Whenever I analyze Alphabet, I have to remind myself not to treat it like just another technology company. That's the easiest mistake investors make. People see Google Search, YouTube, Android, Gmail, Google Cloud, Waymo, and now artificial intelligence, and they assume they're looking at a collection of separate businesses. I see something very different. I see an ecosystem that quietly became the infrastructure behind much of the internet. That distinction matters because infrastructure businesses tend to have staying power. People can switch brands. It's much harder to replace habits. For years, Alphabet's biggest advantage was that it became the default answer to almost every question people had. Need directions? Google. Looking for a restaurant? Google. Researching a new car? Google. Trying to remember the actor from that movie you watched ten years ago? Google. Search became so dominant that its name turned into a verb, and that's a level of brand recognition ...
If you've owned Nvidia over the last few years, congratulations—you've basically been standing in front of a money printer wearing a leather jacket. Every time Wall Street started whispering that the run was over, Nvidia responded by showing up with another earnings report that made analysts look like they'd been trying to predict a hurricane with a Magic 8 Ball. At this point, betting against Nvidia has become one of the market's most reliable ways to discover new and exciting forms of financial disappointment. The obvious question now is whether this ridiculous streak can actually continue. Surely, there has to be a limit, right? Companies don't just keep smashing expectations forever. Gravity exists. Competition exists. Economic slowdowns exist. Yet every time investors prepare for reality to catch up with Nvidia, artificial intelligence finds another excuse to consume billions of dollars' worth of GPUs. It's becoming increasingly difficult to tell whethe...