19.6 C
Los Angeles
Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 08:04 AM
HomeBusinessBank of England Sees Cracks in the Foundation of the AI Market...

Bank of England Sees Cracks in the Foundation of the AI Market Boom

Date:

Related stories

Transparency Protocols to Standardize the $21 Billion Resale Authentication Market

The global journey toward a transparent and circular fashion...

Sinner’s Indian Wells Triumph Leaves No More Mountains to Climb on Hard Courts

Jannik Sinner has climbed every mountain hard-court tennis has...

Trump Sticks Knife Into NATO After Iran Military Wins Prove Self-Sufficiency

President Donald Trump stuck the knife into NATO on...

Fitness Guidance That Cuts Through the Noise: 15 Rules for Rapid Fat Loss

In a fitness landscape filled with contradictory advice and...

Trump Seeks Delay in China Visit Amid Iran War Tensions

Donald Trump has requested to delay his planned visit...

The Bank of England sees significant cracks in the foundation of the current artificial intelligence market boom, warning that they could lead to a collapse. The Financial Policy Committee (FPC) stated in a new report that the “risk of a sharp market correction has increased.”
One major crack is the disconnect between valuation and profitability. The foundation looks strong with “stretched” valuations like OpenAI’s $500 billion figure, but it is weakened by the reality that 95% of firms are seeing no return on their AI investments, according to an MIT study.
Another crack is the potential for supply chain disruptions. The FPC warned that “material bottlenecks” in power, data, or commodities could undermine the entire structure, causing the high valuations to crumble.
A third, external crack is being caused by political pressure. The FPC is concerned that Donald Trump’s attacks on the US Federal Reserve could shake the entire global financial edifice, triggering a “sharp repricing of US dollar assets.”
The FPC’s report serves as an engineer’s assessment: the structure is impressive, but the foundational weaknesses are becoming too significant to ignore. For the UK, which is financially connected to this structure, the risk of being caught in a collapse is “material.”

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories