Every few months the financial world performs the same sacred ritual. A guy appears on television looking like he hasn’t slept since the dot-com crash and announces: “The market is dangerously overvalued.” Cue dramatic music. Cue thumbnail face. Cue YouTube comments filled with people typing “THIS TIME IT’S DIFFERENT” in all caps while holding 73% cash and emotionally preparing for economic Ragnarok. Meanwhile the S&P 500 quietly keeps doing what it’s done for generations: climbing a wall of fear while everyone screams the sky is falling. I was listening to a long-form investing breakdown recently where the central argument was basically: “Maybe the market isn’t actually in a bubble, maybe people just refuse to understand growth anymore.” And honestly? That hit harder than it should have. Because modern investors have developed an absolutely bizarre relationship with success. A stock goes up for years because the company keeps making absurd amounts of money, and people...
There’s a weird thing that happens in the stock market every few years. Everyone suddenly becomes a genius at the exact top of a trend. That’s when your barber starts discussing semiconductor margins. That’s when random relatives begin throwing around phrases like “AI infrastructure layer” after watching two TikToks and half a podcast. That’s when CNBC starts acting like a stock going vertical for fourteen straight months is simply the natural order of the universe. And that’s usually when I start getting nervous. Not because great companies stop being great. But because modern investors increasingly confuse momentum with inevitability. There’s a difference. A huge difference. One is a business compounding value over decades. The other is a crowd discovering optimism and immediately trying to monetize it emotionally. Right now the market feels split between two extremes. On one side, you’ve got investors treating every AI-related company like it’s about to invent immortali...