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The Trillion-Dollar Question: Can AI Startups Justify Their Astronomical Valuations?
Source: Blockworks Original Title: The incredible, incomprehensible, possibly impossible world of trillion-dollar tech valuations Original Link: https://blockworks.co/news/trillion-dollar-tech-valuations
The Trillion-Dollar Boom
In 1901, US Steel became the first $1 billion company—“an almost unthinkable sum.” Today, there are now 11 publicly traded companies worth more than $1 trillion.
For perspective: if you earned $1 every second of the day, you wouldn’t become a trillionaire until the year 33,168.
The Valuation Question
Aswath Damodaran performs reverse DCF analysis to determine what revenue these companies need to justify current valuations:
For context, US Steel’s entire 1901 value was only ~$46 billion in inflation-adjusted terms.
The New Unicorn Era
The term “unicorn” (startups valued at $1 billion) was coined just 12 years ago. Now we have:
Market Landscape
US Dominance: The US has 712 unicorns worth $2.9 trillion collectively, vs. 157 for second-place China. 80 new unicorns were created in 2025 alone.
European Gap: In 2024, the EU collected more in tech company fines than from all public European internet companies. Over the past 50 years, Europe produced just 14 companies with >$10 billion market cap vs. 241 in the US.
Economic Headwinds
Credit Concerns: Oracle debt now trades at junk-bond levels.
Labor Market Shift: With US unemployment rising and wage growth declining, jobs are replacing prices as the focus of economic anxiety. Small businesses have been hit hardest by tariffs.
Tariff Reality: While effective tariff rates are about half the headline numbers due to delays and exceptions, nearly 100% are being passed to consumers via higher prices.
Wage-Productivity Gap: The gap between US productivity and hourly wages for non-supervisory employees continues to widen, accelerating as the economy transforms through global supply chains and technology.
Cultural Shifts
Global Capital Flows
10-year Japanese government bond yields hit 2% for the first time since 1999. Surprisingly, Japanese investors are buying US investments rather than repatriating capital—likely due to the appeal of US AI stocks.
The Bottom Line
As one observer notes: “We pull sand, oil, and ore from the earth and transmute them into machines cheaper than aged milk” (a Tesla Model 3 costs less per pound than Camembert cheese).
The real question remains: Will these companies collectively earn the trillions required to justify current valuations? As the head of ChatGPT recently noted, “There is near-infinite demand for intelligence.” If true, perhaps there should be near-infinite demand for these stocks as well.