History Rhymes – Don't Forget It

No one, that we know of, is saying Artificial Intelligence (AI) isn’t an amazing new technology that will have an important impact on life, investing, and the economy.

What we worry about is that investors have gotten ahead of themselves. It’s happened before. On January 3, 1925 the New York Times published a piece on radio stocks that said, “It is considered doubtful if there ever has been an industry in the history of this country which has had such phenomenal growth.” Those stocks eventually crashed.

We would add the South Sea Bubble of 1720 promised to revolutionize global trade, railroads at the turn of the 20th century, the oil boom of 1920/21, the telecom and computer boom of the late 1990s, and 3D printing more recently. All of these technologies, inventions and industries have transformed the US and the world. They have all lifted living standards; they all created immense wealth for savvy investors and entrepreneurs.

But they also generated speculative pricing in markets that eventually led to pain for investors who tried trading them for profit. There are many reasons for this, but the most important is that the real beneficiary of new developments in technology, when the dust settles, is the consumer, the end user. Yes, wealth is created by well-run companies (that survive the shake-out) in the industry, but the real benefits are spread far and wide.

A perfect example of this is the combination of national fiber optic networks with more powerful, and decentralized computers run on the WinTel platform (the Windows Operating System + Intel Chips). It may be hard to remember, but the world completely changed in the late 1980s and 1990s as things moved from large back offices with lots of paper, to electronically powered networks. From mail to email.