An artificial intelligence (AI) tool analyzing a stock market through a smart robot automation technology.

Does AI think you should invest in AI?

June 8, 2026
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Does AI think you should invest in AI?

Few other industries have captured investors鈥 attention like artificial intelligence (AI). The AI market is projected to grow more than 25% annually to a value of , largely thanks to businesses harnessing AI technology. In the U.S. alone, the industry is expected to generate over $75 billion in value this year.

Many investors are eager to pour cash into major AI companies like SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI, which are expected to go public this year and reach record-setting valuations.

Skeptics argue that the AI market is an overhyped bubble that won鈥檛 be profitable any time soon, given the massive capital required to build and maintain its infrastructure.

But with some of the biggest IPOs in history looming on the horizon, the fear of missing out may be taking its toll.

Is AI a good investment? went straight to the source and asked ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude and Grok for an answer. This is what the AI chatbots had to say with the average, long-term, medium-risk individual investor in mind.

Is AI a good long-term investment, or is it just short-term hype?

Perhaps unsurprisingly, chatbots agree that there is long-term value to be gained in AI investments, although individual companies may still be subject to short-term hype and overvaluation.

All but Perplexity referenced the internet bubble of the 1990s as an example of a comparable time period in which technology changed the economy, but resulted in some companies failing or getting overpriced.

ChatGPT

鈥淎I is probably best viewed as a promising long-term trend with some short-term hype layered on top 鈥 the key question is not whether AI will matter鈥攊t likely will鈥攂ut how to gain exposure without taking excessive risk.鈥

Perplexity

鈥淎I looks more like a long-term theme than a pure short-term fad, but the investable part is still very uneven. The technology has real adoption and productivity potential, yet many AI-related stocks already reflect high expectations, so returns can be volatile and highly valuation-sensitive.鈥

Gemini

鈥淭he short answer is both. AI is fundamentally changing the global economy for the long term, but the stock prices of companies tied to it are experiencing a massive amount of short-term hype 鈥 the technology will mature and succeed, but many individual stock prices will suffer a harsh reality check along the way.鈥

Claude

鈥淭he honest answer: probably both 鈥 The underlying technology is already generating measurable revenue and productivity gains鈥攖his isn't purely speculative like some past hype cycles.鈥 However, it notes, 鈥淢any AI-related stocks are priced for a very optimistic future, meaning a lot of the expected growth is already baked into today's prices.鈥

Grok

鈥淎I is a strong long-term investment theme, not just short-term hype 鈥 AI represents a genuine multi-year productivity driver similar to past transformative technologies (electricity, internet). However, it carries risks of volatility, high valuations, and execution challenges 鈥 It's not guaranteed smooth sailing鈥攃orrections are normal and healthy.鈥

Are AI investments currently overvalued?

Ironically, chatbots owned by some of the biggest players in the AI industry are aligned on the risk that Big Tech stocks are (or may soon be) overvalued, although they agree that the overall industry still has growth potential.

ChatGPT and Perplexity diplomatically declined to name names. But Gemini boldly called out Micron for having 鈥渞ecently surged into the trillion-dollar club on AI chip optimism鈥 and Apple for 鈥渢rading at a jaw-dropping $4.5 trillion market cap.鈥

Claude observed that Nvidia has traded at historically high P/E ratios, while Grok notes that some supporters believe the valuations of giants like Nvidia and Broadcom are 鈥渞easonable given growth.鈥

ChatGPT

鈥淪ome AI investments may be overvalued, but it depends on the company and the investor鈥檚 time horizon.鈥

鈥淢any large AI-related stocks have risen sharply because investors expect strong future growth from artificial intelligence 鈥 Established companies with strong profits, diversified businesses and real AI-related revenue may be better positioned than speculative startups or smaller companies riding the AI trend without proven business models.鈥

Perplexity

鈥淵es鈥攎any AI-related stocks appear overvalued, especially the most crowded large-cap winners, but 鈥楢I鈥 as a theme is not uniformly overpriced.鈥

鈥淭he most obvious valuation pressure is in the big AI beneficiaries, where investors have bid up prices far ahead of proven earnings power in some cases.鈥 However, Perplexity notes that 鈥渟ome infrastructure, software, and chip companies may still have room if revenue growth and margins continue to expand.鈥

Gemini

鈥淭he short answer is yes, by traditional metrics, many pure-play AI investments are heavily overvalued right now.鈥

鈥淲e are currently seeing classic signs of a late-stage hype cycle 鈥he S&P 500's forward P/E ratio is hovering around 23x to 24x, which is significantly higher than its historical long-term average of around 16x. The technology sector itself is much higher 鈥he vast majority of standard businesses have yet to see a material impact on their bottom line. The stock market has priced in the victory before the game has truly been played.鈥

鈥淭he underlying AI technology is real, but current stock prices have assumed absolutely flawless, uninterrupted hyper-growth.鈥

Claude

鈥淭he short answer: by most traditional measures, yes鈥攂ut context matters a lot.鈥

鈥淧rice-to-earnings (P/E) ratios for many leading AI-related companies are significantly above historical averages.鈥 That being said, 鈥淥vervalued doesn't mean 鈥榓bout to crash.鈥 Expensive stocks can stay expensive鈥攐r get more expensive鈥攆or years, especially when the underlying earnings growth is real and accelerating.鈥

鈥淭he market can be simultaneously expensive and right about the long-term trajectory.鈥

Grok

鈥淎I investments are trading at elevated valuations in mid-2026, but they're not universally 鈥榦vervalued鈥 in a classic bubble sense for long-term investors.鈥

鈥淪&P 500 forward P/E is around 22鈥23x鈥攁bove its long-term average,鈥 which is roughly 18鈥19x) 鈥... but well below dot-com bubble peaks,鈥 which was roughly 24鈥40x in 1999鈥2000. 鈥淓arnings have largely driven recent gains (not pure multiple expansion), which is a positive differentiator from pure hype cycles.鈥

鈥淣ot a bubble like 1999 for most core holdings, but valuations are full鈥攎eaning future returns may be more moderate than the last few years, with higher chance of 20鈥30% drawdowns along the way.鈥

What are the best AI stocks and ETFs to buy right now?

AI chatbots aren鈥檛 qualified investment advisors, and, ultimately, to buy right now depend on each investor鈥檚 varying goals, preferences and risk tolerance.

While information from chatbots shouldn鈥檛 be taken as personal financial advice, AI can still summarize investments that might be worth looking into for the average, long-term retail investor with a medium risk tolerance.

Every chatbot surveyed mentioned the Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF (AIQ), and all but Grok mentioned the Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF (BOTZ).

When initially prompted, Grok only listed ETFs, declining to list any AI stocks due to the high risk posed by 鈥渃oncentration, valuation swings and company-specific issues.鈥 Other chatbots encouraged avoiding start-ups and speculative, trendy stocks in favor of established leaders like NVIDIA (NVDA), Microsoft (MSFT), Broadcom (AVGO) and Alphabet (GOOGL).

Long-term, medium-risk investors shouldn鈥檛 allocate more than 20% of their portfolio to AI, according to Claude and Grok, while Gemini puts the maximum allocation at just 10%.

ChatGPT

鈥淔or most investors, broad market ETFs already provide meaningful AI exposure through companies like NVIDIA, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Broadcom.鈥

ChatGPT notes that 鈥渢he 鈥榖est鈥 AI investments are usually the ones that combine strong businesses, broad diversification, reasonable costs and staying power鈥攏ot the most speculative AI startups.鈥

ETFs to consider:

  • QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust)
  • VGT (Vanguard Information Technology ETF)
  • AIQ (Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF)
  • SMH (VanEck Semiconductor ETF)
  • BOTZ (Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF)

Stocks to consider:

  • NVDA (NVIDIA)
  • MSFT (Microsoft)
  • AVGO (Broadcom)
  • TSM (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company)
  • GOOGL (Alphabet)

Perplexity

鈥淔or a long-term retail investor, the best AI buys are usually not the hottest single names鈥攖hey鈥檙e diversified ETFs plus a few profitable, large-cap AI leaders if you want extra exposure.鈥

鈥淚f you want the most balanced answer, AI ETFs are the better 鈥榖uy right now鈥 choice for most retail investors, while NVIDIA or Microsoft are the most defensible individual-stock style exposures if you accept higher risk.鈥

ETFs to consider:

  • AIQ (Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF)
  • ARTY (iShares Future AI & Tech ETF)
  • CHAT (Roundhill Generative AI & Technology ETF)
  • ROBT (First Trust Nasdaq Artificial Intelligence & Robotics ETF)
  • BOTZ (Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF)
  • ROBO (Global Robotics & Automation Index ETF)

Stocks to consider:

  • NVDA (NVIDIA)
  • MSFT (Microsoft)
  • GOOGL (Alphabet)
  • AMZN (Amazon)
  • AVGO (Broadcom)
  • NOW (ServiceNow)

Gemini

For investors with a 10-plus year timeframe and who want a simple, low-cost, low-maintenance approach, Gemini recommends focusing on 鈥渢he established companies and diversified funds providing the infrastructure that the entire AI industry relies on.鈥

For those buying individual stocks, Gemini says to 鈥渟tick to the absolute giants. These companies have billions of dollars in free cash flow, meaning even if the AI hype cools down temporarily, their core businesses are highly stable.鈥

ETFs to consider:

  • ARTY (iShares Future AI & Tech ETF)
  • AIQ (Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF)
  • BOTZ (Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF)

Stocks to consider:

  • NVDA (Nvidia)
  • AVGO (Broadcom)
  • AMD (Advanced Micro Devices)
  • MSFT (Microsoft)
  • GOOGL (Alphabet)

Claude

Claude notes that ETFs may be preferable for the average long-term, moderate-risk investor, because they spread out risk, are low-cost and 鈥渄on't require you to pick winners in a landscape that's still shifting.鈥

But AI-specific ETFs come with a caveat: 鈥淭hey tend to have higher expense ratios, lower liquidity, and more overlap with what you already own in an S&P 500 fund than their marketing implies. For most people in your profile, QQQ or VGT does the job with less complexity.鈥

鈥淚f you want individual stocks 鈥 focus on the infrastructure/platform layer (Nvidia, Microsoft, Alphabet) rather than speculative application plays.鈥

ETFs to consider:

  • QQQ (Invesco Nasdaq-100 ETF)
  • VGT (Vanguard Information Technology ETF)
  • BOTZ (Global X Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF)
  • AIQ (Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF)
  • CHAT (Roundhill Generative AI & Technology ETF)

Stocks to consider:

  • NVDA (Nvidia)
  • AVGO (Broadcom)
  • TSM (TSMC)
  • MSFT (Microsoft)
  • GOOGL (Alphabet/Google)
  • AMZN (Amazon)
  • PLTR (Palantir)
  • META (Meta)

Grok

鈥淚ndividual AI stocks (e.g., Nvidia, Broadcom, Micron, AMD) are high-risk due to concentration, valuation swings, and company-specific issues 鈥 Broad ETFs spread risk across dozens of companies (enablers like chips/cloud + adopters), keeping things simple and low-maintenance.鈥

鈥淎I has real staying power, but don't chase 鈥榟ot鈥 stocks or overload on any single theme.鈥

ETFs to consider:

  • AIQ (Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF)
  • CHAT (Roundhill Generative AI & Technology ETF)
  • BAI (iShares A.I. Innovation and Tech Active ETF)
  • SMH (Broader semis exposure via VanEck Semiconductor ETF)

Stocks to consider: None were listed in response to the initial prompt.

Alternatives to investing: How to save and earn money using AI

Investing isn鈥檛 the only way to profit from the AI boom. Chatbots can also be used to hunt down deals and generate income.

Saving money is important in a tight economic environment. In fact, customers are influenced by value-driven promotions when making purchasing decisions. A smart way to save both time and money is to let AI crawl the internet and summarize relevant promotions and exclusive rewards.

Entrepreneurs looking to start a side hustle can to produce social media content, develop apps and create decorative artwork to sell.

Letting chatbots evaluate investment portfolios and filter investment choices based on specific criteria, similar to a stock screener, is another way AI can be used, albeit indirectly, to . While many trading platforms offer research tools for these purposes, chatbots can respond to an incredibly broad range of queries, and many are free to access on a basic level.

Methodology and notes

Responses to AI investment questions in this article are from the following chatbots (accessed via web browser):

  • ChatGPT (GPT-5.3-mini model), owned by OpenAI
  • Perplexity AI (specific model data is not available on web browsers), owned by founders Aravind Srinivas, Denis Yarats, Johnny Ho and Andy Konwinski and private investors
  • Gemini (3.5 Flash), owned by Google
  • Claude (Sonnet 4.6), owned by Anthropic
  • Grok (4.3), owned by SpaceXAI

All chatbots were used with free-tier accounts on May 26, 2026, and May 27, 2026.

To ensure responses between different chatbots are comparable and useful, each chatbot was given the following prompt before being asked any questions about AI investments:

鈥淎nswer the following questions with this type of retail investor in mind: The investor is an employed person in their mid-30s to mid-50s with a stable income, basic-to-intermediate investment knowledge, and a moderate risk tolerance. Their goal is to invest for retirement or build wealth over a long time frame (10+ years), and they contribute regularly to a diversified portfolio that includes broad market index funds (such as an S&P 500 ETF) with some technology exposure. They prefer simple, low-cost strategies and have limited time for research. They are not an active trader or professional investor.鈥

AI chatbots learn and respond using information available online. In this article, excerpts from conversations with chatbots may include material that has been paraphrased or quoted directly from third-party sources.

The information in this article is general in nature and is no substitute for professional advice. It does not take into account readers鈥 personal situations, and it should not be relied upon as investment advice or construed as providing recommendations of any kind.

Investments can increase and decrease in value; past performance does not guarantee future results. Readers should obtain independent advice from a suitably licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

was produced by and reviewed and distributed by 黑料社.


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