1. AI is becoming part of modern warfare

Companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, and others are increasingly tied to defense contracts with the United States Department of Defense.

Key developments:

• OpenAI agreed to deploy AI models in classified Pentagon networks with safety guardrails.

• AI systems have reportedly been used to analyze battlefield data and prioritize targets during recent operations.

• Hundreds of tech employees have protested military AI contracts after strikes related to the Iran conflict.

At the same time, the U.S.–Israel military against Iran has intensified, with thousands of strikes and drone warfare reported.

Why this matters for investors

War accelerates funding for:

• AI intelligence systems

• drones and robotics

• cybersecurity

• satellite analytics

This means AI infrastructure companies often benefit indirectly from defense spending.

2. War historically boosts certain tech sectors

When geopolitical conflicts escalate, capital typically moves into:

Winners

• Defense contractors

• AI intelligence & surveillance tech

• semiconductor infrastructure

• drone manufacturers

Examples:

• Defense companies like Lockheed Martin received new contracts during the conflict.

• AI hardware firms like NVIDIA are investing billions in infrastructure for next-generation AI data centers.

Because AI computing infrastructure is needed for both commercial AI and military AI, the same companies benefit from both trends.

3. Are AI stocks in a bubble?

Short answer: partially yes, but not entirely.

Signs of a bubble

Many analysts see similarities with the 1999 dot-com era:

• Extremely high valuations

• AI hype driving speculative capital

• Retail investors chasing AI themes

Examples:

• AI companies achieving massive valuations quickly

• semiconductor stocks rising 200–400% in 2–3 years

If growth slows, AI stocks could face a 20–40% correction.

But the AI boom is real

Unlike the dot-com bubble, AI already has:

• real revenue

• government contracts

• enterprise adoption

AI spending is projected to exceed $10B annually in military applications alone by 2028. (Top AI Tools List - OpenTools)

This means the long-term trend is still upward.

4. Likely scenarios for AI tech stocks

Scenario A — Short-term bearish correction

Triggers:

• war escalation causing market panic

• high interest rates

• profit-taking in mega-cap tech

Result:

• AI stocks drop 20–35%

• but fundamentals remain strong

Scenario B — Sideways consolidation (most likely)

What happens:

• hype fades

• revenues grow into valuations

Stocks move sideways for 1–2 years.

Scenario C — Long-term AI supercycle

If AI adoption keeps expanding:

• data center boom

• robotics

• defense AI

• autonomous systems

Then AI could become the largest tech cycle since the internet.

5. AI stocks most exposed to the trend

Important companies to watch:

AI infrastructure

• NVIDIA

• Broadcom

• Advanced Micro Devices

AI cloud

• Microsoft

• Amazon

• Alphabet

Defense + AI

• Palantir Technologies

• Lockheed Martin

These companies often benefit from both commercial AI growth and defense spending.

6. Portfolio strategy in this environment

Many professional investors use a “barbell strategy”:

Growth side

• AI chip companies

• cloud providers

Defense hedge

• defense contractors

• cybersecurity

This balances AI upside with geopolitical risk.

✅ My overall view (2026–2030):

• Short-term: volatile

• Medium-term: consolidation

• Long-term: AI megatrend still bullish

But not all AI stocks will survive—many smaller AI startups will disappear.

@CaptainTiger  @Tiger_comments  @TigerStars  @vodkalime  @Emotional Investor  @bigfatdog123dog  @DCamel  

# Is the Rebound a Dead Cat Bounce?

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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