No Firm Is Immune if AI Bubble Bursts, Google CEO Tells BBC
Alphabet Chief Executive Sundar Pichai said no company would be unscathed if the artificial intelligence boom collapses, as soaring valuations and heavy investment in the sector fuel concerns of a bubble.
There has also been much debate among analysts about whether AI valuations are sustainable.
Read more: European Central Bank’s Guindos Says Financial-Stability Risks Remain Elevated
Asked about how Google would cope with a potential bursting of a bubble, Pichai said he thought it could weather the storm but added: “I think no company is going to be immune, including us.”
Alphabet shares have surged about 46% this year, as investors bet on its ability to compete with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI.
In the United States, concerns about lofty AI valuations have begun to weigh on broader markets, while British policymakers have also flagged bubble risks.
In September, Alphabet pledged 5 billion pounds over two years for UK AI infrastructure and research, including a new data center and investment in DeepMind, its London-based AI lab.
Pichai also told the BBC in the interview conducted at Google’s California headquarters that Google would begin training models in Britain, a move Prime Minister Keir Starmer hopes will bolster the country’s ambition to be the world’s third AI “superpower” after the United States and China.
Pichai also warned of the “immense” energy needs of AI and said Alphabet’s net-zero targets would be delayed as it scales up computing power.
(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti; editing by Edwina Gibbs)
Related:
- IMF Warns of Elevated Risk of ‘Disorderly’ Global Market Correction
- Bank of England Says Soaring AI Valuations Risk Sharp Market Correction