Cathie Wood Says AI Boom Is Just Getting Started: 'We're In The First Inning'

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
Ark Invest's Cathie Wood is dismissing bubble concerns around artificial intelligence and crypto, arguing that recent market weakness is a temporary liquidity squeeze that will reverse within weeks. She says commercial AI adoption is accelerating rapidly despite skepticism.

Cathie Wood isn't buying the AI bubble narrative. The Ark Invest CEO pushed back hard this week against growing concerns that artificial intelligence and crypto markets are overheated, insisting that what looks like trouble is actually just a temporary speed bump.

A Liquidity Problem, Not A Valuation Problem

In a post on X Monday, Wood declared that "the AI story has just begun," sharing clips from Ark Invest's "In The Know" podcast where she made her case. Despite short-term volatility and mounting skepticism about whether AI is actually delivering productivity gains, Wood says the long-term opportunity in artificial intelligence and cryptocurrencies remains completely intact.

"We think this AI story has just begun," she said on the podcast. "We are in the first inning."

The recent market weakness? Wood characterizes that as a "liquidity squeeze" that will reverse course over the next "few weeks." In other words, this isn't about fundamentals—it's about temporary market mechanics.

Consumer Adoption Is Exploding, Enterprise Demand Following

Wood had a pointed response to a recent MIT study suggesting that corporations aren't seeing productivity gains from AI and concluding the whole thing is a bubble. She framed this as a transitional phase, arguing that companies must "restructure and transform completely" to unlock AI's full potential, which naturally "will take time."

But on the consumer side? "It is flourishing," Wood said, pointing to the massive adoption of AI chatbots and tools like ChatGPT.

For evidence of accelerating enterprise demand, she highlighted Palantir Technologies (PLTR), noting its "U.S. commercial business was up 123% last quarter." According to Wood, this surge reflects mounting pressure on CEOs and top executives to act quickly or risk falling behind competitors.

The Bubble Warnings Keep Coming

Not everyone shares Wood's optimism. Several prominent analysts and market strategists have voiced serious concerns about the growing dominance of AI-related stocks in U.S. equity markets, warning that current valuations may be unsustainable.

Albert Edwards, Global Strategist at Société Générale, drew parallels between current market conditions and the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. But Edwards also highlighted key differences in the current scenario, noting the economy's heavy dependence on AI spending and investments makes it far more vulnerable compared to similar-sized bubbles historically.

Investor and author Ruchir Sharma echoed similar concerns, arguing that the United States has become "one big bet on AI," with 40% of U.S. economic growth this year driven by growing AI capital expenditures. Sharma warned that this massive capex has masked several other concerns in the broader economy, which he said is closer to stall speed.

Even Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) founder Bill Gates acknowledged the existence of a bubble, while emphasizing the "profound" value of AI, which he said was "hard to overstate."

Gates said the AI frenzy is far from the "Tulip Mania"—referring to the historic bubble surrounding tulip bulbs in the Netherlands in the 17th century. Instead, he suggested it's far more similar to the early stages of the internet in the late 1990s. Which, depending on how you lived through that period, is either reassuring or terrifying.

Cathie Wood Says AI Boom Is Just Getting Started: 'We're In The First Inning'

MarketDash Editorial Team
13 days ago
Ark Invest's Cathie Wood is dismissing bubble concerns around artificial intelligence and crypto, arguing that recent market weakness is a temporary liquidity squeeze that will reverse within weeks. She says commercial AI adoption is accelerating rapidly despite skepticism.

Cathie Wood isn't buying the AI bubble narrative. The Ark Invest CEO pushed back hard this week against growing concerns that artificial intelligence and crypto markets are overheated, insisting that what looks like trouble is actually just a temporary speed bump.

A Liquidity Problem, Not A Valuation Problem

In a post on X Monday, Wood declared that "the AI story has just begun," sharing clips from Ark Invest's "In The Know" podcast where she made her case. Despite short-term volatility and mounting skepticism about whether AI is actually delivering productivity gains, Wood says the long-term opportunity in artificial intelligence and cryptocurrencies remains completely intact.

"We think this AI story has just begun," she said on the podcast. "We are in the first inning."

The recent market weakness? Wood characterizes that as a "liquidity squeeze" that will reverse course over the next "few weeks." In other words, this isn't about fundamentals—it's about temporary market mechanics.

Consumer Adoption Is Exploding, Enterprise Demand Following

Wood had a pointed response to a recent MIT study suggesting that corporations aren't seeing productivity gains from AI and concluding the whole thing is a bubble. She framed this as a transitional phase, arguing that companies must "restructure and transform completely" to unlock AI's full potential, which naturally "will take time."

But on the consumer side? "It is flourishing," Wood said, pointing to the massive adoption of AI chatbots and tools like ChatGPT.

For evidence of accelerating enterprise demand, she highlighted Palantir Technologies (PLTR), noting its "U.S. commercial business was up 123% last quarter." According to Wood, this surge reflects mounting pressure on CEOs and top executives to act quickly or risk falling behind competitors.

The Bubble Warnings Keep Coming

Not everyone shares Wood's optimism. Several prominent analysts and market strategists have voiced serious concerns about the growing dominance of AI-related stocks in U.S. equity markets, warning that current valuations may be unsustainable.

Albert Edwards, Global Strategist at Société Générale, drew parallels between current market conditions and the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. But Edwards also highlighted key differences in the current scenario, noting the economy's heavy dependence on AI spending and investments makes it far more vulnerable compared to similar-sized bubbles historically.

Investor and author Ruchir Sharma echoed similar concerns, arguing that the United States has become "one big bet on AI," with 40% of U.S. economic growth this year driven by growing AI capital expenditures. Sharma warned that this massive capex has masked several other concerns in the broader economy, which he said is closer to stall speed.

Even Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) founder Bill Gates acknowledged the existence of a bubble, while emphasizing the "profound" value of AI, which he said was "hard to overstate."

Gates said the AI frenzy is far from the "Tulip Mania"—referring to the historic bubble surrounding tulip bulbs in the Netherlands in the 17th century. Instead, he suggested it's far more similar to the early stages of the internet in the late 1990s. Which, depending on how you lived through that period, is either reassuring or terrifying.