The froth in artificial intelligence stocks is reaching unsustainable levels, and the seasoned investor knows what happens when the punch bowl is spiked with too much hype. The market, driven by a speculative frenzy around AI, is now flashing warning signals that recall the dot-com era. Analysts are increasingly vocal about the disconnect between soaring valuations and fundamental earnings. The Bloomberg AI Index, a basket of 50 companies riding the AI wave, has surged over 60% this year, but their aggregate earnings have grown by a meagre 5%. This is a classic case of multiple expansion without underlying substance. The market is pricing in perfection, but the risk of disappointment is high.
The main driver of this mania is the belief that AI will transform every industry overnight. While the potential is real, the timeline is long and the path is crooked. Investors are ignoring the capital expenditure required, the regulatory hurdles, and the simple fact that many AI startups are burning cash faster than they can generate revenue. Compare this to the late 1990s when internet stocks quadrupled before collapsing. The pattern is eerily similar: a revolutionary technology, a wave of IPOs, and a Wall Street machine churning out optimistic projections. This time, however, the leverage is higher. Margin debt has climbed to levels not seen since the 2007 peak. When the correction comes, it could be brutal.
Central banks are not helping. The Federal Reserve and the Bank of England, while ostensibly fighting inflation, have kept real interest rates negative. This cheap money has to find a home, and speculative assets are the natural destination. But as inflation proves stickier than hoped, the prospect of tighter monetary policy looms. A hawkish pivot could burst the bubble instantly. The 10-year US Treasury yield has already risen 40 basis points this quarter, and gilt yields are following suit. Higher discount rates crush the net present value of distant future cash flows, which is precisely how AI stocks are valued. The math does not lie.
Capital flight is another concern. As the AI trade becomes overcrowded, smart money is rotating into value and defensive sectors. The relative performance of the tech-heavy NASDAQ versus the Dow Jones Industrial Average is narrowing. This suggests that institutional investors are hedging their bets. The vultures are circling, and they are waiting for the first sign of weakness.
For the fiscal conservative, this is a vindication of the view that markets cannot be trusted to self-regulate when cheap credit distorts price signals. The government should not bail out speculative excess. Let the market clear. The jobs created by AI will be real, but the stock market bubble is a distortion. The correction will be painful but necessary. The lesson from history is clear: bubbles always burst. The only question is when. And the signals are blinking red.
The time to act is now. Reduce exposure to high-beta AI names. Lock in profits. Build cash reserves. When the music stops, you want to be the one holding the chair, not the one reaching for it. The bottom line is that AI is real, but the current valuation is fiction. Reality always wins.








