The AI thing will level off stock price wise. It could maybe happen now, or the stocks could keep going up.... who cares... it's a math game at this point on stuff like NVDA and MSFT. That deserves a whole thread of its own,.... ... but whatever on that, It's not the point of this thread. We're going to go one level up on the AI play. And guess what, I already know what the last post on this thread will cover...after I have found the right stock(s) and bought in. But for now, I'm just gonna put it in the ether like I have in the past with these types of things. Let me get the writers sporting the pens with national megaphones but no vision started. The next niche... and we are talking 2-3 years here..... is finding the companies that are on the cusp of the intersection of AI and full bodied robotics. My guess is it's in Japan. There is so much more to follow... and it's right in front of your faces. But ya'll won't see it.
It's true. I work in IT and my company is just now starting to investigate how we can leverage NLP models via new services being offered by Microsoft and and others. Guarantee every other company of a certain size is doing the same.
? Huh? There's no such thing when one looks ahead at the future. Late? What the f is that? Everything else now flatlines? Nothing new happens? You better be buying my "granny stocks" in the gba thread then. Those always work too
And btw... who brought NVDA to ET when it was (split adjusted) at like $18? >>>And no one in the world for the most part had ever heard of it. And that was based on seeing the future of crypto's and gaming... both of which I have never done. But that matters not now does it? There is no "late"... only vision. October 2016 (even before Cramer named his dog NVDA): https://www.elitetrader.com/et/threads/nvda.303875/
You titled this thread “you heard it here first” my quote from the your thread about what stocks to buy, where you said WMT…
I shelved them....they crapped the bed during the bear market. Have been taking a break from algo trading...doing some discretionary trading and focusing on upgrading tech skills which has been yielding a good ROI.
I was trading NVDA when it was $40. Dumb me did not think of holding long term and instead, was scalping NVDA for $500 each trade via options. Another dumb move of mine. We all have our woulda, coulda, shoulda moments and I have had my fair share. Now, to the present, robotics has to figure a lot because robots have huge advantages over humans. It does not get tired, can be worked over 24/7 non-stop, does breakdown but, can be repaired by just replacing its parts. Look at Las Vegas, the casinos are now putting up more slot type craps and blackjack machines to replace their dealers. Think about it, no salaries, no healthcare, no bonuses, no pensions, no whining, complaining and not showing up for work. It is all profit. It started with the change people in Las Vegas when the slots used coins and coin slugs but, casinos phased that out, the same change in checkin now being done online. Less people at the counter, means less expenses, more profits for the Las Vegas casinos.
No, and no. Valuations of shares that integrate ai based models into their goods and services have nothing to do with a math game. It's all about greed and how invested the larger players already are. Very hard to measure and estimate. Nvidia may go up 10 fold over the next couple years. Many wrote off Amazon when it traded at 200% IPO valuations early on. Those levels today look indistinguishable from the IPO level. Then there are the software players. Japan will definitely not be it. They lack the innovative skillset in ai. They are great at improving things on the hardware side. Japan is a nobody in the software arena. New ai models require as much art and imagination as raw math skills. Japanese don't have that in their DNA. Not a single Japanese meaningfully contributed to cutting edge ai model and idea generation. The few Japanese that are named as team contributors mostly work abroad for large tech companies. Even in robotics, only rule based algorithms are integrated in Japan, nothing in Japan can remotely compete with the likes of Boston Dynamics, which is by the way owned by a Korean company. Japan will kick it up a notch by integrating ai models into hardware components. Until then you won't hear much coming out of Japan.