The froth is lifting from the AI stock market, and Threadneedle Street is watching with an eagle eye. Sir Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, signalled yesterday that the central bank is intensifying scrutiny of the City of London's exposure to what many analysts now describe as a speculative bubble in artificial intelligence equities. Speaking at a Mansion House dinner, Bailey warned that 'exuberance in certain technology sectors' could pose risks to financial stability, a remark that sent shivers through trading floors from Canary Wharf to Silicon Valley.
For months, institutional investors have piled into AI-focused stocks, riding a wave of optimism fuelled by breakthroughs in generative models and quantum computing. The S&P 500's tech-heavy index has surged nearly 40% since the start of 2024, with companies like Nvidia and Palantir commanding price-to-earnings ratios that would make a dot-com veteran blush. But the music may be slowing. A cascade of warnings from hedge fund managers, coupled with disappointing earnings from smaller AI firms, has ignited fears of an imminent correction.
'This is the classic pattern of a speculative mania,' explains Dr. Elena Marchetti, a financial historian at the London School of Economics. 'We saw it with railway bonds in the 1840s, with internet stocks in the late 1990s. Now AI is the new magic elixir that everyone believes will transform the world overnight, but the valuations have detached from any reasonable revenue trajectory.'
At the Bank of England, the Prudential Regulation Authority has launched a targeted review of banks' loan books and derivative exposures tied to the AI sector. Early assessments suggest that direct lending is limited, but the interconnectedness of global markets means a rout could ripple through alternative asset classes. 'The concern is not just about AI stocks themselves, but the leverage used to buy them,' says a senior BoE official who spoke on condition of anonymity. 'If the bubble bursts, margin calls could cascade, dragging down broader indices and hitting pension funds.'
The timing is particularly delicate. The UK economy is still wrestling with stubborn inflation and anaemic growth, and the government's fiscal headroom is tight. A sharp correction in AI stocks could erode consumer confidence and tighten financial conditions, complicating the Bank's path to normalising interest rates. Already, some hedge funds are shorting what they call 'AI zombies' firms with thin revenue models propped up by hype.
Yet not everyone is bracing for doom. Optimists argue that AI's transformative potential is genuine, and that today's valuations merely reflect the long-term shift toward automation and data-driven decision-making. 'We are in the early innings of a revolution,' says Julian Vane, Technology & Innovation Lead. 'The hype is real, but so is the substance. The challenge is separating the wheat from the chaff. Companies with solid AI assets and clear use cases will survive; the rest will be exposed as vapourware.'
For the average investor, the message is caution. 'This is not a time for FOMO,' adds Vane. 'If you are betting on AI, focus on firms with actual products, not just press releases. And be prepared for volatility.'
The Bank of England is expected to publish its Financial Stability Report in the coming weeks, which will detail its stress tests of AI-exposed portfolios. Until then, traders will remain on edge, watching for any hint that the bubble is about to burst. As Sir Andrew Bailey put it, 'Complacency is the enemy of stability.' The warning is clear: the artificial intelligence boom may be real, but so is the risk of a bust.









