Technology-Driven Growth Industries over the Past Two Centuries
---------------------------------------
If you look at technology-driven growth industries over the past two centuries - steam engines, railroads, telephony, electric power, the Internet - people become too excited about growth and overinvest in it. When the bubbles burst, markets overcorrect on the downside, even though the fundamental growth drivers may still be as present as they were before...How might this apply to the current market of AI hysteria?
You have laid out the classic, immutable template of the technological deployment cycle. Whether it’s the British "Railway Mania" of the 1840s or the telecom/fiber-optic buildout of the late 1990s, the human psychology driving capital markets never changes.
Carlota Perez, a renowned techno-economist, formalized this exact pattern into two distinct phases: the Installation Period (where financial capital drives a frantic, speculative frenzy and overbuilds the physical infrastructure) and the Deployment Period (where production capital takes over, the technology becomes a boring utility, and the actual productivity gains embed themselves into the broader economy).
Looking at the current landscape of AI hysteria through this structural lens, we can map out exactly where the structural overinvestments are occurring, what the "bust" looks like, and how the fundamental growth drivers will survive the inevitable downside overcorrection.
1. The Asymmetry of the Current Buildout
The sheer scale of the current capital expenditure (CapEx) is historically unprecedented.
The core of the current hysteria lies in a massive revenue mismatch:
The Supply Side: Trillions of dollars are being committed to long-term physical infrastructure buildouts over the next five years.
The Demand Side: Current annualized revenues generated directly from AI software and enterprise applications are estimated at a fraction of that cost (roughly $80 to $150 billion).
This creates an intense structural asymmetry. The hyperscalers are locked in a classic Nash Equilibrium prisoner's dilemma: they cannot afford to stop buying chips and building data centers because falling behind in the intelligence race means structural obsolescence, even if the current return on investment (ROI) doesn't justify the spend.
2. What the "AI Underwrite" Correction Will Look Like
When markets realize that the software monetization curve is lagging far behind the hardware CapEx curve, a sharp valuation compression—a "healthy" or perhaps brutal overcorrection—is inevitable.
In a standard historical tech bust, the pain follows a specific waterfall effect:
[ Phase 1: The Revenue Reality Check ] Hyperscalers signal a flattening of CapEx because enterprise software adoption takes longer than expected.
[ Phase 2: The Hardware Crud ] The "picks and shovels" providers (chipmakers, server assemblers, specialized cooling) see demand drop off a cliff. Valuations priced at >30x Price-to-Sales collapse violently.
[ Phase 3: Financial Contagion in Private Credit ] A massive chunk of modern data center construction is funded by private credit and asset-backed debt. As project timelines stretch and secondary market chip prices drop, junk-rated data center bonds face distress.
When this bubble bursts, the market will almost certainly overcorrect to the downside. The financial press will declare AI a "fad," tech stocks will bleed indiscriminately, and the general public will sour on the entire concept.
3. The Institutional Post-Burst Reality (The "Deployment" Phase)
This brings us to the core of your point: the fundamental growth drivers will still be present.
When the railroad bubble burst in the 1840s, the track didn't vanish into thin air; it just changed hands from bankrupt speculators to disciplined operators who ran trains on it at pennies on the dollar, completely transforming global commerce. When the dot-com bubble burst, the thousands of miles of "dark fiber" laid by WorldCom and Global Crossing remained in the ground, ultimately lowering bandwidth costs so precipitously that it paved the way for Netflix, YouTube, and the modern cloud economy.
If and when the AI market overcorrects, the physical reality left behind will be profoundly deflationary and highly productive:
Stranded, Hyper-Advanced Infrastructure: The world will be left with an astonishing abundance of hyper-dense data centers, next-generation electrical grid connections, and warehouses full of high-end silicon.
The Reallocation of Compute: The cost of running advanced machine learning models will collapse. Startups and enterprise incumbents who couldn't afford $100,000 clusters during the hype phase will suddenly inherit a deeply discounted, highly accessible utility.
The Productivity Paradox Solved: True economic productivity gains lag technological introduction by years. Businesses require time to re-engineer workflows, retrain staff, and restructure management. The post-bubble period is precisely when companies stop treating AI as a boardroom buzzword and start quietly integrating it to drive real cash-flow margins.
The Investor’s Takeaway
For a fundamental investor focused on quality and a margin of safety, the current market demands a strict distinction between merely owning a narrative versus owning durable, cash-generative economic moats.
The current hysteria has priced many "picks-and-shovels" businesses as if hyper-growth will continue linearly forever. History guarantees it won't. But history also guarantees that the wreckage of the bust will provide the exact foundation upon which the true, long-term AI-driven economy will be built.
-----------------------------------
Source
Google Gemini
----------------------------------
Postscript
What makes tracking these cycles so compelling is that human psychology remains the ultimate constant. No matter how advanced the technology becomes—whether we are talking about steam pressure or neural networks—the financial architecture of booms, busts, and the quiet, productive eras that follow, human nature will continue to shape the contours of what follows.
