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Get Ready for a New Year and Brace for a Very Different One

DATE POSTED:December 31, 2025

For an eventful year, 2025 is ending the same way it started. A year ago, Nvidia, OpenAI and others made it clear they would do everything necessary to win the race for artificial intelligence.

The year ended with the same companies doing the same thing. Nvidia capped off a year of dealmaking—mostly to cement its lead in AI chips by agreeing to pay $20 billion to license technology from Groq, one of its best-funded challengers. OpenAI is ending the year with a bang too, aiming to raise $100 billion in capital and in talks with Amazon for a $10 billion investment. 

A lot did change in the last 12 months, and some of those changes could become challenges in 2026. The biggest shift is that AI went from interesting but hypothetical for most people into a reality of everyday life.

In U.S. financial markets, AI became a powerful force. It also fed inflation by pushing up electricity prices. On the ground, it generated more grumpiness than goodwill, with communities and local officials complaining about data centers and people blaming AI for the economy’s weak job growth. Warranted or not, the companies building AI will have to deal with the fallout in 2026.

Another thing that changed: The deals got more head-scratchier, as we’ve reported. OpenAI’s quest for $100 billion raises an obvious question: Where do you get $100 billion? Nvidia’s deal for Groq raises another one: Why pay $20 billion for a company that was valued at $6.9 billion just a few months ago, and not get the whole company?

As I’ve written, I don’t think we’re in an AI bubble right now. That’s largely because the main funders of the buildout are the richest, most valuable companies in the world. If the Groq deal amounts to nothing, it will be little more than a scratch on Nvidia’s finances and reputation.

And when those cash-rich giants are not standing behind a deal, investors are now behaving pretty rationally. CoreWeave, the cloud provider that is a leveraged bet on AI, had a spectacular IPO. But investors sobered up when it struggled with data center construction delays and when doubts grew about the scale of its borrowing. The stock is down 60% from its peak.

In retrospect, the peak of AI euphoria may have occurred on Sept. 10 when Oracle added nearly $250 billion in market capitalization after reporting a huge increase in future contract revenue, largely tied to AI. Since then, Oracle is down 40% and that $250 billion is long gone. 

Now, the market is quick to deliver its harsh judgment. Fermi America, the young data center developer cofounded by former Texas Governor Rick Perry, had a successful IPO a few weeks after Oracle’s big day, when AI euphoria was still in the air. But Fermi said in mid-December it lost a data center tenant. Its shares fell 40%. Something pretty amazing will need to happen for investors to fall in love with CoreWeave, Oracle or Fermi again.

The worst investor behavior may be over, but you can bet that market strategists and financial advisers are still talking about an AI bubble with their clients. The advice is the same: diversify. The seven giant tech stocks account for 36% of the S&P 500’s value and 26% of its earnings, according to Goldman Sachs. What about the other 493 stocks, or the rest of the world for that matter?

If investors do diversify, it will mean selling tech stocks and buying everything else, including foreign stocks, which collectively trounced the tech giants in 2025.

Another headwind could be interest rates. Everyone in Silicon Valley remembers the wreckage wrought by the Federal Reserve when it raised interest rates in 2022. Now, the Fed is cutting short-term interest rates. But recently, long-term rates haven’t followed them down.

If President Donald Trump’s new appointee to lead the Fed loses credibility with investors, they could start to worry about inflation and push up long-term rates. That could squeeze any remaining speculation out of the AI buildout.

The last potential shift is politics. The tech industry went into 2025 with a ton of political power in everything from AI to crypto to antitrust regulation. Now the industry faces fears of AI-driven job losses, higher electricity prices, and a boom and bust in speculative crypto that has cost investors—not the crypto industry—dearly. These are all shaping up to be issues in the midterm elections. 

Maybe 2026 will start and end just like 2025 did. Probably not.

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