A bursting AI bubble could trigger mass layoffs across the US economy and erase a substantial share of equity market value, according to the market intelligence firm S&P Global.
In a new scenario analysis, the firm highlights that AI-focused companies have become a dominant force in US equities, driving a large share of market gains over the past five years and leaving the S&P 500 increasingly concentrated in a small group of technology giants.
S&P Global says the sharp rise in market capitalization among AI-linked firms, alongside valuation signals, suggests that investors are pricing in aggressive future earnings growth. The firm notes that trailing price-to-earnings ratios for leading AI stocks now exceed forward P/E ratios, reflecting strong optimism around continued AI adoption and monetization.
“The AI-driven boom has been a significant contributor to the broader market’s performance, fueling a substantial portion of the S&P 500’s 52% growth during January 2020–November 2025.”
S&P Global highlights that concentration risk has intensified alongside the rally. Just seven companies now account for nearly 30% of the S&P 500’s total market capitalization, while the information technology sector’s market value has surged more than threefold over the past five years.
With tech companies doing most of the heavy lifting, S&P Global warns that a deep sell-off in AI names could trigger a chain of events, where overleveraged technology firms default, and layoffs spread across the US economy.
“The US would take the biggest hit but avoid a recession. The S&P 500 would lose more than 50% of its value. More than 2.5 million US jobs would be wiped out in the tech sector and beyond. Employment losses, as well as a strong credit retrenchment from banks, would weigh on households’ revenue and consumption. As companies cut back on innovation spending, long-term investment and potential growth also take a hit.”
“Big Short” investor Michael Burry recently predicted that the AI bubble would burst in 2027, believing that today’s tech cycle mirrors the dot-com era that wiped out $5 trillion in wealth.
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