Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 619

The megatrend you simply cannot ignore

Two and a half years have passed since financial markets, and the world at large, woke up to a new technological break-through labeled Generative Artificial Intelligence.

By now, it seems initial investor euphoria has been replaced with scepticism about the importance of the new technology promise. It's reflected in share prices dipping lower and not necessarily revisiting the levels that featured at the start of 2025.

Look no further than HMC Capital's DigiCo Infrastructure REIT (ASX: DGT) spin-off which made its ASX debut on 13 December last year on a minor discount to the $5 per share IPO pricing. It's share price is now trading closer to $3 - a concrete example of how sentiment has turned for what seemed the no-brainer momentum trend to jump on over the past two years.

From where I am sitting and observing, it seems many investors would rather buy into Aurizon Holdings [AZJ], Iluka Resources [ILU], Lendlease [LLC] or Monash IVF [MVF], and wait for better times to arrive for such market laggards, than grab the opportunity in less ebullient share prices from obvious AI beneficiaries.

Ironically, today's wait-and-see approach in Australia contravenes the rush by astute investors globally, including private equity and large pension funds, to grab their slice of what is promised to deliver the next economic and societal transformation.

So why isn't there a lot more local enthusiasm for owning shares in Goodman Group (ASX: GMG) and other AI beneficiaries on the ASX?

Reasons to be sceptical

It's not as if the promise of a different world tomorrow hasn't arrived previously on Australian shores, and on most occasions the initial hype has quickly turned to dust, or the true winners are mostly listed overseas. Think 3D printing and legalised cannabis as examples of the former and smartphones and social media platforms for the latter.

Online shopping and retailing has delivered on their promise of transformative migration, but for investors there are at least as many success stories as disappointments.

Those old enough might still have nightmares about that Great Promise of the late 90s: the Internet.

In between, of course, we also witnessed the emergence and implosion of the Commodities Super Cycle thesis, which got interrupted by the Global Financial Crisis (late 2007-March 2009) but then died a silent death in 2012.

GenAI, carried by chip manufacturers and megacap companies in the US and mostly by data centre builders and operators on the ASX, is now in its third year, which already is a long time in share market terms. Share prices in Goodman and the like more than doubled from the lows in late 2022 into late-2024/at the start of this calendar year.

So with share prices not the cheapest in an expensively priced market and with critics reminding us many hundreds of billions of investments into GenAI have yet to deliver the killer app everybody wants to purchase, maybe common sense dictates the time to chase this trend has now well and truly passed?

As per always, it all depends on how best to assess this new phenomenon.

GenAI is developing a brave new world

According to former Google CEO and Executive Chairman, Eric Schmidt, the development of GenAI is still only embryonic, with many more stages of development on the horizon, and truly transformative outcomes along the way.

In a recent TED Talk interview (link below) released in April, Schmidt argued the advent of AI is, contrary to investor hesitance, still "wildly underhyped" as general understanding is not yet fully appreciative of what is yet to be achieved through this new technology.

The emergence of non-human intelligence, which is what AI essentially embodies, is likely to turn into the most significant development for the last 500 or even 1000 years, he boldly suggests, leaving all other technological revolutions throughout that period in its shadow.

I encourage investors to watch the interview. Technologist turned AI evangelist Schmidt is far from a lonely voice on this matter. In October last year, FNArena interviewed Nilesh Jasani, who runs his own global innovation fund (link included below). The following paragraphs are from Jasani's latest update for investors:

"Generative AI now orchestrates half the product recommendations on the internet, and a quarter of travel bookings start with a chatbot. Governments, not just hyperscalers, are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into data-center infrastructure. Money that once paved highways now paves inference lanes.

"As consumers, what we buy, how we buy it, and even why we buy it is being rewritten. A decade from now, 10-20% of global consumption could be in products and services that barely exist today. The world around us is changing at a speed that is difficult to comprehend. It is not our intention here to repeat the refrains sung in every journal and presentation. But there are shifts occurring that are often under-discussed in their magnitude. Every major number hinted at in this section would have been a revolution on its own. Here, they are happening simultaneously and building on each other.

"Not just the Internet is in flux or collectively global consumers, corporates, and governments are spending on a new sector like nothing ever seen, but the capabilities and use cases continue to explode in a way unimaginable even a few months prior. Cars are delivering themselves. The skies are witnessing the first flying taxis. Machines can talk in human languages and process vision perfectly: these feats are so staggering that after Elon Musk, Jensen Huang has also felt the need to state that Robotics could become the biggest industry humanity has ever built.

"One can keep going breathless about the potential in diagnostics, or drug discovery, or in climate management, or in material sciences, or in finance. The opera approaches its crescendo. The world is forging tools so powerful they change the ask of humanity itself.

"We can chase every candlewisp of price volatility, or we can learn to breathe through it. The real risks are not recurring double-digit market corrections every few quarters. The real risk is dedicating one's attention to managing them and, in the process, straying away from truly historic real-world transformation."

The message from both Schmidt and Jasani, and from many others, is those investors who keep thinking this boat has sailed, or share prices are too expensive, or there's risk for another sell-off, are likely to miss out on a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be on the right side of history in the making.

Of course, there will be winners and losers, as well as many grand successes and failures. But no matter what type of investor you are, or what horizon your portfolio is set-up for, if GenAI reaches only a quarter of the size predicted by these experts, it will be impossible to escape its impacts on life, societies, economies, businesses, and financial markets.

From this perspective, achieving a better understanding of what is this new technology, and what is its promise, is no longer a choice for active investors.

It's a necessity.

GenAI is electrifying global efficiency

As developments accumulate in quick succession, it is increasingly dawning upon AI afficionados any comparison with the smart phone, the Internet, or even personal computers is a sign of not genuinely appreciating the transformation that has already started.

GenAI's transformative powers are so broad-based across segments, sections and sectors, a more apposite comparison is with the advent of electricity in the early 1900s. By 1920 about 35% of US homes were electrified, giving birth to new industries manufacturing refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, washing machines and radios.

By the end of that decade, that percentage had risen to 68% (90% for the major cities), fueling a consumer spending boom that supported a golden era for equities. Yes, that ultimately ended with an historic disaster at the turn of that decade, but should one worry about such an outcome already?

More than one hundred years later, the development and adoption of GenAI is occurring at much faster, break-neck pace. Its impact on businesses and the economy will be equally broad-based, but profoundly different.

My personal LinkedIn feed suggests people are embracing new AI tools with seldom witnessed gusto. HR departments are receiving perfect job applications. Complaints are drafted in perfect legal lingo. AI is creating high-quality presentation slides, writing standard emails and advising on where to holiday and which recipe or daily exercise seems best.

Investment banking and consultancies are lauding the rapid execution time, without the need for hiring more staff. Fund managers are stunned by the quick execution and the detailed information gathering to support their research.

My prediction is GenAI will be a lot more mentioned throughout the upcoming August reporting season. Critics waiting for the next killer app are missing the point; large corporations like CommBank (ASX: CBA) and Telstra ASX: TLS) await the opportunity to become a whole lot leaner and more efficient, which means higher margins, higher profits and (potentially) higher dividends for shareholders.

If investors can be convinced such margin increases are sustainable, this also translates into structurally higher valuations for companies that successfully integrate this new technology throughout their operations. Others will still be forced to make the investment, lest they be sidelined by a successful competitor or new market disruptor.

Nothing in history ever moves in an uninterrupted, straight trajectory, and it is most likely GenAI won't do it either. This is a positive, as it gives investors time and opportunity to read up and to study, and to get truly acquainted with what tomorrow's world might look like, starting from today's likely winners and opportunities.

Time to get crackin', or to repeat the advice by Eric Schmidt: don't waste this unique opportunity.

In the same vein, if GenAI truly is a once-in-a-lifetime phenomenon that is changing the world as profoundly as now is believed, there will be an ongoing conga line of opportunities (and misses) for many years to follow.

This still is not an excuse to risk missing out altogether.

 

Rudi Filapek-Vandyck is Editor at the FNArena newsletter, see www.fnarena.com. This article has been prepared for educational purposes and is not meant to be a substitute for tailored financial advice.

 

  •   9 July 2025
  • 6
  •      
  •   
6 Comments
Stephen E
July 12, 2025

Think you're right on megatrend though disagree on Digico as a way to play. Company slapped together by investment bankers in a hurry, buying assets at exorbitatnt prices, and generated fees back to parent (of course).

Others more prospective.

Rudi
July 14, 2025

Hi Stephen, I principally mentioned DigiCo as one example of share prices trading below levels seen in late 2024/early 2025. My personal favourites are NextDC and Goodman Group, but there's more on offer, and there will be more beneficiaries coming out of the woodwork in the months and years to follow.

Manfred S
July 12, 2025

I find it difficult to buy megatrends - it always feels like you're paying up for hope. I'd rather own a fund manager which invests in broader US tech or an ETF that does similar - a basket approach in case it is what it's cracked up to be.

Rudi
July 14, 2025

Hi Manfred, this latest industrial revolution is the real McCoy and whether you do it through ETFs, a fund manager, locally listed beneficiaries or on international markets, my prediction is you will --one way or another-- be forced to pay attention and integrate this into your strategies and portfolio(s). The one note to make on valuation is that whatever looks fully priced in the here and now is actually a bargain later on if/when megatrend growth comes through. And that's the key mental barrier investors have to overcome, time and again.

Phil
July 12, 2025

Rudi, do you have insight into the supply side of datacentres, especially in the US?

Rudi
July 14, 2025

Hi Phil, FNArena built a designated section for this new megatrend, so as you probably can imagine, the risk of overbuilding capacity is one item that has our focus. At the moment such risk does not appear to be on the horizon. Yes, capacity is being financed and planned, and a lot of it too, but newly built data centres don't appear overnight and then there's the reason as to why this is a new megatrend; demand is exploding.

 

Leave a Comment:

RELATED ARTICLES

Corporate earnings show resilience against volatility but risks remain

The challenges with building a dividend portfolio

On the virtue of owning wonderful businesses like CBA

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Testamentary trusts post-budget: Estate planning, tax reform and the ‘death tax’ debate

Proposed Budget changes to taxation are casting new uncertainty over testamentary trusts, prompting closer scrutiny of estate planning structures and the real implications of reforms still taking shape.

High quality businesses are on sale

Beneath the dominance of the ASX's largest stocks, much of the market has been left behind. High-quality companies are now trading at levels rarely seen, offering opportunities for investors willing to look deeper.

Meg on SMSFs: The CGT changes don’t impact super but what about Div 296 tax decisions?

New CGT rules could tip the scales in the super vs non-super debate. For those facing the Division 296 tax, the case for withdrawing has gotten more complex. A "comparison rate" tool may help assess decisions.

The strange effect of the 30% minimum capital gains tax

The 30% minimum tax on capital gains sits at the heart of the budget's proposed reforms. Yet the mechanics reveal anomalies that introduce unexpected distortions that raise questions about its design.

Ranking three common retirement strategies

The defining challenge of retirement isn't just about building wealth, it's about converting your lifetime savings into sustainable income. A holistic understanding of different strategies can improve long-term outcomes.

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 667 with weekend update

The downfall of the giant and three lessons for investors.

  • 18 June 2026

Latest Updates

Planning

Does your will qualify for the discretionary testamentary trust exemption?

Treasury has confirmed the exemption many families were hoping for. But buried in the fine print are two conditions that could leave some wills on the wrong side of the exemption, despite years of careful planning.

Lithium's latest drop and what it means for ASX investors

Lithium's latest sell-off has punished ASX miners as prices remain hostage to shifting expectations. The key challenge is navigating a market prone to extreme volatility despite a strong case for the long-term demand outlook.

Investment strategies

CGT reform and fund turnover: who really feels the impact?

The implications of CGT reform are far and wide. As the 50% discount gives way to inflation indexation, turnover and return profiles may become critical drivers of after-tax performance. Some strategies face a far greater hit.

Superannuation

Super was built for a very different Australia

Our retirement system was built around assumptions that no longer hold. Lower homeownership, longer lifespans and changing expectations are exposing cracks that policymakers and super funds need to address.

Retirement

Retirement in reality - 4 months in

Many people spend years planning financially for retirement but little time preparing for what comes next. Four months in, here are the surprising lessons I've learnt on finding purpose, social connection and healthy habits.

Investment strategies

After the Budget, Australia needs its own definition of quality

As tax reforms reshape investment incentives, investors should rethink what quality investing means in the uniquely concentrated Australian market, where traditional frameworks may not translate as effectively.

Datacenters are the new shale oil

Why are tech giants pouring billions into datacentres when the economics look questionable? The most dangerous words in investing may be: "everyone else is doing it". Today's AI boom has striking parallels with the shale bust.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2026 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.