The Utility Mispricing
Currently, global infrastructure funds are making a systemic error: they are pricing AI-native operational companies as if they were traditional utilities. They are applying valuation frameworks built for toll roads, power grids, and static fiber networks to highly dynamic, intelligence-driven organizations. This framework is fundamentally wrong. Utilities offer predictable, slow growth based on physical scarcity. AI-native operators offer exponential growth based on cognitive abundance.
Appreciating Assets vs. Depreciating Hardware
Traditional infrastructure relies on massive CapEx for physical assets that begin depreciating the moment they are deployed. A bridge or a server rack is worth less tomorrow than it is today. AI-native operators, however, build infrastructure powered by software and machine learning. Their primary asset—intelligence—actually appreciates in value the more data it processes and the longer it runs. Valuing an appreciating cognitive network using the mathematics of a rusting bridge represents a massive market dislocation.
The Window for Correction
The window to correct this valuation arbitrage is currently open, but it is closing fast. Capital allocators who recognize the difference between “dumb pipes” and “cognitive infrastructure” will secure generational returns over the next decade. Those who continue to use static yield models will find themselves holding legacy assets while the premium shifts entirely to the intelligence layer. The market is slowly realizing that the algorithms managing the network are more valuable than the network itself.
Capital Intelligence in Action
Deploying capital effectively in the Velocity Economy requires a new kind of diligence. Investors must evaluate a firm’s data acquisition strategy, its model training latency, and its ability to deploy insights into operational environments rapidly. The focus must shift from pure physical asset evaluation to evaluating the speed and quality of a company’s cognitive loop.