The new AI king is "worse than on-chain meme," with millions of transactions transforming into a trillion-dollar mirage for Anthropic.

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According to BlockBeats, on May 7th, AI giants OpenAI and Anthropic are nearing their IPOs, with current public market valuations of approximately $850 billion and $380 billion respectively. In comparison, the implied valuations in the on-chain pre-IPO market are even more staggering. Anthropic's implied valuation on Juipter has surged past $1.2 trillion, while on Hyperliqud it stands at $1.143 trillion. OpenAI's implied valuation on Juipter is $1.05 trillion.

The optimistic implied valuations of AI giants in the on-chain market are actually a mirage. Currently, Anthropic's daily trading volume on Juipter is only $1.39 million, with just 329 traders in the past 24 hours and a total of only 3,530 holding addresses—less than a moderately popular meme token. Today's 329 traders have propelled Anthropic's valuation past $1.2 trillion, surpassing OpenAI to become the AI leader. How staggering is a $1.2 trillion market capitalization? If it successfully IPOs, Anthropic will instantly become the 11th largest listed company globally, creating a new legend in business history. Furthermore, Anthropic's daily trading volume on Hyperliqud is also in the millions of dollars, with an open interest of only $6.7 million.


If the blockchain is a mirage, what about the traditional market? A similar bubble cycle exists among AI giants. Massive cloud service providers like Microsoft, Nvidia, Google, and Amazon are investing heavily in large-scale companies like OpenAI and Anthropic, often injecting hundreds of billions of dollars. These AI companies then use almost all of this money to buy products from investors—Nvidia's GPUs, Microsoft/Amazon/Oracle's cloud computing power, etc. On the surface, revenues are skyrocketing, valuations are soaring, and everyone seems to be "making money." But in reality, the same money is circulating aimlessly within a closed circle, creating a false sense of prosperity, relying on continuous new capital injections and high-cost burning, while real profits and widespread productivity improvements have yet to materialize.

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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