I didn’t fall in love with semiconductors because they were simple. I fell in love with them because they made absolutely no sense—at least not at first. Here’s an industry where companies routinely spend tens of billions of dollars just to stay in the game. Not to dominate. Not to guarantee profits. Just to remain relevant. Imagine running a business where standing still costs you $20 billion every couple of years, and if you hesitate, you’re not just behind—you’re obsolete. That’s semiconductors. And for a long time, I looked at that and thought, Why would anyone invest in this? Then I started paying attention. The First Time It Clicked I remember staring at a capital expenditure chart for a major chip manufacturer. The line wasn’t trending up—it was launching into orbit. Every year, more money. Bigger fabs. Smaller nodes. More complexity. It didn’t look like a business. It looked like a money-burning competition where the winner gets to burn even more money next year. But...
I didn’t set out to care about data centers. No one does. You don’t wake up one morning thinking, you know what would really spice up my life? Hyperscale compute infrastructure. But here we are—living in a world where the most important real estate isn’t beachfront property or Manhattan office towers. It’s windowless warehouses filled with blinking lights, screaming fans, and enough electricity consumption to make a small country nervous. Welcome to the data center arms race—where the weapons aren’t missiles, they’re megawatts, GPUs, and whoever can pour concrete the fastest without tripping over their own capital expenditure. And if you’re an investor? This is where things get interesting. The Moment I Realized This Wasn’t Optional At some point, AI stopped being a buzzword and started becoming infrastructure. That’s the shift most people miss. We’ve been conditioned to think about technology as products—apps, platforms, devices. But what’s happening right now is much more p...