Bank of England warns of ‘sharp market correction’ if AI bubble bursts

Bank of England warns of ‘sharp market correction’ if AI bubble bursts


Bank of England, the Royal Exchange and the statue of the Duke of Wellington in the City of London on 19th February 2025 in London, United Kingdom.

Mike Kemp | In Pictures | Getty Images

The Bank of England on Wednesday warned that the risk of a “sharp market correction” has increased, noting that valuations appear stretched, particularly for artificial intelligence-focused tech firms. 

The central bank becomes the latest in a long list of banks and investors to weigh in on whether an AI bubble is forming as markets tick into the fourth quarter. 

Heightened geopolitical tensions, fragmented trade and financial markets and pressures on sovereign debt markets play into the risk, the Bank of England said in a record of its latest meeting minutes.

“A crystallisation of such global risks could have a material impact on the UK as an open economy and global financial centre,” it said. 

Equity market valuations stood at near all-time highs, the Bank of England said, thanks in part to strong second-quarter earnings by U.S. tech firms.

“The market share of the top 5 members of the S&P 500, at close to 30%, was higher than at any point in the past 50 years,” it said, noting that AI-focused tech company valuations appear particularly stretched.

“This, when combined with increasing concentration within market indices, leaves equity markets particularly exposed should expectations around the impact of AI become less optimistic,” the meeting minutes said. With such high expectations of future earnings growth, any pullback on AI-related bets could lead to ripple effects, it added.

Investors are closely watching AI-related stocks as earning season gets underway, with some strategists confident that tech company valuations are being driven by sound fundamentals. Goldman Sachs also remained cautiously optimistic in its latest note, believing a bubble has not yet formed but heeded a warning to investors to “diversify.”

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, however, warned of “fairly highly valued” assets on Tuesday, though he didn’t explicitly refer to technology firms. 

The Bank of England further warned that “downside factors included disappointing AI capability/adoption progress or increased competition, which could drive a re-evaluation of currently high expected future earnings.” 

Private credit stocks fall following auto finance bankruptcies at Tricolor and First Brands

“Material bottlenecks to AI progress – from power, data, or commodity supply chains – as well as conceptual breakthroughs which change the anticipated AI infrastructure requirements for the development and utilisation of powerful AI models could also harm valuations, including for companies whose revenue expectations are derived from high levels of anticipated AI infrastructure investment,” it added. 

Meanwhile, the private credit market has suffered recently, following news that auto maker First Brands and auto finance firm Tricolor have filed for bankruptcy. Meanwhile, political uncertainty in France and Japan persists and questions remain over U.S. President Donald Trump’s interference with the Federal Reserve, adding to the Bank of England’s more gloomy outlook. 

Changes to the risk landscape “increases the risk that markets have not fully priced in possible adverse outcomes, and a sudden correction could occur should any of these risks crystallise,” the Bank of England said.

As such, it could have a knock-on effect for households and businesses in a market that is already feeling the pinch through high costs of living and borrowing costs, it added.



Source

Rare earth miners jump as Trump is reportedly eyeing mineral stockpile to reduce China dependence
World

Rare earth miners jump as Trump is reportedly eyeing mineral stockpile to reduce China dependence

U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks before signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House on Jan. 30, 2026 in Washington, DC. Alex Wong | Getty Images Shares of U.S.-listed rare earth miners jumped Monday after news that President Donald Trump is preparing a sweeping plan to build a strategic stockpile […]

Read More
Treasury yields are little changed as investors weigh Fed leadership uncertainty
World

Treasury yields are little changed as investors weigh Fed leadership uncertainty

Traders work at the New York Stock Exchange on Jan. 27, 2026. NYSE U.S. Treasury yields were little changed on Monday as market watchers continued to weigh the impact of President Donald Trump naming Kevin Warsh as his pick to be the next Federal Reserve chair. The 10-year Treasury yield fell less than 1 basis point […]

Read More
Disney beats Wall Street expectations propelled by theme parks and streaming
World

Disney beats Wall Street expectations propelled by theme parks and streaming

Walt Disney Co. signage on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Monday, Sept. 29, 2025. Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images Disney reported quarterly revenue and earnings on Monday that topped analyst expectations, lifted by its theme parks, resorts and cruises segment.  The experiences unit reported […]

Read More