Markets were on edge this week as a series of negative headlines about artificial intelligence trade fueled fears of a bubble.
Prominent short seller Michael Barry questioned the sustainability of AI’s returns. Concerns have grown over the level of debt funds needed to build AI infrastructure. If you like high flyers coreweave I was troubled by disappointing guidance.
CNBC’s Deirdre Botha sat down with the founders of two of the hottest AI startups to get their thoughts on the people at the heart of the boom.
Amjad Massad, founder and CEO of AI coding startup Replit, admits there was a cooldown.
“At the beginning of this year, there was a hype market for vibecoding, and everyone had heard of vibecoding. Everyone wanted to try it. The tools weren’t as good as they are today, so I think a lot of people got burned,” Massad said. “So there’s been a bit of atmosphere coding, the hype has slowed down, and a lot of companies that were profitable aren’t as profitable anymore.”
Massad added that while many companies used to publish annual recurring revenue figures weekly, “that’s no longer the case.”
Navrina Singh, founder and CEO of Credo AI, a startup that helps enterprises with AI monitoring and risk management, feels more excitement than fear.
“I don’t think we’re in a bubble,” she said. “I truly believe that this is the new reality of the world we live in. As we know, AI is and is going to be the biggest growth driver for businesses. So it makes sense that we will need more investment, not just in capacity and governance, but also in energy and infrastructure.”
Watch this video to learn more.
