If you need $3 trillion in debt to keep the dream alive, it’s not a dream anymore.
This is why people have grown increasingly worried about the financing behind AI over the past few months: bond issuance has surged since September, and global financing of data centers is expected to balloon to almost $3 trillion just through 2028. https://t.co/IG78HUnVQJ pic.twitter.com/km24DcqNrS
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) November 17, 2025
Jeff Bezos is reportedly throwing his money and time into an artificial intelligence start-up that he will help manage as its co-CEO.
The AI company, called Project Prometheus, is coming out of the gates with $6.2 billion in funding
This is the first time Mr. Bezos has taken a… pic.twitter.com/HuEqRgXJbj
— Evan (@StockMKTNewz) November 17, 2025
I don't know what's scarier, Alex Karp's interviews or Alex Karp thinking these interviews are helping… 😬
Is it over? $PLTR https://t.co/oDlvUepSN7 pic.twitter.com/Y4gHSWdXNZ
— Financelot (@FinanceLancelot) November 17, 2025
💥BREAKING:
First it was Michael Burry.
Then SoftBank Group dumped all its $NVDA shares.
And now Peter Thiel sold his entire $NVDA stake.
Nvidia Corporation accounts for about 8% of the S&P 500 index. pic.twitter.com/5E7r8aTKiM
— Crypto Rover (@cryptorover) November 17, 2025
Thiel is out of $NVDA
SoftBank is out of $NVDA
Burry is shorting $NVDA$NVDA is deep in Wave 5 and has carried the market. https://t.co/dtDdbrOton— The Long Investor (@TheLongInvest) November 17, 2025
Are we headed for the biggest crash in history! 🔴
byu/Bright-Efficiency614 insmallstreetbets
This Is How Our Economy Comes Crashing Down
Welcome to the American economy of 2025.
Economic growth is robust and stock markets are hovering around record highs. Set on a foundation of supportive fiscal and monetary policy, the tower appears sturdy enough.
But a closer inspection shows that an increasing number of structural supports — across businesses, labor markets, consumers and stocks — are looking wobbly. A Jenga-like collapse, meaning an unexpected economic downturn, is not inevitable. But it is a growing, underappreciated possibility.
One of the most critical economic Jenga blocks removed this year has been small American companies, especially those focused on trade. Small businesses, often defined as having fewer than 500 employees, play a critical role in America’s economy and employ 46 percent of total workers. They have an even bigger presence in trade. A Department of Commerce study released in April found that small firms account for a third of the total value of imported U.S. goods and an overwhelming 97 percent of all importing companies in America.
These small firms have had fewer resources than their larger competitors to navigate the Trump administration’s tariffs, such as finding new supply-chain partners, lobbying the government for help or managing costs to absorb tariffs without hurting profitability. So it’s no surprise that an Atlanta Federal Reserve report found in April that small U.S. firms expected sales to be 9 percent lower compared with normal business conditions, because of cost increases. That’s three times greater than the sales hit expected by large firms.
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