probably need to be better regulated.
But yes it doesn't seem like private credit alone will cause problems, the concern I'm trying to outline is a few of these things happening at the same time causing a kind of collapse.
TACO uncertainty is strangely propping up asset values as there's always a credible thought that whatever is happening is pretend or going to be reversed soon. And the expectation that the fed isn't independent any more and will make decisions to prolong the bubble resulting in a bigger crash ambiguously far into the future. Few want to start shorting because they have no concept of how long the market can stay irrational or if 20% inflation might be around the corner instead of a popped bubble.
A financial crash that will make the 2007ff crisis look tame in comparison. That is why Anthropic, OpenAI and SpaceX (which xAI belongs to) are all going public soon and why NASDAQ bent the rules to include them... the current owners all want to raid pension savings worldwide [1] to get their payday before the bubble inevitably bursts.
And when it bursts, you can bet that the vultures will use their fresh cash to buy up assets at fire-sale prices. For the truly rich, a boom-bust cycle is only one thing, an opportunity to achieve extraordinary profit.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48369391
The scenario I see is write-offs. At the moment there are hundreds of billions in IOUs being passed around, much more in liabilities than Lehman had back then in 2007. Compounding that is the frankly insane valuation - it's as clear as day that at least one of the major AI shops will go bust, they all run at a (huge) loss and sooner or later, one of them will run out of cash before achieving market dominance.
Unfortunately, OpenAI and Anthropic are valued at almost 1 trillion $ - backed by nothing but the hope on the winner surviving and achieving the classic VC-backed near-monopoly. The staff can be poached, they don't hold much in IP like patents, the servers and GPUs are mostly owned by third parties like AWS, Microsoft, Google or Oracle - once the cash runs out, they can't sell any assets for even some runway extension because there are no assets. Even the model weights and training data aren't worth much - all competitors already have training data sets of their own, it does not make sense to acquire further data, and model weights are being rendered obsolete by the constant churn of open-weight models particularly from China.
SpaceX is valued even higher, but unlike the other two candidates, they still at least got a viable business even if the entire AI BS bubble collapses, Starlink is a money printer and there's no alternative in sight that matches SpaceX and their reusable rockets.
Now, if either of the three even experiences a large drop in valuation for whatever reason, it's not just experienced VCs that can readily afford (and expect) investments to fail, but this time a lot of "everyday" investment vehicles (such as pension funds) will have to issue write-off losses, and now that they are publicly traded, that may also trigger stop-loss cascade orders further dropping prices, and retail investors will probably join in on the mass panic. That's the #1 risk IMHO.
The #2 risk is that after a collapse, the service providers (i.e. the ones owning the servers) will be sitting on a ton of hardware that has nowhere near recouped its cost. AWS, MS and Google can probably repurpose most of the hardware for their own use and rent out what remains, but they will have to eat significant accounting losses, provoking again a drop in their stock price, but this time with even more blast radius as all three of them are established stock index (and thus ETF) members that a looooot of people have exposure to. But someone like Oracle? They might actually get fried for good.
And the #3 risk is further downstream, particularly relating to NVDA. They have enjoyed years of insane profits because they are the only ones making high-performance AI chips. When demand for new chips collapses due to the event(s) I just described, they can easily shift their TSMC production slots back to GPU wafers and sell these to gamers - but at a far lower profit than before, which again can trigger stock price drops and write-offs.
I won't go further downstream - TSMC and their suppliers are IMHO pretty safe because there is just so much pent up demand from everything not AI, and the construction companies building datacenters don't have too much of a blast radius when the big guns stop expansion projects.
The concrete scenario I'm really, really afraid of: all three succeed with their IPOs, maybe they all survive a year and get included even in S&P 500. The existing shareholders and insiders all slowly dump a lot of their vested stock onto the public market, which in cleartext means into the dozens of billions of $ of retirement contributions. One day, the bubble bursts for whatever reason. The stock markets drop in a panic sell-off, either triggered by stop-loss orders or because retail investors are a herd of sheeple (just like in the 1st covid lockdown). Eventually, circuit breakers on the stock markets will trigger (just like they did in the GME post-apes collapse) and trading will pause, but it will resume until the markets have adjusted to the new valuation... and once the dust clears up, there will be a lot of blood on the floor. Possibly even riots, depending just how much retirement assets just got wiped out.
And who gets stuck with the bonds.
I've been wrong before. However, when was the last time this business model made sense -- that facebook, SpaceX and others, all just pivot from their market niche to general purpose AI datacenter providers.
How on Earth does this make sense?
What happens in a few years when DeepSeek runs on the chinese chips like the Huawei Ascend at a fraction of the cost ?
These are all very high value added companies going into comodity AI hosting and they're all going to make a killing?
Nvidia goes back to being a 100 billion dollar business and everyone else reaps the benefits of cheap tokens.
US is a near monopoly of this pairing. A crash will result in the removal of the fluff and ocerpricing of it all but the stance is beyond strong.
Unless China outcompetes Nvidea AND TSMC AND magically gets 4x cheaper energy they are in a much weaker stance for the long haul.
Fairly simple. You put 16 turbines that don't require permit for a year. After a year has passed you put another 16 pulled from another site and move the initial 16 to the former empty one.
Then you lobby hard to make sure that the authorities read temporary per turbine serial number and not total installed capacity.
Colossus is the world's largest single, unified GPU cluster, all GPUs acting as one coherent supercomputer rather than fragmented pools or multi-site setups. They spun it up in a fraction of the time by all estimates. It's not something you can just throw money at and reproduce the results.
Per Jensen Huang:
"As far as I know, there's only one person in the world who could do that; Elon is singular in his understanding of engineering and construction and large systems and marshaling resources; it's just unbelievable. A supercomputer that you would build would take normally three years to plan and then they deliver the equipment and it takes one year to get it all working."
..."it took 19 days to get Colossus from hardware installation to beginning training, the fastest by far anyone's been able to do that."
https://www.businessinsider.com/jensen-huang-elon-musk-super...
Regarding on site generators. Meta, OpenAI (Microsoft/Oracle) and others are also using on-site gas turbines, generators, and "behind-the-meter" power plants to keep up with the power demand. This has become an industry-wide strategy driven by grid constraints, with natural gas as a fast-deploy option.
It would be great if the grids could keep up with demand, if other options would be considered capable of producing the ongoing demands (ie. more renewable, nuclear, etc) but they're not, and companies are not going to just wait because then they're as good as done.
Ahahaha. Just like when he marshaled resources to buy Twitter?
More like he just cracked the whip, and the actual smart people worked day and night to figure it out, or else they’re fired.
The submarine option in the caves? Expensive, not there on time, didn't work. His push for the screens
Hyperloop was apparently his baby. Fails on all 3 counts.
Tesla self driving. Ineffective, overdue and I can imagine the lawsuits aren't cheap.
It looks like we have an idiot in charge where his only advantage is in pressuring his underlings into reckless behaviour and offloading the responsibility and the negative externalities
Why would I believe a rich guy hyping his company's temporarily magical product when he hypes another guy who is a proven liar and flagrant fraudster? The cool thing is how the Twitter purchase was "on hold" due to bots and now it's mostly bots. But if you own the company making the software that powers the bots, I guess that's ok.
Jensen is smart enough to know he's glossing over the many shortcomings of an ultra-rich loser because it benefits him in the markets. I have no respect for that.
> In comparison, SpaceX/xAI are incredible at building datacentres on time. The original Colossus 1 datacentre was built in 122 days. Musk's empire does have a huge advantage in really understanding how to plan, build and execute enormous infrastructure projects quickly
Without even mentioning that it was done illegally and the air pollution they are creating with gas turbines is wildly irresponsible
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bP80DEAbuo (@ 4:08)
Polluting power generation, straining local power and broken promise after broken promise to fix the situation. And regulators caring more about helping xAI than mitigating the problems.
Edit: from the footnotes: > Colossus actually runs largely on its own on-site gas turbines, which comes out even cheaper: at a simple-cycle heat rate of ~10,000 Btu/kWh and Henry Hub gas at ~$3.50/MMBtu, the fuel bill is only around $90mn a year.
OK, that's crazy. How can I get into renting GPUs to hyperscalers?
Hence why all the bitcoin miners are cashing in (or trying to) by converting their facilities to datacenters.
I get the point the author is trying to make (in that SpaceX's most valuable asset is its compute capacity), but it's not quite the right analogy.
SpaceX is basically Elon's holding company for everything-but-Tesla at this point. If you're betting on SpaceX, you're betting on a conglomerate.
Makes sense. Very difficult to catch OpenAI and Anthropic now since their flywheel of generate revenue, use revenue to buy more compute, train a smarter model with more compute, made it hard to compete.
Being able to supply compute makes more sense for SpaceXAI if you can't compete in SOTA LLMs anymore.
They all have various strengths and weaknesses. My favorite is still ChatGPT, then Gemini/Claude, then Grok.
Grok often feels 1-2 generations behind the competition in general use, but it has three things that I love:
1. It seems to be the best at understanding current events. Maybe due to X integration, or some other tool call optimization in the backend? I don't know, but I often ask about things going on, and the other models have outdated info, give unhelpful answers, etc.
2. It is generally the least sycophantic for personal things. Anthropic is getting here too. ChatGPT and Gemini are working on this, but previous models in those families would almost never say anything negative about what I am doing. Sometimes I need career advice, personal advice, etc and I like the tone of how it responds. I think Claude will be caught up soon.
3. For professional work, there are certain topics that other models would refuse to engage with. At my last company we had an enormous amount of legal users. When a deposition would need a summary on certain topics, most models would refuse. Grok would not. I understand the need for safety and I don't blame the other model providers, but for some professional use cases you NEED a model that is capable of handling sensitive subjects.
That makes sense, but occasionally you ask about an issue where it's clearly received political instruction from the commissar and it acts totally lobotomized. But it's true that Gemini will often blithely state that something could never happen and you'll say "what do you mean, that just happened" and then it comes back apologizing after running a Web search.
I almost exclusively use claude for all my professional and private needs. In my experience it's really good at adhering to my wishes in regards to sycophancy and pushing back. If you really want to you can tell it to systematically push back on anything where pushback makes sense until it continues with the flow of conversation.
In my first therapy session, the answers were too long and contained multiple questions, spawning multiple threads of conversation. I told it to tone it down and only ever ask one question back, maybe two, if they are related. The answers got too short. I told it to make them "slightly longer" again and reached a sweet spot.
The conversation is yours to form! You need to find the "system prompts" and guidelines to give it that work for you.
Grok used to be really really bad ~8 months ago or so, but it's gotten better.
ChatGPT team needs to turn down the 'disagree just because' factor by a lot.
As soon as we hand over searching out information to social media algorithms and LLM tools, we abandon our ability to see reality outside our direct vision.
Grok's ownership has already demonstrated capacity to influence major world elections and other events. You cannot trust it with this sort of information gathering and reporting.
I guess the benchmarks disagree, but whenever I need to find specific information that does not easily show up with a web search, I try chatgpt, gemini and grok. Grok surfaces what I was looking for more often than the others.
Things like "find the github repo from 2017 that does $vague_thing".
Come on, the most logical thing is that Musk overestimated the compute he needs and got lucky with the secondary usage of it.
As soon as the IPO is done and if it didn't fail, he will buy curser and try to push again if he hasn't given up on it.
He also needs some compute for the robotics stuff and for Tesla in-car entertainment and for training FSD.
So they’re cutting edge in that way.
I'll do a write-up at some point. But the core drivers are launch cost, permitting delays for terrestrial datacentres and interest rates.
The balance is between, on one hand, the financing cost of the permiting delays against, on the other hand, the cost of launching radiators. (Chips are light. Solar panels without glass cladding are surprisingly light, too. The weight of an orbital datacenter is almost entirely in its radiator.)
The math high-level works with Starship (6 flights/year), 3+ year financing delays and a 10 kg/kW radeiator (assuming 6% financing cost). Of course, there are devils upon devils in the details. But directionally, we're seeing pushback against terrestrial datacenters. And from what I can tell, advanced heat pipes may be the unlock to get radiators down to 5 to 6 kg/kW, at which point I think even New Glenn's $300/kg projected prices become competitive.
It all goes out the window if launch costs don't come down, interest rates go above 10%, terrestrial datacenters start getting built quicker, or demand for this category of compute collapses.
"Well, you didn't want a data centre in the field near your town, so instead we'll rain astrocentere debris across the western hemisphere and set off a Kessler syndrome cascade. Thank god we didn't have to wait for a permit."
> permitting delays for terrestrial datacentres
going down any time soon, or even being possible.
A frontier model team having to fight their board on whether to monetize the datacenters directly or continue to invest in AI work is going to have a hard time.
- roughly 1B revenue per month is a good look for SpaceX - provides some credibility to otherwise non-existent xAi business.
- pos. News for Google due to their share in SpaceX.
- can be interpreted as leasing versus building for Google, a nice Hedge on compute capacity.
- saves Capex for Google at time of horrendous GPU, memory costs.
It is only a bridge until 2029. What will be the value of the SpaceX data centers by then? Fine print matters on deal with Google. MS made billions up front payments to Coreweave. SpaceX has no upfront payments, has to stem Capex alone. Very favourable for Anthropic and Google.
this agreement between spacex and google can be cancelled with 90 days notice from either party without the other's agreement.
It's purely there to make the IPO look good, on google's part.
1. By law, they must pass through and distribute at least 90% of their taxable income to shareholders every year.
2. They pay 0% in corporate income taxes on the income they distribute, as long as they meet the 1st requirement.
xai is not even close on either. Terrible take. What they should have said -- xai is looking more like a hyper scaler, the aws for ai infra.
I guess it’s very possible multiple people are coming up with the same idea at the same time but given this was submitted by the author it seems kinda rude not to mention it.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/threads?id=runako#48426082
Say it goes down 50%, then it suddenly appears cheap, when in reality that would still be way overpriced.
Yet when we learn of this new $26B in yearly revenue (2.2B/month from Google and Anthropic)the conversation does not return to that discussion. It transforms into:
"xAI's tech sucks"
"Google/SpaceX is Structurally Bad for the Economy"
etc
This is called motivated reasoning. We get new information and instead of the obvious thing, updating prior conclusions, we just find a different way to react negatively. The negative reaction will be achieved. The narrative here is completely polluted by people who dislike Elon/SpaceX.
It was definitely a smart business move. It should be troubling to any shareholder than xAI is unable to utilize this infrastructure as renting it out to competitors.
Clearly, xAI thinks this is the best way for them to extract value out of their assets.
Also, it is clear that Google and Anthropic both think they can extract more value out of those assets than they will pay in rent to SpaceX.
It's clever business perhaps, but it's terrible governance.
But then Musk will always control the majority of voting rights in SpaceX, so not like the shareholders are able to vote to remove him from the board. Being fair, it's the same share structure Zuckerberg uses to retain control over Meta, in case I give the impression that I think only Musk is doing this.
Which is why I'd never buy shares in either of them, the directors are supposed to act in the best interests of all shareholders, and well, if you can't vote on director appointments, you can't do anything when they decide to act in the best interests of a few shareholders.
Hard disagree. It's polluted by Elon in general (pro and con), just like Tesla's idiotic valuation.
But in this case, a pivoted business model fundamentally changes the value proposition, and I'm not clear why "this space company making money on space things is now pretending to be a compute reseller and that's a good thing" is the narrative you think is preferable.
It's also beyond lame to essentially subtweet a "narrative" instead of responding to it directly. Who is "we", aside from a transparently dishonest way to pretend consensus exists?
If they can't build enough capacity where their best option (and they're signing multi-BILLION dollar contracts) is an unproven 'datacenter in space' technology, we are toast.
- near term costs will go up (demand is greater than supply) - tokens shift from all you can eat (TOKENMAXXX) to ROI-driven - engineers with real orchestration skills rule and shift to lower cost optimization (deep seek) - Frontier AI unit economics collapse
I feel like there is some use case planned here that isn't to be known about until it's way too late to do something about it. Or this is a very serious bubble. One of the two or some really horrible blend.
I do feel like there are some use cases which are cost constrained right now, but that area is getting smaller as local models get better.
Meanwhile product managers and sales busy drumming up new features with AI
Also yes, it is serious bubble.
- Raw materials: Silicon, electricity
- Data centers: turn raw materials into compute
- Model vendors: turn compute into tokens
The frontier labs are competing in the idea that their tokens are worth more $/mtok than the others. If you look at the cost/quality Pareto curves, yes OpenAI and Anthropic are in the corner of expensive & good. But you need a log scale on price to look at these charts because the Chinese models are almost as good for a small fraction of the price. For this business model to be sustainable they need to keep innovating faster than everybody else AND for the quality difference to stay meaningful. Neither of those seem like sure things or frankly even likely to happen.
In contrast, further down the supply chain, folks supplying compute and raw materials both seem to be providing solid services that will be useful in the long term.
That said details matter. Can the DCs be reused for other in-demand things?
Might as well be the Mars colonization the way both are going.
FSD unsupervised seems pretty close to me.
This is where we lack data. I’m skeptical of the claim. If anything will force retirement of old chips, it will be power efficiency, not customers being picky amidst a chip shortage.
The compute rental is driven by SpaceX AI likely driven by SpaceX side of the business.
It is not xAI.
Pretty smart if that's what happens.
Not a good look.
But the short term numbers may oddly provide the emotive juice necessary to fuel the gig "hey, look at their massive revenues!"
Because the GPUs go out of date.
Even A100s are still barely available on the major clouds despite being 6 years old.
if the bubble doesn't burst until then...
Moreover they're leasing compute - the actual infra around it is much less important - and how long does anyone expect heavily utilized GPUs to run? How likely is SpaceX to be able to re-lease this compute capacity? It will be broken down or out of date in 2-3 years.
This should be essentially ignored in the long term for SpaceX business prospects, and is low margin business that barely justifies a 10x earnings multiple let along a 100 revenue multiple for the xAI unit.
Except there is no gold. Or arguably that "gold" is prohibitively expensive to use (not just store, it deprecates fast) so the entire rush is being subsidized. Let's go! /s
If that ends up being viable and profitable, there is no realistic competition for decades. In this view, xAI earning a reputation as a reliable AI hyperscaler is just another tactic in that strategy.
Out of curiosity (since I basically never saw $/lb mentioned in any replies anywhere on this, which is hilarious; like talking about having your grain mill at 10,000ft/in the mountains since sunlight is better there): Have you ever tried a forSpace Program?
(And not only 100mi or more above, they're 17,500 mph faster--Mach 22 Datacenters in an oxygen-free, higher-radiation, insulated environment with absolutely no resources)
Regardless, if Google is spending just shy of 1 billion USD per month, that suggests that there is a pretty high ceiling on capex available.
Consider the PR of massive datacenters here on Earth. People complain about noise, water usage. It doesn't even matter if those concerns are valid, the PR is bad enough. That might attract other massive corps that want to outsource instead of deal with the headache of building local.
You realize that not long ago companies were exploring building nuclear power sites next to their data centers to handle the expected power needs?
I'm not saying it will work. I'm saying if it does, SpaceX will own the market for a good while.
Consider the alternative. SpaceX figures out how to build the datacenter in space thing but fails at the rest. That would be an expensive mistake.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/11/musk-unveils-joint-tesla-xai...
The datacenter deals came after. But now, the man who promised the world an AI system that defends free speech and is “pro-human”, is instead selling to his competitors and lowering the daily app usage limits of his own Grok by an order of magnitude (really).
If you’re dealing with the world’s richest man, you can predict that money will come before other concerns despite other rhetoric. Interesting strategy though!
Edit: To be fair, they did decide that hardware was "the bottleneck" according to an interview I saw last year. But I firmly believe they underestimated the software problem (and their app was/is riddled with them).
What shall that even mean?
I don't understand why people don't call that out more, when Musk rambles endlessly about how he's going to reinvent data centers and semiconductor fabs.
Holy F*ck.... SpaceX is going to be the most valuable company of all time by a long shot.
There's a huge GPU shortage right now, so prices are inflated. In the long term what matters is that
cost of launch + space hardware < cost of electricity
Electricity is only about 10-15% of the cost of running a terrestrial AI datacenter, so that doesn't give them a lot of room to undercut their terrestrial competitors