BlackRock CEO Larry Fink dismisses AI bubble concerns, urges faster investment

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Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, wants you to know that AI is not in a bubble. And he’d really appreciate it if everyone would start spending money faster.

Speaking at the 2026 World Economic Forum in Davos on January 22, Fink made a sweeping case for accelerating AI infrastructure investment globally. His core argument: the world isn’t moving fast enough, the capital expenditure required is enormous, and the economic payoff from building it out will ripple across the entire global economy.

“I sincerely believe there is no bubble in the AI space. Hundreds of billions of dollars is needed to build this out. The capex is going to drive more global growth.”

The case for hundreds of billions

AI requires physical infrastructure: data centers, chips, power grids, cooling systems. Major tech companies like AWS, Google, and Microsoft are expected to spend $200 billion or more on data centers alone in 2026. BlackRock’s own Q1 2026 earnings confirmed that the firm views AI infrastructure as a $1 trillion-plus opportunity over the next five years.

Fink specifically argued that AI benefits must “spread beyond the biggest firms” to avoid a scenario where a handful of hyperscalers capture all the value. He framed underinvestment as a geopolitical vulnerability, warning that Western nations risk falling behind China’s advancing AI infrastructure if capital deployment remains concentrated among a few dominant players.

Not a bubble, but not without risk

Fink’s dismissal of bubble talk came with a notable caveat: “I think there will be big failures, but I don’t think we are in a bubble.”

That distinction matters. A bubble implies systemic overvaluation where asset prices detach entirely from underlying fundamentals. Fink is saying something different: individual companies, particularly overvalued startups, will absolutely fail, but the sector as a whole isn’t headed for a broad collapse. It’s also worth noting that BlackRock has been aggressively positioning itself in infrastructure investments, including digital infrastructure tied to AI, meaning Fink’s incentives and his analysis point in the same direction.

The China factor and what investors should watch

Fink’s emphasis on competition with China adds a dimension beyond simple market analysis. He argued that underinvestment in the West isn’t just a missed economic opportunity but a strategic vulnerability given China’s substantial advances in AI development.

The most direct beneficiaries of a sustained AI infrastructure buildout are chipmakers, data center operators, energy providers, and cooling technology firms. On the risk side, capital expenditure at the scale Fink describes creates enormous fixed costs. Data centers are also extraordinarily power-hungry, making the intersection of AI infrastructure and energy markets a consequential investment theme, touching demand for natural gas and renewed interest in nuclear energy.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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