If you’ve ever wondered where all the financial skeletons are buried, Jim Chanos has a map—and he’s not shy about pointing to the fresh graves. On a recent episode of the Odd Lots podcast, the legendary short seller sounded the alarm on everything from data center economics to Medicare Advantage fraud. And he did it with the dry wit of someone who’s seen a few bubbles burst.
Let’s start with AI and Nvidia. Chanos didn’t mince words on the gold rush into anything vaguely AI-related. “The AI bet is an uncertain bet,” he said. “Even the Mag 7 will tell you it’s uncertain… Our view was that the old legacy data centers that were built to basically handle the cloud, not AI, were in trouble. And that was the bet. It’s still the bet.”
That bet? That companies like Digital Realty and Equinix are built on shaky foundations. “I’ve called it one of the worst business models I’ve ever seen,” Chanos said, pointing to the endless capex required to keep servers cool and functioning. And as for Nvidia’s cozy relationship with companies like CoreWeave? He called it “round-tripping”—a polite way of saying it looks a little too much like the shenanigans from the dot-com bubble.
But the real zingers came when Chanos turned to private equity and Medicare Advantage. The supposed stability of private funds? “This is volatility laundering,” he said. “You’re buying businesses on leverage.” He highlighted the desperation starting to show in firms offering sweetheart deals just to keep LPs on board: “You’re seeing a little bit of odd behavior.”
Still, nothing got Chanos more animated than the ongoing grift in Medicare Advantage. “It’s just a windfall for the insurers,” he said. “If they don’t go after Medicare Advantage right away, then you know they’re not that serious.”
Upcoding—where insurers exaggerate how sick patients are to collect higher reimbursements—is rampant, yet enforcement is weak. “It’s the Golden Age of Fraud,” Chanos said. “We have a willingness in the corporate sector and elsewhere… of just not holding people to account.”
The scary part? He might be right. Chanos is like a market undertaker—he shows up when the music stops and the bodies surface. And he’s seeing a lot of floaters lately.
“I think that this is… no way to run an economy and no way to run markets,” he said bluntly.
You can listen to the entire interview here:
For all the latest news and podcasts, join our free newsletter here.
Don’t forget to check out our FREE Large Cap 1000 – Stock Screener, here at The Acquirer’s Multiple:
2 Comments on “Why Jim Chanos Thinks Traditional Data Centers Are Doomed”
I imagine Medicare Advantage (MA) programs also downcode, when patients go to a hospital. There’s a financial incentive to downcode. Downcoding should increase care denials, promote the use of “OBS” (“observation” status), and shorten hospital stays. The end result would be a shift of financial burden from MA programs to patients and hospitals.
If this is right, it would mean that MA insurers employ people and AI bots to upcode, and people and AI bots dedicated to downcoding. If the MA insurer was a person, it would be called cognitive dissonance.
Great point Bradley — It seems that Medicare Advantage (MA) insurers absolutely play both sides: upcoding patient risk scores to grab more federal money upfront, then downcoding hospital claims to avoid paying providers. It’s not cognitive dissonance; it’s a profit strategy.