You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive our free e-letter Gilder's Guideposts, or you purchased a product or service from its publisher, Eagle Financial Publications. [Gilder Guideposts] [Technology Report]( [Tech Report PRO]( [Moonshots]( [Private Reserve]( Technology Investing Spurs Vertigo-inducing Response by George Gilder
06/12/2024 SPONSORED CONTENT [The Biggest Winner of the AI Boom Isnât Nvidiaâ¦]( Nvidia (NVDA) has soared more than 1,700% over the past 5 years. For investors who missed out on the profits, Americaâs #1 Futurist says AI is converging with a âmiracle materialâ right now, and [one company]( leading the way, could see its shares post 10X gains⦠Whoops! How can I write you a Gilderâs Guideposts, possibly steering your investments in a time of turmoil, when I am suffering from the sudden onset of Non-Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo? They say itâs benign (BNNV), but thatâs only if you do not have to make your way through the DFW (the Dallas Fort-Worth Airport), or through the mazes of the markets without wobbling or crashing as your world spins dizzily around you. As remedies, my doctor yesterday prescribed a motion sickness pill named Bromine and physical contortions called Epley maneuvers. By now, they are working well enough that I can finally sit in seat 10E on an American Airlines Airbus 311neo (âfinal assembly completed in the USAâ), and I am able to compose this weekly message. However, as I contemplate the gyrations of the market, the volatile wobbling of stock values, the deceptiveness of much official data, the long plummet of the dollar measuring stick against gold, the tidal flows of index funds, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds, and other putative trillions of dollars of âpassive investment vehiclesâ that do not even pretend to fathom the real values of their so-called securities, I find myself again dizzied and vertiginous, and no head and neck contortions or Nexaprexine tablets offer any relief. The current issue of Harperâs, which printed my first major articles some 55 years ago, emblazons its cover with a story on the problem entitled â401K Doomsday: Will Passive Investing Spell Catastrophe?â by a savvy writer named Andrew Lipstein. He shows that dominating current markets are some $15 trillion of passive investments, some $3 trillion alone from Vanguard, Black Rock, and State Street, that make no effort to research or evaluate their securities choices. Sponsored Content [MarketBeat releases Top 10 Stocks report]( We've just released a new special report that details the top 10 stocks to own now. Some are delivering stellar earnings... others are at the forefront of an explosive trend... others dominate their industry. All offer tremendous opportunity no matter what the market does. [Get the full list here FREE]( Lipstein quotes âpassive investmentâ critic Michael Green, who gained credibility by recently orchestrating a $250 million profit in one trade for Peter Thiel. Green says these investors are, in fact, ânot passive at all. What they are is active managers with the worldâs simplest quantitative strategy. Did you give me cash? If so, then buy. Did you ask for cash? If so, then sell.â This means they shun the usual notion of buying low and selling high, and instead in general follow the opposite rule of buying high (when all are buying) and selling near the bottom (when everyone wants cash). This process renders the associated markets mindlessly volatile, and investment analysts seeking âguidepostsâ increasingly clueless. Nonetheless, at the end of the Harperâs piece, which flirts with doom theories for several salacious pages, Lipstein suddenly loses his apocalyptic bravado. He interviews several authorities, led by Danish economist Lasse Heje Pedersen, who is cited heavily by Green. Contending that âeveryone can make money together,â Pedersen favored the view that âactive investors will always be able to correct distortions caused by index funds.â Ending a 10-page article on the stultifying and possibly catastrophic impact of passive investing, this reassuring view was anti-climactic: doom fended off, depreciated, deferred, even reversed by sage and visionary active traders. What are the active traders doing, though? They are mostly relegating their trading to computers, or what Jaron Lanier -- the shaggy sage who invented âvirtual realityâ -- calls âSiren Servers.â Wrote Lanier: âSiren Servers are usually gigantic facilities, [data-centers] located in obscure places where they have their own power plants and some special hookup to nature, such as a remote river that allows them to cool a fantastic amount of waste heat.â The most successful of all has been Nobel Laureate James Simons, co-author of the Chern-Simons algorithm in string theory and founder of the Renaissance Funds. Under a team led by former IBM speech recognition luminary Robert Mercer, Renaissance reached stratospheric heights, averaging roughly 40% yield every year, through up-and-down markets, for some 20 years (some $65 billion in 2018). Included was an 80% gain during the crash of 2008. [From Financial Fear to Good Fortune]( Jerome Powell just made buying a home more challenging, and the Magnificent 7âs momentum is collapsing. If these headlines donât grab your attention, then youâre asking yourself when the FED will start cutting rates. With so much uncertainty, may I suggest an alternative strategy to just hopingâ¦a method to enhance what youâre currently doing with more precision and confidence. [Learn the top 3 stock trends]( weâre looking at right now for explosive bullish potential. Simons and Mercer, in my view, were the real discoverers of the breakthrough in artificial intelligence in the now famous âTransformers paperâ by eight Google researchers in 2017. The Google team showed that in achieving results beyond human capabilities, algorithmic logic, however complex and ingenious, is far less effective than pattern recognition by parallel processing across vast databases. Mercer proved the point at IBM by far outperforming everyone else in speech recognition by throwing out language models, grammars, and verbal theories. Nearly all the recent AI boom is based on this insight that underlies the two decades of Renaissance investment heroics. Renaissance spurned any direct kibitzing from fundamental analysts or from anyone who knows anything about particular companies. The flaw of this AI approach is that functioning chiefly with price signals within markets, it is intrinsically self-referential and circular. As Simons explained in a speech in 1999: âEfficient market theory is correct in that there are no gross inefficiencies. But we look at anomalies that may be small in size and brief in time⦠Weâre always in-and-out and out-and-in. So, weâre dependent on intense activity to make money.â âIntense activityâ meant huge data centers in Syosset, Long Island, parsing terabytes of data on market movements and associations in parallel, at gigahertz speeds, neutral between up and down-market movements, shorts and longs. Thus came the amazing performance during the two years of the financial crash. This kind of computerized processing in AI systems is not investing at all. It makes near zero contribution to the discovery of new technologies and business plans and the channeling of capital to them. The heart of the investment process is in depth research of companies, technologies, entrepreneurial skills, and paradigms. Governed by information theory, it seeks unexpected insights, measured by the element of surprise. âAnomalies small in size and brief in timeâ are nearly always trivial, even if they can be harvested by siren servers in nanoseconds. What we seek are major new paradigms and scientific breakthroughs that yield transformative new technologies. At present, our focus is on the discovery of graphene, a single layer of carbon atoms discovered to be 200 times stronger than steel, more flexible than rubber, a thousand times more conductive than copper, and the best heat transmitter ever studied. It will transform nearly every industry, including electronics. The most exciting breakthrough came early this year at Georgia Tech, where physics Professor Walter de Heer discovered that a perfect film of near superconductive graphene can be created on the surface of a silicon carbide wafer by subliming out the silicon one atom deep. This promises cool, terahertz, wafer scale electronics within the next decade. We will be on top of it, exempt from the dizziness and vertigo of siren servers shuffling noisy data. Sincerely,
[The Editors]
George Gilder, Richard Vigilante, Steve Waite, and John Schroeter
Editors, Gilder's Guideposts, Technology Report, Technology Report Pro, Moonshots, and Private Reserve About George Gilder: [George Gilder]George Gilder is the most knowledgeable man in America when it comes to the future of technology and its impact on our lives. He’s an established investor, bestselling author, and economist with an uncanny ability to foresee how new breakthroughs will play out, years in advance. George and his team are the editors of Gilder Technology Report, Gilder Technology Report Pro, Moonshots and Private Reserve. About Us:
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