- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmy.ml
- us_news
- usa@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- worldnews@lemmy.ml
- us_news
- usa@lemmy.ml
The reason that the so-called booming economy feels like a complete lie to most people is because the economy is bifurcated. There’s the economy for the rich, which is absolutely soaring, and the economy for everyone else, which is basically in a recession. The scary part is that the entire illusion of national prosperity is being propped up by one of the biggest financial bubbles we have ever seen.
This all starts with a deep split. The spending of the wealthiest 10% of Americans now makes up one third of the entire country’s GDP. They are responsible for nearly half of all consumer spending. Meanwhile, for the vast majority, things feel stagnant because they are. The national GDP number is a mathematical trick, buoyed by a few powerhouse states, while regions representing nearly a third of the nation’s economic output, like the Rust Belt, are in or near a recession. The reason for this divide is simple. The stock market gains you hear about on the news only benefit a tiny slice of the population. The top one percent own half of all stocks. The top ten percent collectively own nearly ninety percent. The bottom half of the country owns just one percent. So when the market hits a new high, it is overwhelmingly just the rich getting richer.
Now, let’s talk about that bubble. By the classic Buffett Indicator, which compares the total stock market value to the size of the economy, the US is in unprecedented territory. This indicator is now over 219%. To put that in perspective, it was only 138% at the peak of the dotCom bubble and 105% before the 2008 crash. This is the largest stock market bubble in US history.
But the real insanity is what’s inside this bubble. The market is being carried by a handful of tech companies, often called the Ten Titans. These ten firms represent just a tiny fraction of all public companies, yet they make up over 30% of the entire US stock market’s value. In recent months, they alone were responsible for over half of all market growth. The entire system is dangerously concentrated in a few names. The fuel for this run up is the artificial intelligence boom. But now, even the leaders of the AI revolution admit it is a bubble. Furthermore, recent studies show that 95% of corporate AI projects are failing, and the rest are making very little money. It is pure speculation that’s driving this frenzy.
The most critical part of this story is that this AI bubble is now masking a severe weakness in the real economy. The overall GDP growth number for 2025 looks okay, but a deeper look paints a different picture. One analysis found that investment in AI and information processing, a sector that is only 4% of the economy, accounted for a staggering 92% of all GDP growth in the first half of the year. Without the sugar rush of AI spending, the rest of the US economy grew at a near flat rate of just 0.1%. The real economy for most Americans is already on life support, and the AI bubble is the ventilator.
This sets up a perfect storm for stagflation, meaning a stagnant economy combined with persistent inflation. Prices remain high due to supply chain issues and trade policies, while the real economy struggles. To make matters worse, the AI boom is actively making inflation worse by consuming enormous amounts of electricity and driving up power costs for everyone. So we are left with a terrifying situation. A historic bubble concentrated in a few tech stocks is creating a mirage of prosperity, hiding a recession that most people are already living through. Everyone will suffer when this bubble inevitably pops.
i hope this deluge of articles finally creates the psychological mindscape to make large investment fund managers start getting cold feet (and for the algos to start amplifying this)
i’m so tired of being edged i just want to get on with this. i can only stockpile so much beans and rice
Investment managers are gonna run out of money entirely by 2027 and if they’re not seeing the wowsers mega jackpot returns on giving away literally all their money, they’re gonna be pretty mad. Also everyone’s retirement will have been spent on GPUs.
then I should be able to withdraw my 401k in 5090s
Yea it should probably bounce most of the way back by then

It’s too late in the season but I think it’s gonna be a good idea to learn how to grow your own food by spring of next year. I’ve lived through all the recessions since the 80’s and this one fucking terrifies me. I am a doomer though.
Growing food is fucking easy, the plants do all the dang work!
Grows out o’ the feckin’ GROUND!
Someone should just take a needle and pop it squish
all I want to see is a hedge fund guy jump out of a window…is that too much to ask?
Okay so here’s the timeline as I understand it:
The money pipeline started to naturally dwindle in the 1970s so then in the 1980s they start credit cards etc to keep the spending. The next big hot move was college loans. They were now building the economy entirely on debts being shouldered by the next generation. Through all this we had some booms and recessions and a depression they called a “Great Recession” because newsprinting the D word scares the money faeries. Cryptocurrency tried to be something else but then became what we all predicted and incorporated into the market. Boo hoo they’re ran out of markets and the inevitable rate of decline, put off for so long, beckons from the shadows. Capitalism’s infinite growth cannot be sustained.
AI is their big hat trick. It’s pure fun money, more ethereal than crypto. It’s less real than the student loan debt which was less real than the credit card debt. It’s a house of smoke built on mirrors. It’s their only way to keep this system from collapsing under the strain of it not working for the majority of its participants.
For a more detailed analysis of why the AI bubble is doomed, check out this piece: https://futurism.com/future-society/ai-data-centers-finances
"In his previous analysis, Kupperman assumed it would take the tech industry $160 billion of revenue to break even on data center spending in 2025 alone. And that’s assuming an incredibly generous 25 percent gross margin — not to mention the fact that the industry’s actual AI revenue is closer to $20 billion annually, as the investment manager noted in his previous blog.
“In reality, the industry probably needs a revenue range that is closer to the $320 billion to $480 billion range, just to break even on the capex to be spent this year,” Kupperman posited in his updated essay. "
Pussy ahh economy scared of a little removedmade bubble.
It’s made of soap film you dumb ass! Just pop it!


I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
This isn’t to say we’re in a massive market bubble, because we clearly are, but stocks have been pretty divorced from fundamentals since QE began after 2008. The contrarian in me says that a bubble wont burst while everyone is looking at it (they’re shy). Plus capital has one last hail-mary to keep this gravy train going, privatize social security. That the dual benefit of further juicing the stock market, and dealing with government debt obligations.
Met a guy online with some masters in AI from stanford who’s been unemployed for a year now.
I found a YouTube link in your post. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:














