And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift.
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@raganwald Aw crud, guess I should transfer the last of my employee stock. The corruption of the stock index criteria is absolutely a grab on everyone's conservative retirement stock funds. It wasn't enough to let people choose risky mixes in their investments and to inflate the market generally with pension savings.
Check kiting via circular investment wasn't enough.
@jmeowmeow @raganwald where do you run to? Where do you hide?
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@ilia That is from Thursday, June 4th. What the S&P 500 said is that they are not changing the rules for xAI ("SpaceX').
Whereas, xAI announced the Google deal the next day. The assertion is that adding the Google deal to their S-1 allows them to claim profitability, thus making them eligible under the existing rules for inclusion without changes to the rules.
I believe that both sets of reporting can be true at the same time.
UPDATE: They still must wait four quarters.
S&P made it clear the index inclusion rules would continue to require 4 quarters of reported profitability. Being able to "claim" future profitability doesn't enter into it. SpaceX's inclusion in NASDAQ 100 and Russell indices is bad enough (Vanguard etc) but they're not going to be in SP500 for the next year, unless the rules change. And hopefully, never.
@raganwald @ilia -
And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift. Google agreeing to rent compute from xAI (cough, "SpaceX") magically makes them eligible for inclusion in the S&P500.
Americans, they are looting your life savings, the ones you earned through labour that they are gleefully replacing. Your descendants will never have the chance you had.
https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/05/google-will-pay-spacex-920m-per-month-for-compute/
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And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift. Google agreeing to rent compute from xAI (cough, "SpaceX") magically makes them eligible for inclusion in the S&P500.
Americans, they are looting your life savings, the ones you earned through labour that they are gleefully replacing. Your descendants will never have the chance you had.
https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/05/google-will-pay-spacex-920m-per-month-for-compute/
@raganwald
Not having any kids keeps playing out for me. -
S&P made it clear the index inclusion rules would continue to require 4 quarters of reported profitability. Being able to "claim" future profitability doesn't enter into it. SpaceX's inclusion in NASDAQ 100 and Russell indices is bad enough (Vanguard etc) but they're not going to be in SP500 for the next year, unless the rules change. And hopefully, never.
@raganwald @ilia@osma @raganwald @ilia The S&P 500 delists unprofitable companies, and they already stated up front that SpaceX has to show a history of profitability and other factors before it qualifies for consideration.
With them losing $15 to $160 Billion a year, $11 Billion a year is hardly going to bail them out. Even going public does not bail them out in any way that fools the index.

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@osma @raganwald @ilia The S&P 500 delists unprofitable companies, and they already stated up front that SpaceX has to show a history of profitability and other factors before it qualifies for consideration.
With them losing $15 to $160 Billion a year, $11 Billion a year is hardly going to bail them out. Even going public does not bail them out in any way that fools the index.

Profitability is often sacrificed for growth, for example Amazon was unprofitable for 6 years after going IPO, uber 4 years, I am sure there many other similar examples
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And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift. Google agreeing to rent compute from xAI (cough, "SpaceX") magically makes them eligible for inclusion in the S&P500.
Americans, they are looting your life savings, the ones you earned through labour that they are gleefully replacing. Your descendants will never have the chance you had.
https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/05/google-will-pay-spacex-920m-per-month-for-compute/
Absolutely thievery. I need to be off Google services ASAP.
(Edit: I long ago tapered off my use of their services to a minimum, but I'm still using Gmail. Time to end that too.)
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And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift. Google agreeing to rent compute from xAI (cough, "SpaceX") magically makes them eligible for inclusion in the S&P500.
Americans, they are looting your life savings, the ones you earned through labour that they are gleefully replacing. Your descendants will never have the chance you had.
https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/05/google-will-pay-spacex-920m-per-month-for-compute/
@raganwald Google paying $920m per month for access to Melon Husk owned computers is ludicrous. That is close to $1 billion per month. Does not make sense. You could feed and educate a lot of people for that mount of wasted money.
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Profitability is often sacrificed for growth, for example Amazon was unprofitable for 6 years after going IPO, uber 4 years, I am sure there many other similar examples
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And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift. Google agreeing to rent compute from xAI (cough, "SpaceX") magically makes them eligible for inclusion in the S&P500.
Americans, they are looting your life savings, the ones you earned through labour that they are gleefully replacing. Your descendants will never have the chance you had.
https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/05/google-will-pay-spacex-920m-per-month-for-compute/
We are watching a tech/AI-bubble come crashing down in real time.
Proof that the "market" N.E.V.E.R. learns.
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Profitability is often sacrificed for growth, for example Amazon was unprofitable for 6 years after going IPO, uber 4 years, I am sure there many other similar examples
@ilia @osma @raganwald they both had to wait to join the S&P 500 until they both showed a history being profitable and dozens of other factors.
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Profitability is often sacrificed for growth, for example Amazon was unprofitable for 6 years after going IPO, uber 4 years, I am sure there many other similar examples
@ilia @webology @osma @raganwald
All AI services operate at a massive negative margin. Every time they generate revenue they lose money. Amazon and Uber had obvious paths to positive margin, AI has none.
When Amazon buys a warehouse it lasts decades. When an AI service stocks a datacenter, the GPUs become useless in a couple of years.
The CapEx that Amazon was spending was largely in actual durable things, the "CapEx" for AI services is mostly consumables.
If these were bakeries, Amazon issued stock to buy more ovens, while the AI services are issuing stock to buy flour for the week.
Paradoxically, Musk and SpaceX were once on the good side of this; reusable rockets are more like tools than consumables, so you get recurring value from their construction.
I don't see recurring value for expenditure, I don't see a moat, I don't see a path to positive margin, these are money pits up and down.
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@ilia @webology @osma @raganwald
All AI services operate at a massive negative margin. Every time they generate revenue they lose money. Amazon and Uber had obvious paths to positive margin, AI has none.
When Amazon buys a warehouse it lasts decades. When an AI service stocks a datacenter, the GPUs become useless in a couple of years.
The CapEx that Amazon was spending was largely in actual durable things, the "CapEx" for AI services is mostly consumables.
If these were bakeries, Amazon issued stock to buy more ovens, while the AI services are issuing stock to buy flour for the week.
Paradoxically, Musk and SpaceX were once on the good side of this; reusable rockets are more like tools than consumables, so you get recurring value from their construction.
I don't see recurring value for expenditure, I don't see a moat, I don't see a path to positive margin, these are money pits up and down.
@eestileib @webology @osma @raganwald AI business could be profitable if the fees they charged better reflected costs, but right now they (AI companies) are still in price discovery mode and fighting to establish market/mind share.
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@eestileib @webology @osma @raganwald AI business could be profitable if the fees they charged better reflected costs, but right now they (AI companies) are still in price discovery mode and fighting to establish market/mind share.
@ilia @webology @osma @raganwald
Seems like that when fees line up with costs, it's more expensive than the alternative (a recently-fired engineer with kids and a mortgage). At least for program listing generation.
For the real use cases of claim denial, automating racist policing, domestic surveillance and purges, bombing children, AI provides a useful culpability sink that may be worth a trillion dollars to the Epstein class.
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@ilia @webology @osma @raganwald
Seems like that when fees line up with costs, it's more expensive than the alternative (a recently-fired engineer with kids and a mortgage). At least for program listing generation.
For the real use cases of claim denial, automating racist policing, domestic surveillance and purges, bombing children, AI provides a useful culpability sink that may be worth a trillion dollars to the Epstein class.
@eestileib @webology @osma @raganwald Not really, if you look @ token costs from Chinese models it is massively cheaper than what frontier labs charge, there is also the matter that there is little dedicated inference hardware optimized for inference and inference alone, which will reduce costs significantly.
That being, I do think over time number of engineers needed will only increase not decrease.
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@eestileib @webology @osma @raganwald Not really, if you look @ token costs from Chinese models it is massively cheaper than what frontier labs charge, there is also the matter that there is little dedicated inference hardware optimized for inference and inference alone, which will reduce costs significantly.
That being, I do think over time number of engineers needed will only increase not decrease.
@ilia @webology @osma @raganwald
Yeah my friend who runs an eng team that uses Qwen with a non-chatbot interface says that pretty much nobody he considers to be serious is using one of the American models, because China has established credibility that they will release a free version that's just as good and far more efficient with a three month delay.
So, no moat. These AI service IPOs are money pits.
I honestly think a major reason that chatbots took over the world is that they flatter men made lonely by age and power.
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@ilia @webology @osma @raganwald
Yeah my friend who runs an eng team that uses Qwen with a non-chatbot interface says that pretty much nobody he considers to be serious is using one of the American models, because China has established credibility that they will release a free version that's just as good and far more efficient with a three month delay.
So, no moat. These AI service IPOs are money pits.
I honestly think a major reason that chatbots took over the world is that they flatter men made lonely by age and power.
@eestileib @webology @osma @raganwald The beauty of those models is that you can run them on own or cloud hardware, so you are not feeding training data to the AI labs and have full control.
They are admittedly a bit behind, but not far enough to be non-competitive or not useful for real work.
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@eestileib @webology @osma @raganwald Not really, if you look @ token costs from Chinese models it is massively cheaper than what frontier labs charge, there is also the matter that there is little dedicated inference hardware optimized for inference and inference alone, which will reduce costs significantly.
That being, I do think over time number of engineers needed will only increase not decrease.
@ilia @eestileib @osma @raganwald These companies aren't profitable because they are putting all profits back into growth and infrastructure. Look at Anthropic's rise to become the fastest company to hit $1 billion in revenue in history, then $10 billion, and now $30 billion in ~4 months. If they'd stop training new models and doubling their customer base, they would be some of the world's most profitable companies based on the numbers they have shared.
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And just like that—surprise!—one AI company bails out another AI company's grift. Google agreeing to rent compute from xAI (cough, "SpaceX") magically makes them eligible for inclusion in the S&P500.
Americans, they are looting your life savings, the ones you earned through labour that they are gleefully replacing. Your descendants will never have the chance you had.
https://techcrunch.com/2026/06/05/google-will-pay-spacex-920m-per-month-for-compute/
@raganwald What are these "life savings" you speak of?
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@jmeowmeow Also, if any of them had an ironclad business model, they'd gleefully allow their "competitors" to flame out and fail.
That they are supporting each other tells us that they know that if one fails before they all offload the junk onto the public, there will be a run on all their stocks.
@raganwald @jmeowmeow It's like junk bonds all over again.