Are We in an AI Bubble?
The entire U.S. economy is being propped up by the promise of productivity gains that seem very far from materializing.
www.theatlantic.comHere are the latest high-level takeaways on the AI bubble trend, based on recent reporting:
Illustration: sector watchers often frame the moment as a scaling question—early excitement and investment (the “R&D sprint”) must translate into durable, compounding productivity to avoid a pronounced correction in valuations.[5][2]
If you’d like, I can pull a concise, up-to-date snapshot with headlines and key metrics from a few major outlets, or summarize opinions by different economists and researchers. I can also create a chart illustrating recent AI-related equity performance or CAPEX trends if you want a visual.
Citations:
The entire U.S. economy is being propped up by the promise of productivity gains that seem very far from materializing.
www.theatlantic.comWe explain the fears on Wall Street.
www.nytimes.comYale SOM leadership expert Jeffrey Sonnenfeld and co-author Stephen Henriques write that the tangle of AI deals among tech giants could be signs of dangerous overinvestment in the developing technology. They outline three ways the bubble could pop.
insights.som.yale.edu'When bubbles happen, smart people get overexcited about a kernel of truth,' he explained. The next day's stock market dip was attributed to the sentiment he shared. The question 'Are we in an AI bubble?' became inescapable.
www.technologyreview.comTom Clarke explains why some analysts think the maths behind the AI boom no longer adds up, and breaks down the three pressure points that could ultimately burst the AI bubble.
news.sky.comI talked to the scholars who literally wrote the book on tech bubbles—and applied their test.
www.wired.comWharton’s Itay Goldstein discusses financial bubbles, the mechanics of betting against them, and the risks facing the AI boom.
penntoday.upenn.eduWe've been here before.
www.nytimes.com