Headline: Goldman Sachs Sees AI Boom in Early Buildout Phase, Not Peak Bubble
Artificial intelligence remains in the investment buildout stage, with substantial runway ahead, according to Goldman Sachs. The bank likens today’s AI surge to the early internet era of 1997–1998, when infrastructure spending and productivity gains were beginning to take shape—well before the speculative peak that followed.
In its latest analysis, Goldman Sachs notes that current AI spending and valuations more closely resemble the pre-dotcom expansion than the 1999–2000 peak. That suggests the cycle is still driven by fundamentals such as data center construction, semiconductor demand, and model training infrastructure rather than by excessive speculation. While the firm cautions that strong returns on capital are not guaranteed, it argues the investment momentum can continue absent external shocks or funding pressures.
This framing underpins optimism for AI-linked equities and infrastructure plays across chipmakers, cloud providers, and data-center developers. As companies scale computing capacity and refine AI models, the sector’s buildout phase could extend, supporting long-term productivity gains and sustained capital expenditure across the artificial intelligence ecosystem.
Key Points – Goldman Sachs says the AI investment cycle resembles 1997–1998, not the 1999–2000 bubble peak. – The bank sees continued momentum in AI infrastructure buildout, including data centers and semiconductors. – Strong returns aren’t guaranteed, but the runway remains intact barring shocks or funding constraints. – AI’s expansion is tied to rising demand for model training and compute capacity. – Sentiment may benefit AI-linked equities, particularly chipmakers, cloud providers, and data-center developers.
Last updated on November 10th, 2025 at 02:56 am







