Technology

Navigating the AI Boom: How to Protect Investments from a Potential Bubble

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As major technology firms announce unprecedented spending on artificial intelligence, concerns are rising about a potential AI bubble and how to safeguard investment portfolios should it burst, according to The Economist.

The magazine suggests investor confidence is waning as tech giants like Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft collectively plan to spend approximately $660 billion on AI in a single year. This level of expenditure, which previously would have fueled stock surges, is now met with skepticism, as evidenced by the decline in share prices following the announcements.

This hesitancy reflects a broader reality: stock valuations, particularly in the United States, are high relative to earnings, indicating lower expected returns and greater potential losses in the event of a market correction. The problem extends beyond stocks to traditional hedges such as gold and Bitcoin, which have exhibited significant volatility, complicating the task of hedging.

Selling off stocks entirely is often not a viable option for professional asset managers due to strict investment mandates, while holding excessive cash can provoke client dissatisfaction. Individual investors may also err by exiting the market prematurely, as seen during the dot-com bubble when technology indices soared before the eventual crash.

Historically, a mix of stocks and bonds provided effective protection; however, this pattern is no longer assured. In 2022, both stocks and bonds fell due to inflation and rising interest rates. A similar scenario could recur if inflation rebounds or if U.S. fiscal policies raise doubts about public debt sustainability, potentially exposing both stocks and bonds to losses.

Hedging through derivatives, particularly options contracts, allows investors to cap losses, but at a cost. Protecting an investment in the S&P 500 from a loss exceeding 10% within a year currently costs about 3.6% of the investment's value. Repeated, this could erode a significant portion of returns, studies by Goldman Sachs have shown.

Historically, the most successful hedging strategies have not relied on exiting stocks but on selecting different types, such as those with lower volatility, companies with stable dividends, or "quality" stocks with strong balance sheets. This approach offers relatively better protection while maintaining reasonable returns.

In an era dominated by the AI boom, this conclusion may seem psychologically unsatisfying but may be the most realistic option. As hedging alternatives narrow, carefully selecting stocks, rather than fleeing from them, remains one of the few available avenues for investors as they watch a bubble that appears “ready to burst.”