| Ticker | Direction | Speaker | Thesis | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LONG |
Alex Finn
AI Content Creator / Expert |
"Software is abundant... there is no more scarcity in software... The scarcity now is in the hardware." Finn explicitly notes that while SaaS stocks crash, hardware stocks like ASML and memory providers (SanDisk/Micron) are hitting highs. As AI agents (OpenClaw) allow users to code their own apps for free, the pricing power of software companies collapses. Conversely, the demand for the physical components to run these models (chips, memory, robotics) skyrockets because you cannot "vibe code" a physical chip. Long the hardware supply chain. ASML (lithography), MU (memory), WDC (SanDisk/storage), and TSLA (scarce hardware/robotics). Supply chain disruptions or a plateau in AI model scaling. | 35:43 | |
| LONG |
Alex Finn
AI Content Creator / Expert |
"I immediately ordered $20,000 worth of Mac Studios... Everyone's running out buying Mac minis right now." Finn argues that to run powerful local models (privacy, 24/7 uptime, zero cost), consumers need high-end local silicon. The shift from cloud-based AI (OpenAI servers) to local-based AI (OpenClaw on-device) creates a massive hardware upgrade cycle. Apple's Silicon (Mac Studio/Mini) is identified as the "greatest value in computing" for this specific use case. Long AAPL as the primary beneficiary of the "Local AI" hardware refresh cycle. Competitors releasing better local inference chips (NPU) or models becoming small enough to run on legacy hardware. | 21:45 | |
| AVOID |
Alex Finn
AI Content Creator / Expert |
"Salesforce was scarce because it was very difficult to build... now with AI... there is no more scarcity in software." Finn states he can ask his AI to build software replacements instantly. The investment thesis for SaaS relies on "moats" built on code complexity and switching costs. If an AI agent can replicate a CRM or design tool (like Figma) in hours for free, these companies lose their pricing power and recurring revenue justification. Avoid legacy "System of Record" SaaS companies like CRM whose primary value proposition is being eroded by AI-generated software. Enterprise inertia keeps companies on legacy platforms longer than expected due to compliance/security. | 35:02 | |
| LONG |
Alex Finn
AI Content Creator / Expert |
"Microsoft... will start buying that wrapper... and they'll say, 'Hey, you can save $10 billion a year by firing all these employees'." While generic SaaS suffers, the platform owners who integrate these agents to reduce OpEx will win. Finn predicts corporations will adopt "secure wrappers" of these agents to automate entire departments (accounting, design), massively boosting margins for the adopters. Long MSFT as both a beneficiary of the efficiency gains (firing art teams/accountants) and as the likely buyer/distributor of the enterprise-grade AI wrapper. Regulatory pushback on mass AI-driven layoffs. | 31:11 | |
| LONG |
Alex Finn
AI Content Creator / Expert |
"One of the only moats left at the end of the day is your distribution." Finn uses his AI to scrape X 24/7 to find trends and build products. In a world where software creation is commoditized (anyone can build an app), the only differentiator is the ability to reach customers. Platforms that own the "distribution" and the real-time data flow (X) become the most valuable real estate. Long the platforms controlling attention and data distribution. User churn or platform instability. | 17:28 |