Hyperliquid News Today: Goldman: AI's $19 Trillion Buzz Surpasses Actual Progress, Bubble Concerns Rise
- Goldman Sachs warns U.S. stock markets have overvalued AI's economic potential, pricing $19T gains ahead of actual productivity impacts. - The bank identifies "aggregation" and "extrapolation" fallacies as key risks, mirroring historical tech bubbles from 1920s/1990s over-optimism. - AI expansion extends beyond tech sectors, with blockchain compliance tools and energy management markets projected to grow via AI integration. - Regulatory challenges persist as DeFi collapses expose gaps in AI token definit
According to Goldman Sachs, the U.S. stock market has already factored in nearly all the anticipated economic advantages of artificial intelligence, with $19 trillion in market capitalization growth outpacing the actual macroeconomic effects of AI. The investment bank’s findings, released in a report from November 2025,
The report projects that the net present value of AI-driven capital income for the U.S. could fall between $5 trillion and $19 trillion, with a central estimate of $8 trillion. Yet, since ChatGPT’s debut in 2022, companies tied to AI have seen their market worth soar by more than $19 trillion, a surge that includes semiconductor manufacturers, major cloud providers, and private AI developers.
The bank identifies two main risks: the “fallacy of aggregation,” where investors may wrongly assume that individual company successes can be scaled across the entire sector, and the “fallacy of extrapolation,” where short-term gains are mistakenly expected to last indefinitely.
Regulatory barriers continue to pose significant obstacles. The 2025 collapse of the COAI token revealed weaknesses in decentralized finance, especially in developing markets with inconsistent oversight. This event highlighted the urgent need for clearer definitions of AI tokens and stablecoins under U.S. regulations,
Goldman’s research also corresponds with larger industry changes. For example, the worldwide energy management systems sector is expected to reach $219.3 billion by 2034, propelled by AI-powered efficiency tools and smart grid technologies.
For those investing, the report highlights a delicate equilibrium. While AI could increase U.S. productivity by 15% over the next ten years, the disconnect between market enthusiasm and real economic results may grow.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Small Businesses Hit Hardest as U.S. Job Cuts Resemble 2009 Downturn
- ADP data shows U.S. small/medium firms cut 31,000 jobs in October 2025, contrasting with 73,000 large firm gains, as layoffs mirror 2009 crisis levels. - Major tech layoffs (IBM -8k, Amazon -14k, UPS -48k) and 153k October cuts highlight labor market fragility, with youth unemployment spiking to 10%. - Amazon faces EU DMA probes over cloud practices while raising $15B in bonds, attracting $80B demand, as Fitch reaffirms its "AA-" credit rating. - Fed may consider rate cuts by 2026 amid small business str

Bitcoin Updates: Kiyosaki and Buffett Clash—Debate Over "Money for the People" Versus Wealth on Paper
- Robert Kiyosaki criticized Warren Buffett's crypto skepticism, arguing Bitcoin serves as a hedge against collapsing traditional markets and central bank manipulations. - Buffett reiterated his stance against Bitcoin, favoring productive assets like stocks and farmland , with Berkshire Hathaway holding $308.9B in equities and $381.7B in cash. - Bitcoin ETFs saw $866M in outflows as prices dipped below $90K, contrasting with Kiyosaki's "People's Money" narrative and Saylor's bullish 2025 projections. - Hyb

AI Titans' Command of the Market Fuels Overcrowded Investments and Concerns of a Bubble
- Bank of America's survey reveals 54% of fund managers view FAAMG+T as the most crowded trade, surpassing gold , driven by AI's influence and Magnificent Seven dominance. - The seven tech giants (Alphabet, Amazon , Apple , Meta , Microsoft , Nvidia , Tesla) now account for 21.5% of S&P 500 weight and 26% of its net income over 12 months. - AI-driven investments surge, with Nvidia's CUDA platform (4M developers) and Tesla's 1M Optimus robot target highlighting sector concentration and growth expectations.

U.S. Job Market Slows Down Amid Rising Layoffs and Fed Considers Rate Reduction
- ADP data shows U.S. companies averaging 2,500 weekly layoffs in late October 2025, signaling a slowing labor market. - Major corporations like Amazon and Target announced large-scale layoffs, driven by shifting demand and cost-cutting pressures. - 55% of employed Americans fear job loss, while the Fed considers a December rate cut amid "near stall speed" labor conditions. - Global regulatory scrutiny of tech giants and AI-driven automation adds to concerns about employment impacts and economic stability.
