
CapitalLoss-as-a-Service
20 posts

CapitalLoss-as-a-Service
@Bitt573
Tech/software investor, mental patient. Crypto skeptic



The interesting thing about SaaS is the market basically went through a gut-wrenching process where it put every possible AI fear on the table culminating with "we're all out of jobs". The downward price movement emotionally reinforced the validity of these concerns into investors' minds. And when stocks are going down quickly, it allows anyone to say whatever bearish thing comes to mind without getting laughed out of the room (and vice versa when stocks are ripping). But now we are perhaps at a point where any investor who holds shares in SaaS has digested these concerns and already determined they are in. In other words, I would think most people who own SaaS at this point are much firmer hands than a few months ago. Like what needs to happen from here to get current investors to sell? And is that going to happen shortly? Will be interesting to see how it plays out from here.



I heard an incredible analogy from a VC friend that I can’t stop thinking about. “The moat in software was the cost of building software. And Claude Code just mass produced a bridge.” It’s wild when you think about the impact of this. The SaaS boom produced a few dozen billionaires and a bunch of zero sum winners. But the AI SaaS era will mass produce millionaires. There will be fewer ServiceTitans hitting $5B valuations, and instead there will be 50,000 companies doing $500K-$5M each, run by 1-3 people with deep expertise and huge margins. To be clear, I believe that the total value of software goes up, and the number of companies created goes up exponentially. But the number of people who capture the value also goes up 100x. I don’t believe in the “SaaS is dying” headline, I think it’s missing the point. It’s simply that the power of SaaS is changing hands.




Recent earnings call, Aneel Bhusri of Workday says startups with AI agents are "parasites" This is what system of record incumbents really think of startups. The war is just beginning. The facts: the user data belongs to the users, not the incumbent software vendor.








these two are probably VPs now clearing 275k




*SEC PREPARES PROPOSAL TO ELIMINATE QUARTERLY REPORTING: WSJ Soon the 10-Q will be a thing of the past
























