By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
Reading: Jefferies’ Chris Wood called Japan’s crash and the U.S. housing bubble. He’s now warning of an ‘AI capex arms race’
Notification Show More
Viral Trending contentViral Trending content
  • Home
  • Categories
    • World News
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Celebrity
    • Business
    • Crypto
    • Tech News
    • Gaming News
    • Travel
  • Bookmarks
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Viraltrendingcontent
Viral Trending content > Blog > Business > Jefferies’ Chris Wood called Japan’s crash and the U.S. housing bubble. He’s now warning of an ‘AI capex arms race’
Business

Jefferies’ Chris Wood called Japan’s crash and the U.S. housing bubble. He’s now warning of an ‘AI capex arms race’

By Viral Trending Content 5 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Christopher Wood has a track record of spotting speculative bubbles. He called the dotcom boom, Japan’s credit bubble and the U.S. housing bubble before many of his contemporaries. So when he warned of an “AI capex arms race” at the Fortune Innovation Forum in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on Tuesday, the audience paid attention.

Wood, now the global head of equity strategy at Jefferies Hong Kong, said that the arms race began in 2023 when Microsoft invested in OpenAI. He argued that investors are missing a crucial point: That nearly all the money made so far is accruing not to the companies building AI products, but to those selling the infrastructure behind them.

“You want to own what I call the picks and shovels of AI,” Wood said. It’s companies like Nvidia, those producing semiconductors and building data centers, that have made real profits from the AI boom. 

“But it’s completely unclear to me who’s going to monetize and make money out of all this capex,” Wood continued. 

This sets up what he views as an almost-inevitable over-investment bust—though when markets finally lose patience with ballooning spending without results is unknown. 

Wood’s already repositioned his own portfolio. He recently sold his Nvidia holdings, not necessarily because he believed shares have picked, but because their five-fold gains already priced in extraordinary expectations.

His AI exposure is now concentrated in China, where he believes companies are approaching the technology more pragmatically. “You need two things to do AI: compute and energy,” he said. “The Chinese are far more ahead in energy than the U.S. is ahead in compute.”

While the U.S. still leads in terms of the power of its advanced chips, Washington’s semiconductor export controls, in place since late 2022, may have inadvertently strengthened China’s position. By cutting Chinese firms off from U.S. chips, the policy both deprived American tech companies of their biggest customers and jolted Beijing into accelerating its domestic semiconductor ecosystem.

“[Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang] has made it quite clear that Huawei is a much more formidable competitor than was the case three years ago,” Wood noted, adding that controlled Nvidia chips had made their way to China anyway through secondary channels, despite U.S. controls. “It’s a massive own goal.”

Huang has repeatedly praised Chinese chipmakers, including Huawei. He called the Chinese tech giant “one of the most formidable technology companies in the world” in April.

China’s AI strategy is also diverging from the U.S. Rather than chase the elusive goal of artificial general intelligence, Chinese firms, spurred by successes like DeepSeek, are channeling resources toward practical, commercially viable applications, many built on open-source models. “They’re not trying to build the perfect LLM,” Wood said. “It’s all about applications.”

U.S. tech giants, by contrast, are pouring money into parallel efforts to build proprietary frontier models, a shift that is fundamentally altering their economics. For years, Big Tech companies rested on “asset-light” business models, each in their own space. Now, Wood said, the hyperscalers are competing in the same AI space while moving to “asset-heavy” models.

Other panelists at the Fortune Innovation Forum echoed Wood’s comments on China’s AI strategy. “China is focused a bit more on diffusion, while the U.S. focuses more on perfection,” Chan Yip Pang, executive director at Vertex Ventures SEA and India, said on Monday during a discussion on the competition between open-source and closed-source models.

Why are U.S. tech giants spending so much? opportunity is one answer. Fear is the other. “They’re terrified of being disrupted,” Wood said. “There’s massive FOMO. That’s what’s driving this arms race.”

You Might Also Like

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says he’s ‘learned and relearned’ to not make big decisions when he’s tired on Fridays

White House warned staff against betting on futures markets amid Iran war, official says

Only five ships crossed the Strait of Hormuz Thursday, far below Iran’s pledge as negotiations begin

TReDS tweak to ease MSME credit flow amid global pressure

1 FTSE 250 stock I like and 1 I’ll avoid after the stock market correction

TAGGED: bbc business, Business, business ideas, business insider, Business News, business plan, google my business, income, money, opportunity, small business, small business idea
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Is SharpLink Gaming Offloading Ethereum? Linked Wallet Moves 10,975 ETH to Galaxy Digital OTC
Next Article Why Gamers Can’t Stop Playing Where Winds Meet
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Latest News

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says he’s ‘learned and relearned’ to not make big decisions when he’s tired on Fridays
Business
Apple AI Pin Specs Leak: Dual Cameras, No Screen & More
Tech News
A ‘glass-like’ battlefield: German Army chief on the future of warfare
World News
Polymarket Sees Record $153M Daily Volume After Chainlink Integration
Crypto
Natasha Lyonne Then & Now: See Before & After Photos of the Actress Here
Celebrity
Cult Hit Doki Doki Literature Club Fights Removal From Google Play Store Over ‘Depiction Of Sensitive Themes’
Gaming News
Dead as Disco Launches Into Early Access on May 5th, Groovy New Gameplay Released
Gaming News

About Us

Welcome to Viraltrendingcontent, your go-to source for the latest updates on world news, politics, sports, celebrity, tech, travel, gaming, crypto news, and business news. We are dedicated to providing you with accurate, timely, and engaging content from around the globe.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Home
  • World News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Celebrity
  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Gaming News
  • Tech News
  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Crypto
  • Tech News
  • Gaming News
  • Travel

Trending News

cageside seats

Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024

Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says he’s ‘learned and relearned’ to not make big decisions when he’s tired on Fridays

cageside seats
Unlocking the Ultimate WWE Experience: Cageside Seats News 2024
May 22, 2024
Investing £5 a day could help me build a second income of £329 a month!
March 27, 2024
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says he’s ‘learned and relearned’ to not make big decisions when he’s tired on Fridays
April 10, 2026
Brussels unveils plans for a European Degree but struggles to explain why
March 27, 2024
© 2024 All Rights reserved | Powered by Vraltrendingcontent
  • About Us
  • Contact US
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?