AI’s Unit Economics, H1B Policy, and Housing Dependence Form a Perfect Recession Machine
Argues AI unit economics are unsustainable and reliant on gov funding, while H1B restrictions threaten the housing market, creating a recession risk.
- AI service costs significantly exceed enterprise revenue per seat, indicating broken unit economics.
- Reliance on government funding suggests the commercial AI model is failing and facing effective nationalization.
- Tightening H1B visa policies could collapse housing demand, triggering a broader economic recession.
AI didn’t just stumble — it sprinted off a cliff, did a triple‑backflip into a GPU volcano, and proudly announced it had secured government funding on the way down. The moment ChatGPT opened the federal chequebook, the entire industry quietly admitted what the spreadsheets had been screaming like a fire alarm: this business model is a chalk outline. Not a sector. Not a market. A crime scene with a GPU cluster still smoking next to it.
Because the unit economics aren’t “challenged.” They’re a suicide note written in CUDA. Enterprises pay $30 a seat. The cost to serve a single power user is $500 and rising like a SpaceX test flight that’s about to explode for “data collection purposes.” Every new model generation turns last year’s $10B cluster into a historical reenactment. And when the VCs finally stopped pretending they were underwriting the Manhattan Project, ChatGPT did the unthinkable: it went to the government and said, “Daddy, I need money.” That’s not a bailout. That’s a nationalisation with a PR team. Once the taxpayer becomes the primary oxygen source, the commercial AI race ends. You can’t compete with a model funded by an entity that literally prints the scoreboard.
But the real comedy — the pitch‑black, slow‑motion‑collapse kind — starts with immigration policy. The bedrock of the American economy isn’t innovation, productivity, or whatever patriotic bedtime story CNBC whispers into the void. It’s housing — a $40‑trillion Jenga tower whose new demand is almost entirely fuelled by H1B workers paying $4,500 a month for a San Jose broom closet and calling it “an investment.” These workers aren’t just participants; they’re the oxygen tank strapped to the housing market’s chest. Tighten the H1B pipeline, and suddenly the entire real‑estate complex — from Zillow to your landlord’s third Airbnb — starts hyperventilating like a founder reading their burn‑rate slide aloud.
And here’s the part economists treat like Voldemort:
it only takes about twenty H1B homeowners panic‑selling at a 5% discount to crater the entire local market by 50% or more.
Housing valuations aren’t based on fundamentals. They’re based on the last sale. One slightly discounted comp becomes five. Five become a trend. A trend becomes a “market correction.” And suddenly every homeowner in a 20‑mile radius is underwater because twenty engineers got their visas denied and had to dump their townhouses before TSA escorted them to the departure gate.
Every denied visa is a vanished lease.
Every vanished lease is a forced sale.
Every forced sale is a comp.
And every comp is a neutron bomb under the housing market.
Now watch the gears interlock like a doomsday clock hitting midnight.
AI companies, already bleeding cash like a Renaissance battlefield, start layoffs. The very workers who kept tech alive — and kept housing prices vertical — disappear from payrolls and from the country. Housing demand evaporates at the exact moment AI’s losses migrate to the public balance sheet. The taxpayer becomes the involuntary sugar daddy of a trillion‑dollar hallucination and the bag‑holder for a collapsing housing market.
This isn’t a recession. It’s a precision‑engineered economic death spiral.
\- AI sets itself on fire, then hands the extinguisher to the government.
\- H1B policy kicks out the only people who can afford the rent.
\- Housing collapses because the tenants were the economy.
Each one is a catastrophe. Together, they’re a synchronized, patriotic implosion — a recession machine so perfectly designed it should be in the Smithsonian next to the Apollo capsule and the original debt ceiling.
And the punchline?
The God‑model didn’t ascend.
It got nationalised.
The housing market didn’t cool.
It face‑planted.
The tech workforce didn’t pivot.
It got deported.
And the taxpayer — the only “customer” left — now owns a depreciating house and a trillion‑dollar chatbot that hallucinates citations.
It’s not just the perfect recession machine.
It’s the first recession with a Terms of Service.
huh. a rare AI slop post that didn't use "make sure not to sound like an AI" in the prompt...
This is unreadable.
I agree that AI being too expensive is a huge problem. Curious how you would play that angle. Just getting out the AI trade? Or invest in companies that could help make AI more economically feasible for enterprise?
I've been researching the latter and right now I'm in Elastic (search software for AI cost optimization) and maybe Nutanix (software for private/on-prem AI).
Damn you missed the whole run didn’t you?
By that you mean I bought micron at 70 got out at 700, SanDisk at 220 and got out at 1710, yes I missed the entire check writing to the LLM cycle.
Congrats on your memory trade
Your post is still a ChatGPT copy paste.

r/valueinvesting