AI Boom Is In Early Bubble Phase, Bridgewater Founder Ray Dalio Says

(Reuters) - The artificial intelligence boom that powered Wall Street's technology stocks is "now in the early stages of a bubble," hedge ​fund manager Ray Dalio warned in a post on social media ‌platform X on Monday.

Wall Street's main indexes posted double-digit gains in 2025, marking a third straight ‌year of advances, a run last seen during 2019–2021. The gains were fueled by heavy investor demand for AI-linked stocks, which pushed U.S. equity benchmarks to record highs.

Dalio, who co-founded hedge fund Bridgewater Associates in 1975, said U.S. stocks significantly ⁠underperformed non-U.S. equities and gold ‌in 2025. Gold surged more than 60% last year, while emerging markets posted a banner year and Britain's blue-chip FTSE ‍100 outperformed major global markets.

"Clearly, investors would have much rather been in non-U.S. stocks than in U.S. stocks, just as they would have preferred to be in non-U.S. bonds ​than in U.S. bonds and U.S. cash," he wrote in the post.

Global ‌stocks seesawed in the fall as mounting concern over a potential AI stock bubble dragged on sentiment and raised the risk of a selloff.

Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over the U.S. Federal Reserve's interest rate path added to investor unease.

"Of course, there are big questions about Fed policy ⁠and productivity growth ahead," Dalio said.

"It appears ​most likely that the newly appointed Fed chair ​and the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) will be biased to push nominal and real interest rates down, which would be supportive ‍to prices and inflate ⁠bubbles."

Analysts say global investors will actively seek opportunities this year in undervalued pockets of financial markets as growing concerns over an AI bubble ⁠push traders to look beyond highly valued technology stocks.

Bridgewater Associates' main macro funds delivered a record-breaking ‌performance in 2025, Reuters reported in late December.

By Manya ‌Saini in Bengaluru
Editing by Anil D'Silva

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