Is the “AI Bubble” About to Burst or Just Beginning to Inflate?


Every transformative technology of the past 150 years has created a bubble — from railroads to radio to the internet. As much as investors today hope it will be “different this time,” it won’t.

So as the S&P 500 reaches historic highs, the question isn’t whether artificial intelligence (AI) will produce a bubble, but where in the cycle we are: Is the AI bubble about to burst, or is it just beginning to inflate?

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In many ways, the adoption of modern AI has been remarkable. Just over three years after ChatGPT kicked off the current boom, OpenAI reports that more than 800 million people use its large language models (LLMs) weekly. And as of November 2025, 41% of American workers reported using AI for their work, according to research from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis — up 10% from a year earlier.

Adoption is widespread at the company level, especially in the information sector, where 37.5% of companies actively use AI, according to research by The Motley Fool.

But these numbers paint a rosier picture than the reality on the ground. While many workers have now tried the technology, only 13% report using it every day. On average, Americans spend 5.7% of their working hours with AI. While that’s meaningful, it’s not the sweeping transformation the valuations imply — at least yet.

There is certainly a compelling case that we are just getting started. Bulls will rightly point out that capital expenditures from the biggest tech companies in the world are still accelerating — Meta, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Amazon have signaled north of $500 billion in combined AI-related capital expenditures for this year. Companies don’t spend that kind of money without seeing a major opportunity.

And while the parallels to the dot-com bubble are hard to miss, there is a key distinction: The companies at the heart of today’s boom are enormously profitable businesses with massive cash flows. These aren’t Pets.com.

Critically, the technology is still improving. We are entering a phase where so-called agentic AI — systems that can autonomously execute multistep tasks — is nearing prime time. If these systems mature to the point where they can reliably handle the kinds of complex workflows that currently require a human, the economic implications would be enormous. That’s a big if, but the trajectory of improvement is real, and dismissing it outright would be a mistake.



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