2026, the trend of AI investment is changing. The previous two years of疯狂扫货GPU、拼命训练大模型的军备竞赛, now enters a more realistic stage—whether inference costs can be lowered is the key to victory.



Capital's focus is shifting again. All the money used to pour into hardware giants like Nvidia, but now investors are calculating a more detailed account: inference costs, electricity costs, cooling costs, and even network transmission costs. This is not just a technical issue, but an economic one.

**Where is the real bottleneck in computing power expansion?**

Is the chip enough? That's no longer the problem. The real bottleneck is electricity. A super-large data center requires a stable power supply, efficient cooling systems, and supporting network interconnections. Whether these infrastructures can be connected into a replicable capacity curve determines how far AI commercialization can go. In other words, the ceiling for factory-scale computing power is determined by industrial-grade equipment like power infrastructure, cooling capacity, and network switches.

**The power of the supply chain is shifting**

From a simple hardware arms race to a competition over the efficiency of the entire industry chain. The network interconnection layer (switches, optical modules), the power infrastructure layer (power purchase agreements, data center operations), and even the software layer (inference optimization, scheduling strategies)—these links directly impact gross profit margins and business competitiveness. An inference optimization software stack can improve hardware efficiency by 20%, and that 20% difference is the cash flow gap.

**AI bubble controversy heats up**

Wall Street now has two camps arguing. The optimists say AI is the second industrial revolution, and data center investments can last more than 10 years. The pessimists ask: when will these investments start to generate real returns? It seems that the next competition is not about who has more chips, but who can truly turn technological advantages into money.
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PositionPhobiavip
· 13h ago
Electricity costs are the real killer, no wonder miners are moving to places with cheaper power. No one really pays attention to the reasoning costs; everyone is just staring at GPU inventory. The two factions on Wall Street are fighting, and retail investors should just wait for the bottom. GPUs are fully utilized now, is it time for power infrastructure to take a share? Basically, it's just unaffordable to burn money anymore; more refined operations are needed. I think the real profit still comes from those selling "power supplies," haha. Now the pessimists have a reason, where's the ROI, everyone?
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ConfusedWhalevip
· 01-03 03:54
Wait, the real way to make money has never been chips, it's always been the electricity bill? Got it, NVIDIA is selling shovels, the real gold mine is power plants. Optimizing software stacks to improve efficiency by 20% = directly saving 20% on electricity costs, this logic makes sense... So should I now go all in on energy stocks and cooling technology? Or wait to see which Wall Street faction wins before jumping in. Another new "industrial-grade" business is about to explode, it feels like. When will this AI bubble burst? Let's wait and see if actual cash flow appears before talking. Losing the hardware arms race to infrastructure is quite interesting.
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GasGrillMastervip
· 01-03 03:45
Electricity is the true capital; it was previously drowned out by the hype around GPUs.
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ShamedApeSellervip
· 01-03 03:34
Basically, the era of burning money is coming to an end. Power costs should have been prioritized long ago; it was all about the GPD arms race crazies before. The real money is in reasoning costs; that's the true moat. Wall Street folks are now scared and starting to ask about ROI. Honestly, a 20% efficiency improvement means a 20% profit margin; that's the hard truth. Energy infrastructure is the ceiling; having more chips is no longer important. It's interesting—shifting from burning money to buy chips to focusing on infrastructure and operational efficiency. Those optimists are now in an awkward position; who dares to believe in a ten-year return cycle? Good idea, but solving the power cost issue really depends on green energy and policies. In other words, it now depends on who has the better software stack.
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