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Don't Worry, AI Investors, the Artificial Intelligence Boom Is Still on -- But There Are Rising Dangers for Nvidia

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Despite there being no signs of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom slowing down, AI stocks writ large have been hammered in 2025 due to the Trump Administration's tariff threats and policies.

AI stocks have obviously risen significantly over the past two years, so they did come into the year at relatively high valuations. And the threat of economic recession has legitimately called into question the massive AI investments forecasted by leading tech companies earlier this year.

Fortunately, on Wednesday, April 9, the administration pared back the most extreme reciprocal tariffs. Also last week, several big tech CEOs reiterated their huge AI investment plans this year while indicating that AI demand remains incredibly strong.

But with those bullish comments also came some remarks that pose risks for the biggest AI company of all: Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).

AI appears recession-proof

First, the good news. Even amid the tremendous market turmoil, the AI revolution still appears to be in full swing. In fact, two "Magnificent Seven" company CEOs confirmed this just this week, even as markets plunged.

First, Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG)(NASDAQ: GOOGL) held its Google Cloud Next 2025 event last week, which probably flew under many investors' radars. At the event, not only were there a number of exciting announcements, especially with regard to Google's new Gemini 2.5 model, but CEO Sundar Pichai also confirmed Alphabet's previously announced plans to spend a massive $75 billion on AI data centers this year. Pichai added that spending is yielding good returns, saying, "The opportunity with AI is as big as it gets."

And not only did Alphabet executives talk bullishly about their AI offerings and Google Cloud, but Google's cloud customers did, too. At the event, customer Intuit confirmed that it was "doubling down" on AI efforts, while another big customer, Verizon, described huge benefits from using Google's AI models.

Meanwhile, it's not just the tariff fallout but also the introduction of China's low-cost model DeepSeek R1 in January that has roiled AI stocks. But on Thursday, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) CEO Andy Jassy put concerns over the need for all that spending to rest in an interview on CNBC. He noted:

People get confused. And we saw this with AWS [Amazon Web Services] too, which is, customers love when you take the cost per unit of something down, it allows them to save money on what they're doing, but they don't actually spend less. It actually unleashes them to do a lot more innovation, and in absolute they spend more.