https://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-d ... =home-pageThe ramifications of Chinese startup DeepSeek, with its promise of delivering cheaper, more energy-efficient alternatives to harness artificial intelligence, have yet to be fully reflected in U.S. equities.
That’s the thinking of Don Townswick, director of equity strategies at Conning Asset Management, which oversees $170 billion in assets.
“If it turns out to be a little more sketchy, a little less valid than what people are saying now, the ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks would tend to benefit,” Townswick told MarketWatch.
On the flip side, if DeepSeek ends up delivering a less costly way forward, “I think it’s going to be a lot easier for typical companies to more easily use AI in their business,” he said.
Under that scenario, Townswick sees benefits from DeepSeek that could be accretive to earnings for a broader mix of companies beyond the current AI heavyweights, through greater efficiencies and productivity from less-expensive AI solutions.
“Google is what happens when we pool information energy on a software network. Everyone understands this. Bitcoin is what happens when we pool monetary energy on a software network. Few understand this.”
Michael J. Saylor