The most durable thing in your software isn’t in the code.

AI can clone a SaaS product in a week and walk an agent straight through a shallow integration. What survives are three things that compound into one another, plus the human judgment beneath them that no competitor can replicate.

A trader at Jefferies, not an engineer, named the “SaaSpocalypse” panic, which tells you what kind of event this is. Software shed close to $2 trillion from its October peak on the theory that anything can now be cloned in a week. The theory is right about features and wrong about moats. The error is picturing a moat as a wall, one thing you build once and stand behind. The durable defense is a loop, and underneath it sits the part no competitor can vibe-code, because it was never in the code: judgment.

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Your AI budget is already gone.

Editorial documentary photograph of a quiet finance executive's desk; a framed editorial illustration above the desk shows a small stack of token-shaped chips with one corner of the stack burning steadily and a thin trail of smoke rising upward, the rest of the stack intact but visibly being consumed.

Three Uber executives, three different seats, told the same story this spring. The cost category most boards govern quarterly is moving to hourly.

By April, Uber’s CTO had blown the AI budget he set in December. Three weeks later, the CEO said he was metering headcount and leaning further in. Two weeks after that, the COO asked aloud whether any of it was producing value. Three quotes, three seats, one cost category nobody had experience with. Here is why token spend breaks the quarterly cadence finance was built on, and the three questions a board should be asking by the next meeting.

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