The ENTIRE Stock Market Is a House of Cards. Just SEVEN Companies Are Holding It Up.
This isn’t a boom. This is a DANGEROUS illusion.
Last year, over 50% of the ENTIRE S&P 500’s return came from just SEVEN tech titans. Think about that. EVERY OTHER COMPANY was just along for the ride. Now, the elites are admitting the circle is collapsing. Nick Balkin of Foord Asset Management reveals a terrifying fact: global investors are “ALL IN,” with cash levels at their lowest since 2007—the year before the last financial CRASH.
The so-called “Magnificent Seven”—Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla—control roughly 35% of the market’s value. They can lift it or CRUSH it on a whim. And they’re spending BILLIONS on unproven AI dreams, creating what experts call a “circularity that adds risk to the system.” When AI companies like OpenAI buy chips from Nvidia, they pay with overvalued stock. “If that equity is overvalued, then maybe there’s a bit of a hole in some of Nvidia’s earnings,” warns Saul Miller of Truffle Asset Management. It’s a PYRAMID SCHEME built on hype.
The smart money is RUNNING. “Investors are relying on the digital bedrock of the global economy,” says fund manager Andrew Headley. They’re fleeing to cheap, boring, but CRITICAL software like SAP and Salesforce—systems that run the world with 99.999% reliability. AI, they admit, won’t replace these cores for 20 YEARS, if ever. The entire AI frenzy is trading on “euphoria” while the real engines of business are on sale.
But here’s the kicker: this affects YOU. Your retirement fund is likely crammed with these overvalued tech stocks. If they stumble, YOUR savings get wiped out. Meanwhile, the truth is hiding in plain sight. The real money isn’t in the flashy AI software; it’s in the copper needed to power its energy-hungry data centres and the old software that actually keeps the lights on.
The bubble is bigger than the dotcom era, and the same people who built it are quietly building their escape routes.
The entire system is betting your future on a lie.




