🧠 Big Short Calls AI Hype Again: Is OpenAI the Next Netscape?
Michael Burry — the investor who famously saw the 2008 collapse before anyone else — is once again questioning a consensus trade. This time, his target isn’t housing or passive ETFs, but AI’s crown jewel: OpenAI 🤖💥
His comparison is provocative: Netscape.
A company that defined the early internet, yet ultimately became a footnote when platforms with deeper moats took control.
So what’s the concern?
🔹 Capital Dependency
OpenAI is burning cash at a scale few private companies ever have. Training frontier models isn’t just expensive — it’s structurally expensive. Compute costs rise faster than revenues, and scale doesn’t necessarily mean margin expansion (yet).
🔹 Microsoft’s Quiet Advantage
Burry suggests Microsoft is playing the long game:
• Funding OpenAI
• Absorbing its IP
• Embedding models into Azure, Office, Windows
• Keeping most of the risk off its own balance sheet
If true, this raises an uncomfortable question:
👉 Is OpenAI the product… or the supplier?
🔹 The $500B Question
Burry’s most controversial line:
“The industry needs a $500 billion IPO to sustain itself.”
That sounds extreme — until you look at the math 📊
AI valuations are built on future monetization, but today’s revenues are tiny compared to the capital invested. Someone eventually needs to provide an exit:
• Public markets
• Governments
• Or a dominant platform buyer
History reminder 📚
Netscape wasn’t wrong about the internet.
It was just out-scaled, out-distributed, and out-monetized.
💡 So… Is AI a Bubble?
Probably not.
But AI stocks ≠ AI technology.
Just like:
• The internet was real
• But many dot-com stocks went to zero
The real winners may not be the most advanced model builders — but the ones who:
✅ Control distribution
✅ Own the cloud
✅ Set pricing power
✅ Integrate AI invisibly into daily workflows
👀 What to Watch Next
• Can AI companies show operating leverage, not just user growth?
• Will regulation raise barriers — or cap returns?
• Who captures margins when models become commoditized?
🤔 Final Thought
Every tech revolution creates legends and casualties.
The hardest part isn’t spotting the future —
It’s figuring out who actually gets paid when the hype fades.
Bubble… reset… or platform shift?
🐯📈 What’s your take?
Comments