There’s a weird thing that happens in the stock market every few years. Everyone suddenly becomes a genius at the exact top of a trend. That’s when your barber starts discussing semiconductor margins. That’s when random relatives begin throwing around phrases like “AI infrastructure layer” after watching two TikToks and half a podcast. That’s when CNBC starts acting like a stock going vertical for fourteen straight months is simply the natural order of the universe. And that’s usually when I start getting nervous. Not because great companies stop being great. But because modern investors increasingly confuse momentum with inevitability. There’s a difference. A huge difference. One is a business compounding value over decades. The other is a crowd discovering optimism and immediately trying to monetize it emotionally. Right now the market feels split between two extremes. On one side, you’ve got investors treating every AI-related company like it’s about to invent immortali...
Every market cycle creates its own religion. The dot-com bubble had internet traffic. The housing bubble had “real estate always goes up.” Crypto had laser eyes and emotionally unstable billionaires tweeting frog memes at 3 a.m. And now? Now we have AI chips. Which means the modern investor has transformed into a caffeinated techno-prophet screaming “DATA CENTER DEMAND” while staring at candlestick charts like they’re decoding the Dead Sea Scrolls. I get it. The numbers are insane. Stocks doubling in months. Market caps exploding into the trillions. Retail investors suddenly speaking fluent semiconductor terminology after watching four YouTube videos and surviving one earnings call. Everyone wants to know the same thing right now: “Is it finally time to sell?” And honestly, I think that question alone reveals how psychologically broken most investors become during momentum markets. Because people don’t actually know how to handle success. Losses feel painful. But gains...