Billionaire Money Managers Are Sounding a Warning on Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks -- Are You Paying Attention?

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In case you haven't noticed, the bulls have been in full control on Wall Street for more than two years. Last year, the iconic Dow Jones Industrial Average, benchmark S&P 500, and innovation-inspired Nasdaq Composite respectively gained 13%, 23%, and 29%, with all three indexes hitting numerous record-closing highs.

There's a lengthy list of catalysts behind this persistent rally in equities, which includes better-than-expected corporate earnings, aggressive share buybacks by Wall Street's most-influential businesses, Donald Trump's November victory, a resilient U.S. economy, and stock-split euphoria.

But if there's one factor above all others that's been fueling this bull market, it's the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution.

A New York Stock Exchange floor trader looking up in worry at a computer monitor.
Image source: Getty Images.

Artificial intelligence is a nearly $16 trillion addressable market

The reason professional and everyday investors are so excited about AI is because of its otherworldly potential and reach. Software and systems empowered with AI have the ability to become more proficient at their assigned tasks and can potentially learn new skills, all without the aid of human intervention. This capacity to reason, learn, act, and evolve gives AI utility in almost every industry around the globe.

In Sizing the Prize, the analysts at PwC forecast that AI would, through productivity improvements and consumption-side effects, add $15.7 trillion to the global economy by the turn of the decade. On a percentage basis, we're talking about a 26% increase in worldwide gross domestic product come 2030 because of this game-changing technology.

Semiconductor colossus Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has led the way, with its graphics processing units (GPUs) serving as the brains of high-compute data centers. Nvidia's Hopper (H100) chip and successor Blackwell GPU architecture are allowing AI software and systems to make split-second decisions, and helping businesses build/train large language models and run generative AI solutions.

Excitement is also building regarding the practical applications of AI. Moving beyond hardware, attention has turned to the likes of Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL)(NASDAQ: GOOG), which are, in this order, No's 1 through 3 in terms of cloud infrastructure service platform market share with Amazon Web Services, Azure, and Google Cloud. All three platforms are leaning on generative AI solutions to help their customers.

While the sky would seem to be the limit for artificial intelligence, some of Wall Street's most-prominent billionaire investors would beg to differ.