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* FIEND'S SUPERBEAR MARKET
REPORT *
* December 4,
2025 *
* *
* e-mail:
fiendbear@fiendbear.com
*
* web
address: http://www.fiendbear.com *
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Fiend Commentary
================
Why great
tech manias often end in falling prices—and what that would mean now.
Bubbles
don’t just pop—they reverse the cash flows they created. The spending
that drove prices up becomes the very thing that drags them down: capacity is
built, debt is piled on, and expectations harden. When the funding tide
recedes, projects pause, orders vanish, and the glut that follows pushes
prices lower. That’s the deflation risk after the party.
We’ve seen
this movie before
What rhymes
today
What a
post-bubble deflation path would look like
1.
Capex cliff:
Announcements keep coming, but starts and orders
slow first. Backlogs shrink; equipment discounts
appear.
2.
Debt overhang:
Cash flow misses collide with rising real servicing costs; credit spreads
widen; restructurings start at the edges.
3.
Price cuts as survival: GPU rentals, inference pricing, and DC lease rates cut
to fill; the revenue line disinflates even before
demand does.
4.
Policy reaction:
Easier money arrives late—supporting asset prices—but the real-economy drag
persists as firms delever. That’s classic debt-deflation
dynamics.
How to use
this now (next 30–90 days)
My
plain-English view: AI will
change a lot; that is not the question. The question is whether the financing
of AI has overshot the cash flows that can service it near-term. If it has,
the first act after the peak isn’t inflation—it’s discounts. And
discounts, across a leveraged build-out, are another
word for deflation.
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