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War has broken out in the Middle East, bombs, drones and missiles, they are criss-crossing
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the region, the strata who moves is closed, oil prices keep pushing higher, the private
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credit cracks at home have turned into a tsunami of fear of paralyzing Wall Street, and
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Apollo's John Zito, the big boss.
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He just issued a warning about private equity valuations.
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To say there's chaos in corners across financial markets, that would be a complete understatement.
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Yet, investors are pouring capital into their favorite trade, AI stocks, baby.
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The rapid allocation back into these high-flying equities has as much to do with the macro
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environment as it does with the underlying stocks themselves.
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On the macro front, investors are coming to terms with the idea that a war in Iran,
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it's going to have a very little to no impact on software technology companies.
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Could various forms of electricity needed for data centers get more expensive?
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But that's still a very small impact on the behemoth corporations that are printing
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cash and a pace that we have never seen in human history.
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These companies are giants, and they don't seem to be slowing down.
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We can also see that the company's specific announcements that are driving increased investor
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demand continue as well.
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Meta is reportedly going to lay off 20% of their workforce, and the stock jumped more
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In video, jump 1.6% after CEO Jensen Huang announced new components at their conference,
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and then he said that the company expects to do $1 trillion in revenue, just from its
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newest chip by the end of 2027.
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$1 trillion is a very, very, very big number.
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Take a listen to what he said.
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I'm here to tell you that right now, where I stand, a few short months after GTC DC,
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one year after last GTC, right here where I stand, I see through 2027 at least $1 trillion.
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Now does it make any sense?
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And that's what I'm going to spend the rest of the time talking about.
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In fact, we are going to be short.
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I am certain computing demand will be much higher than that.
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And there's a reason for that.
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So the first thing is, we did a lot of work in the last year.
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Of course, as you know, 2025 was NVIDIA's year of inference.
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We wanted to make sure that not only were we good at training and post-training, that
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we were incredibly good at every single phase of AI, so that the investments that were made,
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and our infrastructure, could scale out for as long as they would like to use it.
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And the useful life of NVIDIA's infrastructure would be long, and therefore the cost would
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The longer you could use it, the lower the cost.
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There's no question in my mind.
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NVIDIA systems are the lowest cost infrastructure you could get for AI infrastructure in the world.
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And so the first part was last year was all about AI for inference.
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And it drove this inflection point.
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And simultaneously, we were very pleased last year that Anthropic has come to NVIDIA.
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That MSL, meta-SL, has chosen NVIDIA.
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And meanwhile, meanwhile, as a collection, as a group, this represents one-third of the
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world's AI compute, open source models.
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Open source models have reached near the frontier, and it is literally everywhere.
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Now Tesla and Micron were both up on the day as well, but they made separate announcements
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about various production facilities that each company is building.
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Both of those production facilities are related to AI chips and memory.
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The news was fast and furious all day, but investors were prepared with plenty of dry powder
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as they poured capital back into the darlings of the stock market.
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And I wouldn't expect the stock market to start underperforming today.
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Corsian Group's Ryan Dietrich points out that St. Patrick's Day, you know, the Green
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And historically, the seventh best performing day of the year.
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Just look at all the green in this chart right here.
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But the structural bull market in equities has some investors wondering what could happen
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in other areas of the market, is geopolitical uncertainty persist.
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Brian Sasi writes that according to the Bank of America Fund Manager survey, it appears
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that smart money is raising cash, which means they're selling assets, and they're not
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expecting much of the economy moving forward.
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But all this raising of cash by fund managers, it's probably just another opportunity for
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smart, sophisticated, good looking retail investors to buy the dip.
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Creative Planning's Peter Malook reminds us over the last 75 years.
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The average entry year market drop is 14%.
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If you are overly stressed out about the current 5% drawdown, the stock market may not be for
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Downside volatility is the price investors pay for the long-term outperformance.
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Basically, if you can't handle the heat, get out of the kitchen.
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If you're hoping the Federal Reserve is going to bail out the market with significant
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rate cuts, well, that's what they should have been doing for the last couple of months.
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But Bob Elliott highlights that history shows us a Fed cut is unlikely.
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He writes that there is a lot of hope that the Fed will cut further in response to this
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oil shock to support growth.
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But even a quick look at history shows that best the Fed pauses, and at worse, they hike
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coming to fight inflation.
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Now, the increasing complexity of the current situation is institutional investors on their
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They're taking punch after punch after punch in the chin.
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They may be pouring cash into AI stocks, but otherwise, they're playing defense.
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It is hard to take big risks when the market is gyrating in this way.
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You don't want to go tell your LPs how you screwed up their returns by trying to be the
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It's much easier to simply take what the market gives you.
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And then you just claim, well, geopolitical volatility drove my portfolio down with the
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Individual investors, though, they're in a different situation.
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This is where sophisticated, good looking retail investors shine.
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They take big risks.
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They buy the dip volatility is their friend.
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They're hunting for opportunities when everyone else is scared.
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You got to love the cowboy nature, the people with real skin in the game.
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They're putting their own personal money at risk, not LPs, and they're trying to better
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their personal financial situation.
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Remember, there are two types of investors in the world, those who run away from risk
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and those who run towards it.
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And this week is a perfect example of how the difference shows up in the market.
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But regardless of what side of the equation that you're on, investors are trying to figure
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out how big can these AI companies get?
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Will the bubble pop?
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And also, when will the war in Iran end?
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We've got government officials like Kevin Hassett going on CNBC this morning to explain
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the economic destruction in Iran as one of the many ways to generate support for the military
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operation in the Middle East, take a listen to what he had to say.
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But the fact is that the U.S. economy is fundamentally sound and that if it were to be extended,
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it wouldn't really disrupt the U.S. economy very much at all.
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It would hurt consumers and we'd have to think about, you know, if that continued, what
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we would have to do about that.
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But that's like really the last of our concerns right now because we're very confident that
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this thing is going ahead as scheduled.
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Now time's going to tell if this strategy works.
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But investors are starting to get comfortable with the fact that we have already seen the
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worst of the damage in the stock sell off.
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For example, Ed Yardini said, we were expecting a 10 to 15% correction in the S&P 500.
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But the 5% decline from January 27th record highs through Friday's close might be the extent
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Now have we seen the extent of the drawdown or is there a lot of optimism ahead?
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Frankly, I don't know.
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I don't have a crystal ball.
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I'm just like you and trying to figure it out.
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But what I do know is the answer to that question is going to be pinned on two things.
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What happens with the AI companies?
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And will the price of oil continue to go higher as the Iran conflict continues?
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My best guess is actually that a lot of the damage has been done because psychologically
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investors, they braced for impact.
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If we're going to go drop bombs in another country, if we're going to close the street,
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if global oil production is going to slow and the training and logistics of oil all around
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the world is not going to flow as freely, then obviously we should see inflation explode
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We should see stock sell off aggressively and there should be carnage in everyone's
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But we're only down two or three percent.
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And those that were predicting all of the doom and gloom, they've been wrong.
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But if investors were bracing for really, really, really bad outcomes, but after two or
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three weeks, they simply saw a little bite, a little small negative impact that my guess
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is, they build confidence, they reach in their pockets, they pull out some cash, they're
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going to throw it in the market, stocks will go back up and everyone is going to remember.
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Buying the dip has been an amazing strategy for a decade plus.
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There's no reason why that's probably going to change right now.
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It's different today's show.
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Thank you guys so much for watching.
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Please remember to subscribe on YouTube and I'll see you guys live tomorrow from the desk
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and we'll see you guys in the next video.