The Bank of England has issued a stark warning that the surging market for artificial intelligence stocks poses a systemic risk to Britain’s technology sector and broader financial stability. In a confidential briefing to the Treasury Select Committee, obtained exclusively by this publication, the central bank’s Financial Policy Committee expressed alarm over the “irrational exuberance” driving valuations of AI-focused companies, many of which lack proven revenue streams or viable business models.
The warning comes as the FTSE AI Index has surged 140% in the past 12 months, far outstripping the broader market. The Bank’s analysis suggests that up to 40% of the UK’s tech sector valuation may be driven by speculative froth, rather than fundamentals. “We are seeing patterns reminiscent of the dot-com bubble, but with a distinct twist: the hype around generative AI is creating a feedback loop where inflated expectations justify ever-higher valuations, regardless of actual performance,” said a senior Bank official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
This is not a prediction of imminent collapse, but a sober assessment that the risk of a sharp correction has escalated significantly. The Bank has flagged several specific concerns. First, the concentration of AI stocks in a handful of mega-cap tech firms, many with limited exposure to the UK economy, means a sudden sell-off could cascade through pension funds and retail portfolios. Second, the opacity of AI business models: many companies claim to be “AI-first” but offer little evidence of proprietary technology or sustainable competitive advantage. Third, the regulatory vacuum: with no clear framework for AI governance in the UK, investors are pricing in future regulation as a risk, but inconsistently.
For the common investor, this means caution is warranted. The Bank is not sounding the alarm for an immediate crash, but it is urging diversification and due diligence. The risk is that a trigger – a major AI company missing earnings, a high-profile AI failure, or sudden regulatory intervention – could spark a rush for the exits. The Bank’s modelling suggests a 15-20% correction in AI stocks could wipe out £50 billion in UK household wealth, a non-trivial hit to consumer confidence.
From my vantage point in Silicon Valley, this warning feels both timely and overdue. The AI hype cycle has been fuelled by genuine breakthroughs – large language models, generative image systems, and predictive analytics – but the commercialisation timeline has been wildly overestimated. Many of these technologies are still in the lab, not the living room. The Bank’s analysis correctly identifies that the user experience of society, if you will, has not yet caught up with the narrative. We are living in a world where every startup adds “GPT” to its pitch deck, but few have solved the core problem of building trust with users.
The digital sovereignty angle is also critical. The UK’s ambition to become a global AI hub is being undermined by this bubble. If the correction hits hard, it could deter long-term investment and set back the very real opportunities in AI for healthcare, logistics, and sustainability. The Bank’s warning is not Luddite; it is a plea for realism. We need to separate the signal from the noise.
What happens next? The Bank has already begun stress-testing major UK banks and investment funds for exposure to AI stocks. It is also in talks with the Financial Conduct Authority about potential disclosure requirements for AI companies seeking public listing. The Treasury is reportedly considering a task force on AI valuation standards. These are all sensible steps, but they come late in the cycle.
For now, the message is clear: the music is playing, but the exits are being marked. Investors should not panic, but they should think hard about whether the AI company they are backing has a product, a market, and a plan. Otherwise, they may find themselves holding a ticket to a bubble that has already burst.









