Reflections on Nvidia and Microsoft

The pursuit of value, as any student of the Aleph knows, is rarely a direct path. It is a labyrinth of probabilities, a mirroring of potential outcomes. Recently, my inquiries into the ever-shifting cartography of capital have led me to consider two entities—Nvidia and Microsoft—not as mere corporations, but as nodal points within a vast, self-referential system. The question is not whether they will yield returns, but rather, what do their present valuations reveal about the collective dreams—or anxieties—of the market?

Nvidia: The Architect of Simulated Realities

Nvidia, as best as I can ascertain from the fragmented texts of the Buenos Aires National Library’s economic archive, began as a purveyor of graphical illusions. It has since evolved into something far more profound: an architect of simulated realities. Their ‘GPUs,’ these engines of artificial cognition, are not merely processors of images, but instruments for conjuring worlds within worlds. The demand for these devices, fueled by the burgeoning field of ‘AI’—a term I use with a certain epistemological caution—is not surprising. We are, after all, creatures perpetually seeking reflections of ourselves, and now, increasingly, reflections that surpass our own capabilities.

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The ‘moat’—a term favored by the pragmatic school of value investing—surrounding Nvidia is not constructed of concrete or steel, but of code. Their CUDA platform, a language that binds developers to their hardware, is a subtle form of enchantment. It is a linguistic trap, elegantly designed to ensure that the architects of these simulated realities remain dependent on Nvidia’s tools. The current price, hovering around $185 per share, represents a claim on this future, a wager on the continued expansion of these digital universes. Five shares, obtainable with a modest $1,000 investment, are a small key to unlock this particular chamber of the labyrinth.

Microsoft: The Librarian of the Cloud

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Their cloud division, Azure, is not merely a repository of information, but a complex network of dependencies. The $392 billion backlog—a figure that grows with unsettling rapidity—represents a commitment, a promise of future revenue secured through the creation of switching costs. To abandon Azure would be to dismantle a carefully constructed ecosystem, a task few are willing to undertake. At approximately $479 per share, Microsoft represents a claim on this established order, a share in the ongoing management of the digital library. Two shares, obtainable with the same $1,000, offer a degree of stability in a world increasingly defined by its ephemeral nature.

It is, of course, impossible to predict the future with certainty. The market, like the Library of Babel, is infinite and ultimately unknowable. But to observe these two entities—Nvidia and Microsoft—is to glimpse, however fleetingly, the underlying architecture of our present reality.

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2026-01-16 03:23