Will this new scary-realistic AI permanently disrupt Google? [RiskHedge Report] [Chris Wood]
The end of Google By Chris Wood - RiskHedge The new scary-realistic AI everyoneâs talking about⦠will it permanently disrupt Google? Plus, Appleâs latest leak... - If you havenât yet heard of âChatGPTâ you soon will... Itâs a new Artificial Intelligence (AI) program taking the tech world by storm. And itâs unlike anything Iâve ever seen. Developed by OpenAI, the AI research company cofounded by Elon Musk⦠this âchatbotâ is unique because it can answer pretty much any question in a conversational way, as if youâre talking to a human. And no... this isnât just a super-advanced âSiri.â ChatGPT can write computer code... answer tough math questions... even write poems and essays... all in seconds. We asked ChatGPT to write a short essay on why Apple (AAPL) stock is a buy: If you donât like the results? Just say âmake it more exciting.â [Hereâs a video of a kid using ChatGPT to do his homework.]( As you can imagine, folks are talking about how ChatGPT is set to disrupt everything. Thereâs a lot of speculation that this is the beginning of the end of one of the most powerful tech firms of our time: Google. - So... could ChatGPT really end Google? The disruption of Google (GOOGL) would send shockwaves through the market. Googleâs search engine accounts for a whopping 92.2% of all search queries. âTo Googleâ is a verb. Thatâs how entrenched the brand is in our minds. Since I started following Google stock in a previous newsletter in 2012, it has appreciated 430% to grow into the fourth-biggest company on earth. [WATCH] RiskHedge Publisher, Dan Steinhart, used to believe he had to expose his money to damaging bear markets in order to earn high investing returns. He was wrong. Go here to see how you can potentially quadruple your portfolio while most struggle to tread water in todayâs dangerously uncertain markets. [Click to see what he's calling "the most important research our firm
has ever published."]( The argument is ChatGPT is essentially âsmarterâ and more precise than Googleâs search engine. ChatGPT can give searchers exactly what theyâre looking for immediately. Google, on the other hand, gives you a bunch of links to sift through⦠and allows companies to force their results to the top through ads. I understand the âthesis.â But ChatGPT is not a real threat to Google. Folks seem to be forgetting that Google is the biggest and best AI company in the world. It's been doing AI since day one. It spends a fortune building and refining large language models like GPT. If Google wanted to create an AI chatbot superior to ChatGPTâit could, easily. So why isnât it? The return on investment isnât there yet. Google says the costs to integrate something like this into its big products like search and Gmail need to be about one-tenth of what they are today for it to make sense. Few companies are better at staying ahead of the tech curve than Google. A little private company like OpenAI isnât going to sneak up on and outclass Google. And if it didâ¦. Google stands ready to write as big a check as needed to buy it. What do you think? Is ChatGPT a real threat to Google? Let me know at chriswood@riskhedge.com. - Did you catch the latest leak from Apple? Itâs about the companyâs highly anticipatedâbut shrouded in secrecyâvirtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) programs. Iâve been speculating the company will release a mixed-reality (VR + AR) headset in early 2023 and a pair of sleek AR glasses in 2024. And we seem to be getting close to the mixed-reality headset release⦠The âleakâ confirms Apple renamed the operating system that will power the device to âxrOS.â At the same time, a secretive shell corporation called Deep Dive LLC began trademarking the xrOS name. This isnât unusual for Apple. The company has used shell corporations in the past to register trademarks in front of big releases. It doesnât want to spoil the surprise. Itâs a sure sign Apple is getting close to releasing its mixed-reality headset. I expect it could hit the shelves as soon as January. - The sleek AR glasses are an even bigger opportunity for Apple⦠Iâve long predicted that AR glasses will be the ânext smartphones.â At first, theyâll probably be an accessory to your phone. Eventually, when the tech is good enough, theyâll replace your smartphone. Google was one of the first to see this opportunity. It tried to front-run the market when it released Google Glass in 2013. But it was a total flop. The tech wasnât good enough yet to do anything useful or solve real problems like a smartphone could. What makes Appleâs product launches so successful is theyâre never the first, but theyâre almost always the first best. The iPhone wasnât the first smartphone. Companies like Palm and Blackberry (BB) had been selling smartphones for years. But Apple was the first to tie lots of features together, including cameras and touch screens, in a sleek way that people liked. Same thing with the iPad. Thereâs good reason to think Appleâs mixed-reality headset and AR glasses will be instant successes. In addition to Appleâs track record, Apple has tens of millions of die-hard fans whoâll buy anything the company makes. There are about a billion iPhone users in the world today. Thatâs an enormous user base. Many of them will be easily converted to AR/VR headsets⦠and generate billions in sales in the process. Apple is already the largest company on earth, worth around $2.2 trillion. As Iâve said before, [it will become a $10 trillion company over the next decade on the back of consumer AR.]( Chris Wood
Editor, Project 5X In the mailbag... Today, readers share their thoughts on [where stocks are headed in 2023](... Thanks for your emails, they are very informative. I read them very carefully. My guess for the stock market in 2023 is it will cycle up and down for most if not all year, possibly gradually increasing slightly. 2024 is anyoneâs guess but I suspect it will still cycle but it will slowly trend upwards. âJohn The bad news is the 3M/10Y inverting in late October which never missed a recession in the past. Shortest time to a recession post inversion is five months, but average is 10-11 months and max is 17 months. I think given that I donât expect a deep recession, as that would only be triggered by a Black Swan event like a nuclear incident or China collapse, itâs reasonable to think that we would have a recession in about 10 monthsâmeaning August 2023 and as markets typically bottom four months ahead of actual recession markets would bottom in 2Q. âLeo Suggested Reading... [Iger's Backâ
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