In 2000, everyone believed the internet would change the world.

And they were right.$TRUMP

But the market still crashed.

Today, everyone believes AI will change the world.

And once again, they’re probably right.

But history has shown something important:

Bubbles don’t collapse because the technology is fake.

They collapse because expectations detach from reality… and greed takes over.

Michael Burry — the investor known for predicting the 2008 financial crisis — has recently drawn comparisons between today’s AI-driven rally and the final stages of the dot-com bubble.

And when sentiment reaches a point where taxi drivers, influencers, and every headline is aggressively bullish at the same time… it usually means smart money starts quietly rethinking exposure, not increasing it.

History doesn’t repeat in exact patterns.

But human psychology absolutely does.

2000: Internet bubble

2008: Housing bubble

2026: AI bubble?

The real question is not whether AI will transform the world — because it likely will.

The real question is whether markets have already priced in a future that is too perfect, too fast, and too clean to actually unfold in reality.$TRUMP