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This article is by Justin Rourke – Head of Advice at Armstrong Watson Financial Planning & Wealth Management and Richard Cole, Fund Manager at Future Money Ltd. We aim to provide you with our commentary on the latest economic and investment developments which are likely to be affecting your investment and pension portfolios.

We also provide regular webinars called “Making Sense of Markets” where they discuss the factors affecting economies and markets. Our next webinar will be on 12th February. Please click here to register. 

In this latest update, we discuss the dramatic movement in markets yesterday, with established AI stocks falling heavily on the emergency of a new challenger. 

A New Story 

Artificial Intelligence stocks have been making the news once again, but not in the way that we have become accustomed to. Rather than being another tale of how AI is changing the world and how the stocks involved easily justify their sky-high valuations, it is instead a story of how hype and enthusiasm can blind investors to questions of justifiable valuations, which can then have dramatic consequences when assumptions are found to be built on shaky ground. As a result, the tech-heavy US NASDAQ index fell 3% yesterday, while the poster child company of AI, Nvidia, fell 17% in value. 

This market rupture follows the announcement last week that a young Chinese technology firm, DeepSeek, has developed an AI model that can perform to a comparable level as the established names in this space, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT. The emergence of a similar quality product might not be such a shock to the system if it wasn’t for the fact that it has reportedly been developed for just $5.6 million and using a relative handful of not even the latest processor chips from Nvidia. This compares to the many billions of dollars other firms have been spending in order to get to this level. 

Rise of the Hyperscalers 

Since the first release of ChatGPT in late 2022, large technology companies, such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Meta (known as the ‘hyperscalers’) have been in an arms race to spend huge volumes of money on AI chips. This has led investment markets to handsomely reward both these stocks, assuming that the companies with the biggest AI investment will ultimately enjoy the biggest revenues; and the company selling them the chips, Nvidia, which has gone from being primarily known in the videogame sector to being, at one point, the most valuable company in the world. 

The share prices of all these companies have surged over the past two years, with investors seemingly uninterested in metrics showing them to be at historically elevated valuations, believing the future is only going to get brighter for them. However, in our view, these prices have been stretched and the level of excitement around these stocks has been bordering on mania, reminiscent of previous stock market bubbles, such as the dotcom boom and bust at the turn of the millennium.  

The Warnings Have Been There 

This is a topic we have written about in previous commentaries and is an area that has been carefully managed in the investment portfolios managed by Future Money.  Exposure has been limited to these AI names given concerns of bubble like prices, with a focus instead on other areas that can benefit from US economic strength, but which are at more attractive valuation levels. 

This is a short-term story so far, and with after-hours trading suggesting a slight recovery in the most affected stocks, it is possible this is a mere blip in the charge higher. Yet even if it is, this should be taken as a clear warning of what can happen when market narratives change. AI is likely to change the world and lead to great productivity gains, but as the billionaire hedge fund manager, Ray Dalio, said in today’s FT, “some people are confusing that with the investments being successful”. 

Pleasingly for investors, broader markets performed reasonably well yesterday, but those focused on AI, which have experienced the largest gains of recent years, fell dramatically. This should be taken as a caution to consider valuation levels and not just an exciting story when making investment decisions. 

Our Philosophy 

Volatility is a part of investing which is why we always take time to understand how much risk any client is prepared to take before investing. We also generally believe in the benefit of diversification of assets to help manage some of the extremes of the markets. Taking a diversified multi-asset approach means that some assets can fair better in different market conditions as they are more defensive assets such as bonds, whereas during periods of growth, equities tend to fair better. 

Armstrong Watson, in addition to our full range of accountancy services, also has our own fund management expertise from the Future Money asset management team, as well as independent expertise from the wider market. We are able to use this to help provide insight, commentary, advice and support to our financial planning and wealth management clients. 

A key aspect of our investment philosophy is that it is time in the market not timing the market, which is usually the best approach. For more information and guidance on Investing, please download our useful Introduction to Investing here. 

At Armstrong Watson, our quest is to help our clients achieve prosperity, a secure future and peace of mind. We believe that for those people who are considering taking financial advice in relation to their savings and investments, it may be a good time to do so to utilise existing allowances and tax reliefs due to the fact that certain allowances are frozen to 2028/29. 

Important Information

Please note that the contents are based on the author’s opinion and are not intended as investment advice. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The value of investments and the income derived from them can fall as well as rise and investors may get back less than they invested.


If you would like to discuss your investment portfolio please speak with one of our Financial Planning Consultants on 0808 144 5575 or email us.

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