But the potential is much bigger than this, he says.

“A couple of hundred billion dollars in [venture capital] funding each year is going into modernising and inventing this new world. What it means is a hundred trillion dollars of industry, several per cent of which is [research and development] budget, is shifting over to artificial intelligence,” he says.

Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang at the CES tech show in Las Vegas last Monday.Credit: AP

“People ask, ‘Where is the money coming from?’. That’s where the money’s coming from.”

But for all of Huang’s chutzpah, AI will need a lot more than this hot air – and soaring chip sales – to sustain its insane 2025 run into this year.

There is a growing worry that the AI giants, which have helped pump Nvidia to a $US5 trillion giant, need to start demonstrating an actual return from their massive AI investment plans, or risk a brutal market backlash.

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Not that crazy market optimism has not been confined to AI, or the US market.

ASX-listed defence tech group DroneShield has now doubled from its market nadir late last year when investors erupted at the news that both its CEO and chairman had dumped all of their stock with no warning.

The company will need to almost double again to regain its $6 billion valuation.

But if the board keeps its promise to improve operations, and the sales contracts keep coming in, a company that reported revenue of less than $60 million for the 2024 calendar year could once again be worth more than $6 billion.

It might not be the only ASX-listed stock to leave AI euphoria in the dust in 2026.

Gold reserves have surpassed the euro to become the second-largest global reserve asset.Credit: Bloomberg

We are already seeing geopolitics ramping up interest in green metals like lithium and rare earths, as Lynas amply demonstrated last week with a massive jump on the news that China was again restricting rare earth shipments to Japan.

For many market professionals, the closest thing to a sure bet this year is the soaring gold price, which is just short of its $US4500-plus record high.

Analysts predict gold could top $US5000 per ounce as a hedge against government bonds and the US dollar, which risk having their value eroded by massive government spending and rising debt levels.

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But if you don’t trust analyst forecasts, how about global reserve banks? According to a European Central Bank study last year, the gold reserves of central banks now exceed their holding of US Treasuries for the first time in more than three decades.

Gold reserves have also surpassed the euro to become the second-largest global reserve asset after the US dollar.

SPI Asset Management managing partner Stephen Innes says it is a reflection of the growing uncertainty, and this industrial-grade demand for a precious metal shows that its record run won’t be shaken easily.

“That is not cyclical buying. It is balance sheet re-engineering,” Innes says. “Reserve managers are diversifying away from concentration risk in a system that feels increasingly political and less predictable. That kind of demand does not retreat on pullbacks. It adds.”

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