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Brutal Market Warning: Fund Manager Exposes Weakest Sector, #1 AI Trade | Matthew Tuttle

Channel: David Lin Published: 2026-06-25 18:00
David Lin

Matthew Tuttle argues the AI trade is not a March 2000-style bubble top, but it is shifting from a broad “buy anything AI” phase to a more selective bottleneck trade. He prefers memory, photonics, space, energy infrastructure, and selected software/cyber names over broad software ETFs, and he says investors should size positions small because a sharp correction is possible even if the secular trend remains intact.

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Detailed summary

This is an interview with Matthew Tuttle, founder and CIO of Tuttle Capital Management, about where the AI trade goes next and how to position around it. His core thesis is that the AI boom is still alive into 2027, but the easy money has moved on from broad exposure to a more selective hunt for bottlenecks. In his framing, the market first bought “anything related to AI,” then shifted to bottlenecks such as memory, photonics, and space, and now needs to keep “peeling the onion” into substrates, inference, token costs, and related infrastructure. He repeatedly says this is not a March 2000-style episode, though he concedes “we might be” in a bubble and that nobody can reliably call the top. A major part of his argument is that memory is currently the strongest bottleneck. …

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Main takeaways

  1. The AI trade is not over, but it has become much more selective.
  2. Memory is the clearest current bottleneck in his framework.
  3. Broad software ETFs are too blunt for the AI era.
  4. SpaceX was a lesson in not chasing IPOs on day one.
  5. Anduril is his favorite prospective IPO name.
  6. A true AI top would likely require hyperscaler spending to roll over.
  7. Rate hikes would be a meaningful headwind for high-beta tech.

Market read by horizon

Short term

Near term, he would lean into pullbacks in memory and other AI bottlenecks while avoiding broad software baskets and day-one IPO chasing. The immediate risk is a sharper correction if rates rise or if the latest AI winners get crowded and unwind.

  • He thinks the recent pullback in AI-related names is likely a buyable dip rather than a major top.
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  • If Micron stays strong, he expects the memory names to do well near term.
  • Broad software ETFs like IGV look weak to him relative to bottleneck trades.
Mid term

Over the next few months, he expects the market to keep rotating within AI from obvious winners into suppliers, bottlenecks, and infrastructure names. The setup stays constructive unless hyperscaler capex rolls over or the rate backdrop turns decisively hostile.

  • Over the next several weeks and months, he expects the AI opportunity set to keep rotating from broad exposure into narrower infrastructure bottlenecks.
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  • He wants investors to watch the next layers after memory: photonics, substrates, inference, and token economics.
  • He thinks selective software names may work, but only if they are clearly additive to AI rather than threatened by it.
Long term

Structurally, he sees AI as a multi-year industrial buildout rather than a finished bubble, with value accruing to bottlenecks, energy, and adjacent infrastructure. The lasting implication is that stock selection matters more than thematic exposure, because broad baskets may underperform the true enablers.

  • His structural view is that AI remains a major secular race that includes the U.S., China, Russia, and Europe.
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  • The durable winners, in his view, are the companies solving real bottlenecks rather than simply owning the AI label.
  • He thinks future tech alpha will come from identifying the next constraint before the crowd does.
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Key claims (12)

BULLISH AI investment cycle evolution

The AI trade has moved from buying anything AI-related to focusing on bottlenecks — memory, photonics, space, substrates, inference, and token costs.

Speaker describes an evolution in the AI trade and lists specific bottleneck areas investors should focus on now.

BULLISH AI-driven memory demand MU

Memory prices are skyrocketing because AI demand is structurally strong, and Micron's beat is demand-related rather than one-time.

Speaker points to rising memory prices, Micron's 9% gain, and expectations being high but still beaten as evidence of sustained AI-driven memory demand.

BEARISH AI disruption of software IGV

The IGV software index is a poor investment in the AI era because it includes legacy software companies that will be crushed by AI.

Matthew argues that in the age of AI, investors need to separate software companies that benefit from AI from those that will be disrupted, and a broad index like IGV includes too many losers.

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Assets discussed (23)

SpaceX
BULLISH stock

Used as an example of a high-profile IPO and a space/AI-related asset he likes long term, but he warns against buying day one.

IGV — IGV
BEARISH etf

He says it is too broad and not a smart way to own software in the AI era.

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Speakers

GUEST Matthew Tuttle INTERVIEWER David Lin

Interview (20 Q&A)

market indicators

Do you think Bitcoin and the IGV index trading alongside each other are indicative of more downturns or corrections to come?

Matthew doesn't read much into them moving together. He thinks Bitcoin is not a leading indicator for the market — air has just come out of that trade. On software (IGV), he says many software companies will get crushed by AI and some will benefit; he'd stay away from IGV and be careful on software generally, though he likes cybersecurity names and trades CRM and NOW occasionally.

AI-safe software

What companies do you think will not be cannibalized by AI software companies?

Matthew says Microsoft is a whole different category and will be fine. Palantir will be fine. Anything cybersecurity — you need more of it, not less — will be fine. He also trades NOW and CRM when they get beaten down and thinks they'll be fine. Beyond that he'd be really careful with software.

memory thesis

Why should people look into the memory space if AI will continuously innovate and require less compute power — shouldn't we be shorting memory stocks instead?

Matthew says right now memory is a bottleneck. He is not sure it will always be one, but until it ceases to be a bottleneck it is an area he wants to be in. He notes they have three different memory ETFs plus a 2x long SanDisk fund. He advises watching position sizing (1-2% allocations) so a 50% correction would not be a big deal.

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Where this transcript pushes against consensus

  • He dismisses the idea that Bitcoin is a reliable leading indicator for the market without providing much evidence.
  • He argues against the March 2000 analogy, but the comparison is left somewhat qualitative rather than data-driven.
  • His claim that memory can remain a bottleneck is plausible, but he does not address how quickly supply could catch up.
  • The space-data-center and space-manufacturing thesis is interesting but highly speculative and mostly forward-looking.
  • His view that broad software is largely avoidable may understate the resilience of some incumbent platforms beyond the names he cited.

Topics

AI trade rotationmemory bottlenecksoftware selectionIPO strategySpaceXAndurilspace economydefense convergencerates and inflationETF structure

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