Limitless: An AI Podcast

There has been a surge in memory stocks and memory ETFs, with AI inference demand reshaping the market and perhaps reshaping the entire memory industry. 

Micron, SK Hynix, and Samsung are interesting plays with their supply constraints, rising memory needs, and signs that shortages are starting to affect consumer devices.

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TIMESTAMPS

0:00 Memory Companies
5:03 Inference Demand
6:52 Supply Constraints
10:58 Key Players
14:55 Market Conditions
20:04 Forecasting
23:31 Closing

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RESOURCES

Josh: https://x.com/JoshKale

Ejaaz: https://x.com/cryptopunk7213

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Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here:
https://www.bankless.com/disclosures⁠

Creators and Guests

Host
Ejaaz Ahamadeen
Host
Josh Kale

What is Limitless: An AI Podcast?

Exploring the frontiers of Technology and AI

Ejaaz:
If you invested $25,000 in SanDisk last year, you'd have a million dollars today.

Ejaaz:
Memory stocks have absolutely skyrocketed, and the reason behind that is simple.

Ejaaz:
It's AI. Memory has become the core component behind GPUs, CPUs.

Ejaaz:
It actually makes up 50% of the materials cost to actually build AI models today.

Ejaaz:
And just six weeks ago, a new memory ETF launched, giving you exposure to the

Ejaaz:
top three memory manufacturers, SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron.

Ejaaz:
And just under a month from launching, it is up over 100%. It took in over $6

Ejaaz:
billion in assets in the first five weeks of it operating.

Ejaaz:
In fact, Goldman Sachs referred to it as the fastest growing ETF that they've

Ejaaz:
seen with $1.1 billion worth of inflows in a single day. So this begs the question,

Ejaaz:
Is memory stocks or AI memory specifically a good investment to make right now

Ejaaz:
or has the bubble grown too much?

Ejaaz:
If we look historically at memory, it's gone under very volatile boom and bust cycles.

Ejaaz:
So in this episode, we're going to explore whether this makes sense at all.

Ejaaz:
And I think I would personally argue that I think this time is different.

Ejaaz:
Memory has undergone a significant shift of demand where AI is just consuming all available supply.

Josh:
So maybe just take a step back before we get into why. We could talk about what

Josh:
memory is as it is referred to around AI, which is basically high-speed chips

Josh:
that sit physically next to the GPU.

Josh:
And they hold the model weights and the data that the chips need in order to

Josh:
access during the inference and training run.

Josh:
So this matters because these large models are bottlenecked by not really how

Josh:
fast the GPU can do the math, but how fast it can pull data from that memory.

Josh:
So the speed and capacity of that memory directly determines how big and how

Josh:
fast a model can run. So if you want to publish AI tokens, if you want to generate

Josh:
tokens, memory is the single critical kingpin.

Josh:
And this is different than anything we've ever seen before, because for the

Josh:
last 40 years of time, memory was the pretty much textbook example of a horrible business.

Josh:
There are three suppliers that make these ships. There's Samsung,

Josh:
SK Hynix, Micron, and they make identical products, which are essentially a commodity.

Josh:
And it turned into this thing called a pig cycle, which is basically high prices.

Josh:
And then everyone builds the same fabs. And then there's oversupply,

Josh:
which results in price collapse. and this cycle has kind of run itself every

Josh:
couple of years since the 1980s.

Josh:
But Ijaz, like you said, this time is different. There are these two key traits

Josh:
that are converging that make it different this time.

Ejaaz:
So the first one is...

Ejaaz:
The demand sync that comes from AI for memory has vastly outpaced any other

Ejaaz:
demand sync that memory has had before.

Ejaaz:
So if you look at pre-AI memory stock charts and post-AI, it looks like completely

Ejaaz:
like a penny stock. It's just gone parabolic, right?

Ejaaz:
And so the question everyone's asking is, is this real? Well,

Ejaaz:
the answer is, it's true.

Ejaaz:
If you look at NVIDIA specifically, when the AI cycle really kicked off,

Ejaaz:
their GPUs were in incredible amounts of demand.

Ejaaz:
Now, back then, the models used a significant chunk of memory,

Ejaaz:
typically around 30% to 40% of the bill of materials cost for GPUs back then

Ejaaz:
for NVIDIA's early models went to memory, basically.

Ejaaz:
Now, if you fast forward to today, it's 50%. And if you look at every future

Ejaaz:
iteration, including Rubin, Rubin Ultra, and Feynman, that is going to be launched later in 2028.

Ejaaz:
Doesn't just require the same amount of memory, it requires 2,

Ejaaz:
3, and 4x the amount of memory for every single iteration.

Ejaaz:
So the point being is, there is an insatiable amount of demand for memory,

Ejaaz:
and there are different types of memory.

Ejaaz:
In fact, AI has created a completely new novel type of memory structure known

Ejaaz:
as HBM, high bandwidth memory,

Ejaaz:
which functions above the status of local genuine DRAM, which is like your standard

Ejaaz:
DRAM, which a lot of other consumer devices use, just for AI specifically.

Ejaaz:
So the point being is there are very limited amounts of memory available and

Ejaaz:
AI is eating up pretty much the majority of it right now.

Josh:
Yeah, so we have the network effects that are occurring just from AI demand,

Josh:
but the high bandwidth memory is a key structural difference that I think a

Josh:
lot of people aren't really aware of.

Josh:
If you imagine a single traditional stick of RAM, something that you might see

Josh:
plugged into a computer, you could think of it, that's like a one-story warehouse.

Josh:
What these AI chips require right next to the GPU is this thing called high

Josh:
bandwidth memory and that is a warehouse but stacked vertically

Josh:
mostly right now it's about 8 to 12 stacks high soon there's

Josh:
going to be 16 stacks high and that requires a lot of

Josh:
very precise materials a lot of engineering a lot of

Josh:
resources that make these chips far more complex but also

Josh:
constrain the supply far more i mean each gpu or each

Josh:
stick of memory is now approximately 8 to 12 sticks

Josh:
so you have this convergence of a few things one is just the

Josh:
need for them in order to generate tokens but specifically the

Josh:
need for that high bandwidth memory that makes a huge difference so

Josh:
now not only do we have the supply constraints coming in terms of the actual

Josh:
structural advantages that um hbm has but you also only have three people that

Josh:
actually produce this there are three manufacturers and the constraint is so

Josh:
tight that they have actually some of them stopped making commercially available

Josh:
ram because they're so focused on building

Josh:
purely memory for AI.

Ejaaz:
Yeah. And there's also a recent shift that has happened within AI in general

Ejaaz:
where previously it was very focused on AI training. And so it was very GPU heavy.

Ejaaz:
That's why NVIDIA is now like the most valuable company in the world.

Ejaaz:
Now that recently shifted towards inference. Inference is like where you prompt

Ejaaz:
or call on a model and you get an answer back.

Ejaaz:
Instead of humans doing the majority of the inference, we're finding that AI

Ejaaz:
models themselves or AI agents specifically are spending a lot of time thinking.

Ejaaz:
Talking amongst each other and coming up with a better output and a better answer.

Ejaaz:
That's what a lot of cutting edge models and AI products today actually do behind the scenes.

Ejaaz:
That requires a lot of inference. Now, if you want to do all that amount of

Ejaaz:
inference, you need not just a little bit more memory, you need a load more memory.

Ejaaz:
So the argument that's being made right now is in a future where the entire

Ejaaz:
economy is facilitated or propped up by AI agents, you're going to need like

Ejaaz:
10 to 50x more memory than we have available today.

Ejaaz:
And Ben from Stratechery did an amazing breakdown and I kind of like summarized

Ejaaz:
it here where basically the value of the opportunity is like 10 to 50x from

Ejaaz:
now and we don't currently have enough memory to do that.

Ejaaz:
And it immediately reminded me of another company, which was NVIDIA,

Ejaaz:
back when they were building out GPUs for gaming processing,

Ejaaz:
graphics processing specifically, And then they stumbled across this AI thing

Ejaaz:
where they were like, huh, it also needs parallel computing.

Ejaaz:
And now, like, the demand sync was crazy from AI. The same thing is happening

Ejaaz:
with memory, and these memory manufacturers are going to benefit the most.

Josh:
So we're going to get into what companies are best positioned for memory.

Josh:
But prior to that, it's probably makes sense to explain why this time is different,

Josh:
why the clock is ticking, where there's a perhaps a limited opportunity before

Josh:
the market starts to realize this structural change.

Josh:
Now, we mentioned the problems that are occurring in terms of just supply side

Josh:
due to the invention of HBM and just the requirement of that in every single GPU.

Josh:
But there's also a software side demand vector as well, which is the rise of agents.

Josh:
And we've mentioned this in a previous episode, but I think it's important to

Josh:
double down on, is the idea that you're not just talking to a singular chatbot anymore.

Josh:
And when you send a query to an LLM, like ChatGPT or like Claude,

Josh:
you create this thing called the KV cache.

Josh:
And that uses a lot of memory. It stores a lot of the context inside of this narrow window.

Josh:
Now, what happens with agents, which is the new paradigm, which is what a lot

Josh:
of these companies are shifting to, and a lot of people who are doing productive

Josh:
work are actually using, those agents, each one consumes their own KB cache,

Josh:
which means it needs, if you have 20 agents, you need 20 instances of memory.

Josh:
And there is no sign of that trend slowing down where there's more instances

Josh:
or more demand for agents, which means more context that needs to be remembered,

Josh:
which means significantly more of that HBM, which is a ready supply constraint.

Josh:
In fact, if you want to get some memory now, lead times are extended currently

Josh:
to the end of 2027 because there's just this inability to scale production.

Josh:
And I think when we answer the question of why this time is different,

Josh:
there are these unique structural changes, both on the hardware demand side,

Josh:
but also on the software supply side that both point to

Josh:
A pretty far out window in which you should start to worry about demand because

Josh:
there is just a very clear trend in one direction and a very clear under-indexing

Josh:
of the ability to supply all of the memory required to fulfill that trend.

Josh:
So I think that's something worth noting is that there are demands for this

Josh:
coming from all these different areas.

Ejaaz:
There's a physical constraint to building memory.

Ejaaz:
The top three providers cannot physically build out more capacity.

Ejaaz:
In fact, I was reading a story earlier this week where apparently

Ejaaz:
a bunch of different AI customers have been offering Micron and the likes of

Ejaaz:
Samsung and SK Hynix to help them build out or purchase equipment in exchange

Ejaaz:
for guaranteed capacity or supply in 2027 and 2028, right? You're not exaggerating that.

Ejaaz:
Currently, they're booked up until the end of 2027.

Ejaaz:
And so there's a physical constraint there. Typically in a bubble,

Ejaaz:
whether it's a memory bubble or a tech bubble in general,

Ejaaz:
you have some version of these companies faking demand, and they're levering

Ejaaz:
up to create a supply which ends up becoming an oversupply.

Ejaaz:
So there's too much of the product out there, and so prices kind of like crash

Ejaaz:
demand kind of like sinks. That isn't the case here.

Ejaaz:
If you look at every quarterly earnings report from each of these three manufacturers,

Ejaaz:
who are all public, by the way,

Ejaaz:
you can see that these back orders, that these bookings are not only legitimate,

Ejaaz:
but they're already paid for

Ejaaz:
in advance, which typically doesn't happen with any of these contracts.

Ejaaz:
So you have legitimate cash on the books that you can then use as a cash projection

Ejaaz:
or a forward projection for a lot of these companies. In fact,

Ejaaz:
if you look at Micron, their forward earnings right now is under 10, which.

Ejaaz:
Isn't definable within a bubble where if you look in like past historical cycles,

Ejaaz:
that typically hits around 30 to between 30 to 50 affords earnings ratio.

Ejaaz:
So the point is, it's legitimate as far as we can say.

Ejaaz:
Now, skeptics are saying, maybe it's the earnings that is the bubble.

Ejaaz:
So the earnings that they're reporting isn't actually real, but that's harder

Ejaaz:
to pick apart than what we're seeing right now.

Josh:
Yeah, I was actually going to mention, I think that's such an important point. the idea

Josh:
that although these companies are trading so much higher sandisk is

Josh:
up 1500 percent the forward pe ratio which

Josh:
is the price to earnings basically what premium it trades for on a

Josh:
relative basis versus what it's worth today is only 9 to 12x and it's lower

Josh:
for samsung at 7x and it's even lower for sk hynix at 5 to 6x so they're not

Josh:
really trading at a premium relative to what they're guiding for their estimates

Josh:
and revenue to be if you take a company like tesla i think that's currently trading at 40 to 50x.

Josh:
And companies like Microsoft or Amazon are like 15 to 20x.

Josh:
So these memory stocks on a relative basis are actually valued pretty in line

Josh:
with what you'd expect for a industry that's doing very well.

Josh:
And that's noteworthy. So let's get into the actual stocks, the companies that

Josh:
people can participate in, or at least look at if they're interested in participating

Josh:
in this. There are three large players.

Josh:
There is SK Hynix, their Samsung, and their SanDisk.

Josh:
I'm seeing another ticker here, which perhaps you could walk us through,

Josh:
which is MU up 864%. Why is that up so much?

Ejaaz:
Yeah, I mean, it's Micron. Micron is up over 8x over the last year.

Ejaaz:
The primary reason for that is the other two companies, the biggest memory manufacturers,

Ejaaz:
which is SK Hynix and Samsung electronics are based in Korea.

Ejaaz:
So if you're in the West, or if you're in America specifically,

Ejaaz:
and you want to get exposure to these stocks, it's not as easy as going on to

Ejaaz:
your Chase stock account and purchasing these, you can't exactly do that.

Ejaaz:
There's a few more hoops to jump through, and most people aren't willing to do that.

Ejaaz:
So another way of getting exposure to this thing is to buy the main American memory manufacturer.

Ejaaz:
And there is one clear leader, which is Micron. So their stock has absolutely set.

Ejaaz:
And to be fair, in Micron's defense, they produce a really good product and

Ejaaz:
they are one of the advanced suppliers.

Ejaaz:
But if you want to talk about who the king is, it is SK Hynix.

Ejaaz:
They have been the sole and main provider for memory, for NVIDIA and all their future GPUs.

Ejaaz:
In fact, in the same way that NVIDIA has booked out the majority of capacity

Ejaaz:
for TSMC to build their GPUs, they have done the same with SK Hynix.

Ejaaz:
So the reason why those people that I mentioned earlier are trying to like pay

Ejaaz:
off SK Hynix for guaranteed supply in the future is because NVIDIA owns the

Ejaaz:
monopoly on all capacity for SK Hynix going forward.

Ejaaz:
So SK Hynix is like the strongest. Samsung Electronics is next.

Ejaaz:
Samsung Electronics does a ton of other stuff, which is why it's not a pure

Ejaaz:
concentrated bet on memory.

Ejaaz:
And then you have Micron, which is like the American bet. Now,

Ejaaz:
what I want to speak about is that ETF I mentioned earlier, Josh,

Ejaaz:
that launched six weeks ago.

Ejaaz:
That is like the fastest-growing ETF, I think is like $5 billion worth of inflows

Ejaaz:
over the last five weeks or $6 billion.

Ejaaz:
Um, it's this thing called DRAM. It's a fantastic ticker and it's a memory ETF.

Ejaaz:
And the reason why it's so unique is two reasons.

Ejaaz:
One, it's accessible in the West, but two, it's a basket exposure to those two

Ejaaz:
Korean companies that I mentioned earlier on. It owns SK Hynix shares.

Ejaaz:
It owns Samsung Electronics shares, but it also owns Micron.

Ejaaz:
In fact, all three of these companies, I think make up around 70% of the entire

Ejaaz:
basket. So it's a very concentrated play on memory, AI memory specifically.

Ejaaz:
And then it also owns smaller stakes in the likes of SanDisk and Westgate,

Ejaaz:
which is a different type of memory that is still equally important for the AI trade.

Josh:
We have a great visual on this i think this is probably what most people will

Josh:
be interested in participating in just showing the holdings within this i mean

Josh:
this is the access that you want if you want access to the korean companies

Josh:
it has 24 sk hynix 25 micron technology 5 in wd 6

Josh:
seagate samsung is 20 so this is probably the most

Josh:
balanced basket of exposure this is personally what i'm most

Josh:
interested in if you don't want to think about it too much you just set it

Josh:
and forget it uh ejash you mentioned this to me a little while

Josh:
ago and since then it has gone absolutely nuclear this seems

Josh:
to be the singular place in which people are converging on

Josh:
if they don't want to do all the hard work of picking winners and losers

Josh:
in fact this has recently gotten enough

Josh:
attention to where they have leveled it up even once

Josh:
more so now there is a ticker that goes by the

Josh:
name of just ram instead of dram which is the etf that

Josh:
covers basically the entire memory market and this is a 2x

Josh:
leverage long memory etf that is going

Josh:
to be launching very soon so if you really want to go risk on

Josh:
if you really believe in the memory trade over a long period of time there are

Josh:
tools available to be able to enable you to gamble on this to the full extent

Josh:
i'll probably just stick with the regular dram etf but for those ambitious this

Josh:
is probably the best way to get access to those individuals particularly if

Josh:
you listen in the united states like most of us do and you want access to those Korean powerhouses,

Josh:
this is a pretty good way of doing it.

Ejaaz:
Now, I'm sure what a lot of listeners are thinking as you're hearing what we're

Ejaaz:
saying is, okay, well, all these stocks are up

Ejaaz:
5 to 8x, we've completely missed the trade.

Ejaaz:
Why on earth would we potentially want to invest in this? Is this a bubble? Is this going to pop?

Ejaaz:
And there is feasibility to argue that that might be the case.

Ejaaz:
This time isn't actually different.

Ejaaz:
In fact, if we look at the historical context of these memory suppliers,

Ejaaz:
on the left here in 2000, there were 11 main manufacturers of memory.

Ejaaz:
And it's important to understand that memory has gone through boom and bust

Ejaaz:
cycles for the better part of the last two to three decades.

Ejaaz:
And with every boom and bust cycle, you end up with fewer players,

Ejaaz:
which brings us over to the right over here, which this is funny,

Ejaaz:
this was in 2013, Josh. So these three have kind of stuck it out.

Ejaaz:
You have three companies which basically dominate memory manufacturing in its entirety.

Ejaaz:
So the question now is, is this gonna happen in the same way?

Ejaaz:
Now, there's two sides of this argument.

Ejaaz:
The side that argues against this thesis is,

Ejaaz:
Um, AI has created a demand sync for the reasons that we mentioned earlier,

Ejaaz:
Genetic AI, the fact that you need it for all successive GPUs in larger quantities

Ejaaz:
than we've seen in any other technology shift. And that is the case.

Ejaaz:
Um, AI is pretty pervasive across every single industry.

Ejaaz:
So if you assume that every single industry is going to have some form of AI

Ejaaz:
model that changes the way that the industry works or AI agents that can automate, say,

Ejaaz:
I don't know, 10 to 40% of working roles there, you can then extrapolate to

Ejaaz:
think, well, okay, that's going to need a bunch of memory, a bunch more GPUs,

Ejaaz:
a bunch more CPUs, a bunch more agents to be able to facilitate that.

Ejaaz:
So you can then kind of mark up the amount of memory that is required.

Ejaaz:
And that's why these stocks have probably a longer way to go.

Ejaaz:
Now, the skeptic would argue, okay, that's the case for now.

Ejaaz:
But what if we launch an AI model or a GPU, which requires much less memory?

Ejaaz:
Won't that mean that memory oversupply will happen? What happens when Micron's

Ejaaz:
fab gets launched and we have a heck ton more memory?

Ejaaz:
Will that decrease prices in demand? You could argue yes and no.

Ejaaz:
Jevon's paradox, people will just maybe want more of the things.

Ejaaz:
So you may need even more amounts of memory. But those are both sides of the opposing argument.

Josh:
Okay, so I guess I have something that I'd want to challenge you on in kind

Josh:
of supporting why this time is different, if you think this time is truly different.

Josh:
Because when we look at the historical patterns of what these memory cycles

Josh:
are like, they generally last about 18 months and then experience a pullback

Josh:
of anywhere from like 40 to 75%. This happened in 1995, 99, 2017, 2023.

Josh:
And now this current cycle started actually in the fourth quarter of 2024.

Josh:
So we're about month 18 now, which is where things should be either taking a

Josh:
turn for the worse or changing for the better.

Josh:
So if you're thinking about how you allocate personally and how you believe

Josh:
this to go, this is a pretty pivotal time. If you're looking at it as if there's

Josh:
like resistance on the chart, we're at that resistance right now. We're in month 18.

Josh:
Does it seem like it's more probable that this actually is different or is this

Josh:
the natural cycle? Because I mean, all the signs point to it being different this time.

Josh:
But you mentioned, I mean, the ETF had doubled in five weeks.

Josh:
So a lot of that like easy beta that people had is gone.

Josh:
Is there still opportunity for the upside? And what timescale are you thinking about?

Ejaaz:
If you ask me personally, I do think that there is a long term, a lot more upside.

Ejaaz:
But it wouldn't surprise me if we see a short term retrieval from stock price

Ejaaz:
charts. We have had, I think, six weeks of constant uptick in this DRAM ETF

Ejaaz:
and in just memory stocks in general.

Ejaaz:
And that has been on the basis of these quarterly earnings and a bunch of other

Ejaaz:
partnership announcements.

Ejaaz:
That can't keep happening every single week. At some point, we're going to run

Ejaaz:
out of news to kind of push prices up further.

Ejaaz:
And I think we're going to see a recession. I think people are kind of overthinking it.

Ejaaz:
Now, the argument against that would be, well, forward earnings ratios are still

Ejaaz:
quite low. And some people might see that, but I just don't think we can see

Ejaaz:
a chart go up exponentially every single week. I think we're going to have some back pull.

Ejaaz:
The thing that gives me optimism is those backlog of orders that I mentioned

Ejaaz:
earlier that aren't just signed, sealed, but before they even delivered.

Ejaaz:
People have paid for it up front. There was a recent deal that was struck between,

Ejaaz:
I believe it was Google and Micron for their TPUs, and they paid 40% up front.

Ejaaz:
So the point is, these companies really want memory, and the companies that

Ejaaz:
really want memory are not unknown companies. They're the mag-7 who have the

Ejaaz:
cash flow and free cash flow to pay for it and back it up.

Ejaaz:
So if you have some of the smartest, most intelligent companies,

Ejaaz:
most valuable companies in the world, putting up money and big risks like that,

Ejaaz:
you could argue that this time is different and more legitimate.

Ejaaz:
Now, of course, there is the non-zero chance that all of this blows up,

Ejaaz:
that the demand is actually fake, that Anthropic and OpenAI on their demand

Ejaaz:
side actually end up inflating their numbers too much.

Ejaaz:
And that could lead to a waterfall cascade of all these things crashing.

Ejaaz:
But I don't see the structural context for that happening right now.

Josh:
12 months from now, higher or lower?

Ejaaz:
Higher.

Josh:
I think higher too. That feels like the vibe.

Josh:
There is like very clear trajectory and sure, there will be a bit of volatility

Josh:
along the way, but higher feels like an optimistic version of the future that

Josh:
we have enough information to go on that I could feel comfortable about betting on.

Josh:
So I think that's probably most of the case for memory.

Josh:
That's why it's important what unique market structures are now available that

Josh:
weren't in the past version of these 18-month cycles and where the opportunity

Josh:
lies if you are interested in participating.

Josh:
I guess the ask for you, the person who's listening to this, is...

Josh:
What do you think on that 12-month timescale? Or what is the best way for you to get exposure?

Josh:
There's this chart that really devastates me personally, EGIS,

Josh:
as someone who loves to create my own custom PCs and build hardware.

Josh:
The cost, yeah, if you scroll down all the way to the bottom even,

Josh:
the cost of these memories or memory systems for consumer products is through the roof.

Josh:
And that's been a little disappointing because if you want to just go buy a

Josh:
PC, if you want to get a new Xbox, even the new Steam machines,

Josh:
they've all been delayed or the prices have been increased.

Josh:
In fact, if you want to go buy a PlayStation 5, it costs now today than it did,

Josh:
what was it, five years ago when it first came out because of these supply constraints.

Josh:
So we're starting to see it permeate out into the general broad consumer market.

Josh:
And that feels a little discouraging. I wonder how high that can go.

Josh:
I wonder how much tolerance the consumer market has before it starts to bend.

Josh:
So that's something I'm going to be looking at also, is following these prices

Josh:
as it relates to just general consumer hardware.

Josh:
Is the iPhone going to suffer are those prices going to go up the average smartphone

Josh:
costs things of this nature are also on the watch list to see if they could

Josh:
if they could bear it and if they can then we're probably good if not it's something

Josh:
to just take some note of personally

Ejaaz:
Memory is going to be one of the biggest bets in the same way that gpus were

Ejaaz:
and it saw nvidia you know breach of above five trillion dollar market cap i

Ejaaz:
think the same thing is going to happen in um memory this time and we have three concentrated players.

Ejaaz:
One in America, Micron, that is going to do the same thing for memory.

Ejaaz:
So I'm excited about it. I am slightly nervous about the boom and bust of these

Ejaaz:
different cycles, but I guess we'll see if this time is different.

Ejaaz:
The fundamentals. It's getting high, man. Things are going up.

Ejaaz:
Well, at some point, it's going to break, right?

Ejaaz:
I'm looking at this consumer PC memory chart, and I'm like, at some point,

Ejaaz:
people are just going to throw their hands up in the air.

Ejaaz:
It's going to be too expensive and something will need to shift,

Ejaaz:
whether it is these consumer device makers like Apple.

Ejaaz:
Pushing back and saying, listen, we're just not going to do this,

Ejaaz:
or we need to find an alternative.

Ejaaz:
I don't know what that is. But one thing is for sure is the demand for AI models,

Ejaaz:
the demand for AI agents is just going up and to the right.

Ejaaz:
If it's not coming from consumer, it's coming from enterprise.

Ejaaz:
So I just don't know how this conundrum is going to be fixed.

Ejaaz:
Maybe we create an alternative type of model. But either way, we will be tracking it.

Ejaaz:
And I'm bullish memory at least for the next six to 12 months.

Ejaaz:
But that is it. I'm curious whether the listeners of the show have any other takes.

Ejaaz:
We've released, I think, two other investment-themed episodes over the last

Ejaaz:
week and a half, and the feedback has been tremendous.

Ejaaz:
Both comments telling us why we're right and why we are explicitly wrong.

Ejaaz:
I want to hear from both sides because it helps us kind of like figure out where

Ejaaz:
we're going next and what to cover next.

Ejaaz:
If there's anything that we missed on the memory set of things, also let us know.

Ejaaz:
And finally, we heard you on wanting to talk about or unpack the layers of substrates

Ejaaz:
and infrastructure that we covered on our previous episode.

Ejaaz:
We are going to plan and deliver that episode fairly soon. But this week,

Ejaaz:
later on, we're getting Leopold's firings.

Josh:
Happy Leopold week. This is huge.

Ejaaz:
This is huge.

Josh:
Our last two episodes, those were among the biggest ever because it was covering Leopold.

Josh:
I don't want to say, i don't want to take any credit but if you search up leopold's

Josh:
portfolio or if you go on x we're very much the beginning of

Josh:
the leopold narrative and now it is the next chapter in

Josh:
that so leopold's uh fun situational awareness has

Josh:
gone from 1.5 billion to like 6 billion in the course of

Josh:
two years and they publish these things called 13f filings every

Josh:
quarter that reveals the new set of positions that 13f filing is going live

Josh:
sometime by the end of this week it's due by friday so we will be very ambitiously

Josh:
monitoring this and as soon as it releases we'll have an episode ready to go

Josh:
to talk about all the new investment thesis around situational awareness for the next quarter.

Josh:
So stay tuned for that. We are locked in and ready to go as soon as that one drops.

Ejaaz:
Exactly. But aside from that, I think that is it. And we will leave you guys

Ejaaz:
until the next episode. But see you then.