“Damn, there is so much great knowledge out there. Did you know that “BOOKS” are full of smart?? No, I mean like life changing, I-wish-I-knew-that-years-ago type stuff.
I know that I was waaaayyy late to the game figuring it out. And I know that a lot of you are too busy to read as much as you ‘should’. And that is why you need me.
I still remember how it started for me. It started in June of 2008. After 11 years …..Click to continue
June 13, 2026

Why Your $20 ChatGPT Subscription Costs OpenAI $200 to Deliver (And Why That's a Problem)
Inside the eye-watering economics of AI that have tech giants burning through billions faster than a teenager with their first credit card
Imagine running a lemonade stand where every cup you sell for a dollar costs you ten dollars to make. You'd be out of business faster than you can say "bankruptcy court." Yet that's essentially the business model Silicon Valley's AI darlings are running right now, and somehow, investors keep writing checks with more zeros than a phone number.
According to recent industry analysis, companies like OpenAI and Anthropic might be spending more than $1,000 in computational costs for every $100 their customers pay them. Let that sink in for a moment. For every Benjamin Franklin customers hand over, these companies are burning through ten of them just to keep the digital hamster wheel spinning. It's like discovering your Uber driver is paying $50 in gas for your $5 ride—except instead of one confused driver, it's an entire industry worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
The Math That Would Make Your Accountant Cry
Here's what's happening behind the curtain: When you ask ChatGPT to write your wedding toast or help debug your Python code, you're not just tapping into some magical cloud fairy dust. You're activating massive data centers filled with specialized computer chips that consume electricity like a small city and cost more than most people's houses. These aren't your grandma's desktop computers—we're talking about cutting-edge AI processors that cost tens of thousands of dollars each and run hotter than a Phoenix parking lot in August.
Every query you submit gets processed by these expensive machines, which need to crunch through billions of calculations to generate responses. The bigger and smarter the AI model, the more computational power it requires, and the more it costs to run. It's the technological equivalent of using a Formula One race car for your grocery store runs—incredibly impressive, absurdly expensive, and probably not sustainable long-term.
OpenAI charges most consumers around $20 per month for ChatGPT Plus. Enterprise customers pay more, but even those premium prices don't come close to covering the actual computational costs for heavy users. When someone is having lengthy conversations, generating images, or running complex analyses, the company could be spending $200 or more per month in infrastructure costs to serve that single $20 subscriber. The economics are, to put it mildly, challenging.
The Venture Capital Treadmill Keeps Spinning
So how do these companies stay afloat while hemorrhaging money on every transaction? The same way many tech startups have survived for decades: they raise absolutely enormous amounts of venture capital. OpenAI has raised billions from investors like Microsoft. Anthropic has pulled in billions from Google, Amazon, and others. These companies are essentially running on a financial treadmill, constantly needing to raise more capital to fund their operations while they figure out how to make the economics work.
The pitch to investors goes something like this: "Yes, we're losing money on every customer right now, but we're building the future of technology! Eventually, we'll make the models more efficient, the chips will get cheaper, and we'll figure out pricing that works. Trust us, and keep those checks coming." It's a bet that the technology will improve faster than the cash burns out—a gamble that's worked for companies like Amazon and Tesla, but has also spectacularly failed for countless others whose names you've forgotten.
This creates a fascinating dependency cycle. OpenAI needs Microsoft's billions to keep the lights on. Anthropic needs Google and Amazon's cash infusions to compete. The AI race has become less about who has the best technology and more about who has the deepest-pocketed backers willing to fund years of losses. It's like a high-stakes game of financial chicken, where everyone's betting that they won't be the first to blink—or run out of runway.
What This Means for the Future of AI
Here's where things get interesting for those of us not sitting on venture capital boards. This unsustainable economic model has to resolve somehow, and there are really only a few ways it can play out. First, the technology could get dramatically more efficient. Companies are working furiously on this, developing smaller models that can run on less expensive hardware, optimizing their code, and finding clever shortcuts that maintain quality while reducing costs. Some progress is being made, but it's a race against mounting losses.
Second, prices could go way up. That $20 monthly subscription might become $50, $100, or more as companies try to close the gap between revenue and costs. We're already seeing this with enterprise pricing, where companies pay thousands per month for API access. The free tier that many people enjoy? That's probably living on borrowed time. Nothing says "we need to make money" quite like watching your burn rate exceed your revenue by a factor of ten.
Third, we could see massive consolidation. Smaller AI companies without access to big tech's infinite money fountain will simply run out of cash and shut down or get acquired. We might end up with just a handful of AI providers—essentially the ones backed by Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and maybe a couple others with sufficiently deep pockets. Competition would decrease, innovation might slow, and consumers would have fewer choices. It's the natural endpoint when an industry requires billions in capital just to play the game.
Fourth, there's the possibility that the whole thing is a bubble that eventually pops. If investors lose faith that AI companies can ever achieve profitable unit economics, the funding spigot could turn off. Companies would be forced to dramatically scale back operations, lay off staff, and potentially shut down entirely. It's happened before in tech—remember when everyone thought 3D TVs and Google Glass were the future? Yeah, investors do too, and they're not eager to repeat those expensive lessons.
The Trillion-Dollar Question Nobody Wants to Ask
The elephant in the server room is whether current AI technology is actually worth the astronomical costs being poured into it. ChatGPT is undeniably useful and impressive, but is it "lose billions of dollars per year" useful? That's a question that keeps CFOs up at night, even if the true believers in AI's transformative potential prefer not to dwell on it too much.
For consumers and businesses currently enjoying AI services at prices that don't reflect their true costs, the message is clear: enjoy it while it lasts. You're essentially being subsidized by venture capitalists who are betting that AI will eventually justify its price tag. Whether you're using AI to write emails, generate marketing copy, or automate customer service, you're getting a sweetheart deal that economics suggests can't last forever.
The next few years will be crucial. Either AI companies will crack the code on making their services profitable, or they'll need to radically change their approach. Maybe that means better technology, higher prices, new business models, or some combination we haven't imagined yet. What's certain is that the current situation—where companies burn through ten dollars to earn one—isn't a long-term strategy, no matter how much venture capital you have backing you.
For the mortgage and real estate industries increasingly relying on AI tools for everything from property valuations to customer service chatbots, this matters more than you might think. If AI pricing suddenly doubles or triples to reflect actual costs, or if smaller AI providers start disappearing, it could disrupt workflows and force companies to rethink their technology strategies. The smart money is on having backup plans and not putting all your eggs in the AI basket—at least not until the economics make more sense than a lemonade stand selling dollar cups that cost ten bucks to make.
Want to stay ahead of the curve on how technology, economics, and occasionally questionable business models are shaping the future of real estate and mortgages? Subscribe to our newsletter at WellThatMakesSense.com where we translate the chaos of the financial and tech worlds into insights you can actually use—no MBA or venture capital required. We promise to keep making sense of things that, well, should make sense but somehow don't until we explain them
June 12, 2026

UWM's Courtroom Drama: When "I'd Rather Not" Meets a Federal Judge
Mat Ishbia's mortgage empire is playing chicken with contempt charges, and the stakes just got spicier than your compliance officer's nightmare
What Even Is Contempt of Court? (Besides What Your Processor Feels for You on Fridays)
Let's break down contempt of court, because it's not just something that happens on Law & Order reruns. Contempt comes in two delicious flavors: civil and criminal. Civil contempt is the court's way of saying, "Do the thing we told you to do, or we'll make your life expensive and annoying until you comply." It's coercive—designed to force compliance. Think of it as the judicial equivalent of your operations manager standing over your desk until you finish that conditions list. Criminal contempt, on the other hand, is punishment for disrespecting the court's authority. It's the "you've been bad and now you're getting spanked" version, complete with potential fines and even jail time for individuals involved. In corporate cases like this, criminal contempt can mean significant financial penalties and serious reputational damage—the kind that makes your marketing department break out in hives. In UWM's case, we're looking at civil contempt proceedings. The judge wants those documents, and UWM's resistance is being viewed as obstruction of the legal process. The court has essentially said, "We asked nicely. Now we're asking less nicely." For a company that's built its brand on being bold and disruptive, this is the kind of disruption nobody ordered.The Document Dilemma: What's UWM So Afraid Of?
Here's where it gets interesting for those of us in the mortgage trenches. What could possibly be in these documents that's worth risking contempt charges? Let's speculate responsibly, shall we? First up: internal communications about the "All In or All Out" policy. If there are emails, Slack messages, or meeting notes where UWM executives discussed the competitive impact of forcing brokers to choose sides, that's discovery gold for Fairway's legal team. Imagine messages like "This will definitely hurt Rocket and Fairway" or "Brokers will have no choice but to drop our competitors." That's the kind of smoking gun that makes plaintiff attorneys do a happy dance. Second: data on broker behavior and market impact. UWM likely has detailed analytics on how many brokers chose them over competitors, which brokers left their platform, and how the policy affected market share. This data could prove Fairway's claims that UWM's actions harmed competition. It's one thing to say "our policy was just good business"; it's another when your own spreadsheets show you systematically kneecapped your rivals. Third, and this is the juicy one: communications with brokers that might show coercion or pressure tactics. If UWM representatives strong-armed brokers into compliance, threatened to cut them off, or made the choice feel less than voluntary, those communications could transform this from a "spirited competition" narrative into something that looks a lot more like market manipulation. Nobody wants their sales team's "motivational" emails read aloud in federal court. There's also the possibility of financial projections and strategic planning documents that explicitly outline the policy's intended competitive damage. Corporate strategy documents tend to be refreshingly honest about intentions—after all, they're meant to be internal. "Destroy the competition" sounds great in a boardroom; less great when a judge is reading it to a jury.Why This Matters to You (Yes, You, Scrolling on Your Phone Between Calls)
You might be thinking, "Cool story, but I'm just trying to close loans and hit my numbers. Why should I care about UWM's legal drama?" Fair question. Here's why: this case could reshape the wholesale mortgage landscape you work in every single day. If Fairway prevails and UWM is found to have violated antitrust laws, it could open the floodgates for other lenders and brokers to file similar suits. More importantly, it could force UWM to abandon or modify policies that restrict broker choice. For brokers, that means more flexibility. For account executives, that means the competitive landscape could shift dramatically. The "All In or All Out" era might be coming to an end, whether UWM wants it to or not. There's also the broader industry implication: how much power should wholesale lenders have over their broker partners? This case is essentially asking whether a lender can force brokers into exclusivity arrangements in a market that's supposed to thrive on competition and consumer choice. The answer could set precedent for years to come. And let's be real—there's also the schadenfreude factor. UWM has never been shy about its aggressive marketing and competitive tactics. Watching a company that's spent years loudly proclaiming its dominance now squirm in court has a certain entertainment value. It's like watching the high school bully get called to the principal's office. We're all professional enough not to enjoy it. Mostly. The contempt proceedings add another layer of intrigue. If UWM is held in contempt, it's not just about this one case—it's about their willingness to cooperate with legal processes. That raises questions about corporate culture and governance that could affect everything from investor confidence to broker relationships. Nobody wants to hitch their wagon to a company that plays fast and loose with federal judges. As this drama unfolds, mortgage professionals across the industry will be watching closely. Will UWM finally produce the documents? Will they be held in contempt? And most importantly, what will those documents reveal about how the wholesale mortgage game has really been played? Grab your popcorn, folks. Discovery season is just getting started, and somebody forgot to redact the good parts.June 11, 2026

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