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Is the Market Riding an Ai Bubble?

Or is there something underneath the froth?

Article published: December 08, 2025

You鈥檇 have to be living under a rock 鈥 or shall we say, in a bubble 鈥 not to have heard the rumors: Are we in an AI bubble? If you remember the dot-com bubble of the late 鈥90s-early 2000s or the housing bubble of the mid-2000s, you might be feeling a little d茅j脿 vu. So, should you be worried? And more importantly, what should you do about it?

BUBBLE-ISH? MAYBE. MAYBE NOT.

To be clear, we鈥檝e never known for sure that we were in a bubble at the time it was happening. If we did, we would have, you know, not let it happen 鈥 bubbles are built on human behavior and beliefs.

So all we can do is make our best diagnosis based on the signals we鈥檙e seeing (not opinions or press releases). We鈥檒l be honest: They鈥檙e mixed.

  • The Magnificent 7 鈥 a group of powerhouse U.S. tech companies (Alphabet/Google, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Tesla) 鈥 have seen spectacular gains in the last few years and now make up over 35% of the S&P 500鈥檚 value (as of Oct. 31). That鈥檚 huge.
  • Yes, they鈥檙e pricey. But compared to historical tech valuations, they鈥檙e not off the charts, with a combined price/earnings ratio of 31.4 (compared with a dot-com-era P/E ratio of over 120 in the tech-heavy Nasdaq).
  • Unlike those of the dot-com era, these companies are profitable, generating strong cash flow, and they aren鈥檛 drowning in debt. Most of their profits come from existing businesses, not speculative AI ventures.
  • And unlike the cheap borrowed money driving the housing bubble, today鈥檚 AI investments are mostly funded by cash.
  • Some of the most inflated AI valuations are in private companies you likely don鈥檛 have access to invest in 鈥 think OpenAI and Anthropic. These firms are making massive deals for chips and cloud infrastructure, suggesting sky-high valuations. But here鈥檚 the good news: If those valuations crash, your portfolio won鈥檛 feel the direct hit.

BUBBLES AREN鈥橳 ALWAYS ALL BAD

Tech companies heavily invested in AI might look expensive 鈥 maybe even too expensive 鈥 but let鈥檚 also acknowledge that the tech is changing everything, from how we work to how we shop, learn and even create. As it does so, AI has the potential to reshape nearly every corner of the economy.

Tech races often follow a 鈥渨inner takes all鈥 pattern, which fuels fierce competition and massive bets.

And that can actually be good 鈥 and natural 鈥 for a capitalist economy. Sure, they鈥檙e painful for investors who go all-in on the wrong companies, not to mention the workers who lose jobs at shuttered businesses.

But bubbles also drive innovation. The dot-com crash wiped out many firms, but it also paved the way for the ubiquitous internet we rely on today. (If you鈥檝e never experienced the pain of dial-up, ask your parents.) Capitalism thrives on this cycle: big ideas 鈫 big investments 鈫 shakeouts 鈫 progress.

And when it comes down to it, we believe capitalism, for all its flaws, is the best system humans have come up with to create technology that improves lives and connects the world. Bubbles, like occasional bear markets, may just be part of the deal.

SO WHAT SHOULD YOU DO?

In the end, we can鈥檛 tell you whether we鈥檙e currently in a bubble or not. But remember that, over the long term and despite occasional bubbles, the economy has kept growing 鈥 and historically the market has trended up a lot more often than down. So stay invested, stay focused on the long term and stay diversified.听

This material was prepared for educational purposes only. Although the information has been gathered from sources believed to be reliable, we do not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.

An index is a portfolio of specific securities (such as the S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq composite), the performance of which is often used as a benchmark in judging the relative performance of certain asset classes. Indexes are unmanaged portfolios and investors cannot invest directly in an index.

Investing strategies, such as asset allocation, diversification or rebalancing, do not ensure or guarantee better performance and cannot eliminate the risk of investment losses. All investments have inherent risks, including loss of principal. There are no guarantees that a portfolio employing these or any other strategy will outperform a portfolio that does not engage in such strategies.

Past performance does not guarantee future results.

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Wei-Yin Hu

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With more than 30 years of experience, Wei helps lead a team of financial researchers and portfolio strategists who work on stimulating problems that also have a real-world impact on people鈥檚 lives. Their responsibilities include the development of the analytical models that generate 蜜穴视频 recommendations and forecasts, as well as the design of new advice ...

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