Expert insight

Economic payoff of AI is coming—but it’s not here yet

August 22, 2024

Joe Davis

Vanguard Global Chief Economist

As is often the case with new technology, it’s likely to take many years to realize the full potential of AI. While substantial benefits appear likely, a meaningful risk of disappointment remains.

Here, then, is an attempt to connect the dots between the current level of share prices, an approaching slowdown in the U.S. economy, and the long-term promise of the latest technology to command the world’s attention.

$1 trillion may be invested in AI, but not by the end of 2025
 

A common narrative in AI circles is that tech firms, utilities, and other businesses will spend a combined $1 trillion or more to advance the technology in the coming years.1 Such a sum may be spent, but it’s not going to happen by the end of next year, by which time we expect the U.S. economy to have slowed. We estimate that it would take $1 trillion in AI-related spending to push economic growth in 2025 above the trend of roughly 2%.

Investments in AI: Unprecedented but well shy of $1 trillion 

A bar chart shows that U.S. investments in artificial intelligence totaled an estimated $67 billion in 2023 and shows four projections of spending on AI in 2024 and 2025. If spending on AI grows 13% per year, as spending on software did between 1990 and 2000, it would amount to $76 billion this year and $86 billion next year. If spending on AI grows 16% per year, as telecommunications spending did between 1997 and 2001, it would amount to $78 billion this year and $91 billion next year. If spending on AI grows 21% per year, as cloud technology spending did between 2010 and 2016, it would amount to $81 billion this year and $99 billion next year. If spending on AI grows 34% per year, as it did between 2013 and 2023, it would amount to $90 billion this year and $121 billion next year. If spending on AI grows 92% per year, as NVIDIA Corp.’s data center revenue grew between 2020 and 2023, it would amount to $129 billion this year and $248 billion next year.

Note: Historical figures reflect compounded annual growth rates. 

Sources: Vanguard; historical telecommunications and cloud spending data are from the Federal Reserve’s FEDS Notes, Own-Account IT Equipment Investment, October 2017; Data for historical AI spending and estimate of actual 2023 spending in the United States are from Stanford University’s Artificial Intelligence Index Report 2024; Data for historical software spending are from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis; and data for NVIDIA Corp. revenue are from Ycharts.com.

As shown in the adjacent chart, last year, U.S. investments in AI totaled an estimated $67 billion. To project such spending in the near term, we grossed up last year’s investments in AI by various annualized rates of growth ranging from 13% to 34%. Those hypothetical growth rates reflect the rate of growth in AI investments over the last decade as well as the rates of investment in three other broad technologies in their heydays. Those rates of growth would leave AI spending this year and next in the $76 billion to $121 billion range.

Even if investment in AI suddenly nearly doubled this year and next—mirroring the near doubling of NVIDIA Corp.’s data center revenues in recent years—AI spending would amount to “only” about $129 billion in 2024 and $248 billion in 2025. Those would be tremendous outlays, to be sure. Perhaps unprecedented. But $1 trillion in AI investment by 2025 would require 286% growth. That’s probably not going to happen, which means we’re unlikely to experience an AI-driven economic boom in 2025. 

Enthusiasm for AI may explain much of the recent ardor for stocks
 

We have been cautioning investors for some time that U.S. stocks—and growth stocks, in particular—are richly priced. Indeed, the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio (CAPE) of the U.S. stock market stands at about 32% above our estimate of its fair value.2 While growth stocks and the broad stock market appear to be overvalued, small-capitalization, value, and non-U.S. stocks appear to be fairly valued.

U.S. stock prices remain stretched despite recent pullbacks

A line chart shows the wide fluctuations in the cyclically adjusted price/earnings ratio, or CAPE, of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index from 1957 to 2024 and its predecessor, the Composite Stock Index, from 1950 to 1957. It also shows a fluctuating range of Vanguard estimates of a separate, fair-value CAPE measurement. The chart shows that the index’s CAPE valuation has typically hovered in or near our estimates of the fair-value CAPE. It also highlights the early-2000 valuation peak amid the dot-com bubble, with CAPE at nearly 45 and valuations exceeding fair valuations at times from 1991 to January 2024. Currently, valuations are above our range of fair-value estimate.

Notes: Vanguard’s U.S. fair-value CAPE is based on a statistical model that adjusts CAPE measures for the level of inflation and interest rates. The statistical model specification is a three-variable vector error correction that includes equity-earnings yields, 10-year trailing inflation, and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields estimated from January 1940 through August 5, 2024. Details were published in the 2017 Vanguard research paper Global Macro Matters: As U.S. Stock Prices Rise, the Risk-Return Trade-off Gets Tricky. A declining fair-value CAPE suggests that higher equity-risk premium (ERP) compensation is required, whereas a rising fair-value CAPE suggests that the ERP is compressing.

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Sources: Vanguard calculations, based on data as of August 5, 2024, from Robert Shiller’s website, available at https://shillerdata.com; the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; the Federal Reserve Board; Refinitiv; and Global Financial Data.

My colleagues and I have been focused on the economic promise of artificial intelligence for some time. We are particularly curious as to whether AI-enabled growth in workforce productivity might help drive improvements in standards of living by offsetting the headwind of aging populations. In brief, count me as a cautious optimist. But improbable, at best, is the rapid economic and earnings growth that would correct the current excess valuation of the U.S. stock market. 

Corporate profits would have to soar to erase stocks’ overvaluation
 

Our final chart shows that U.S. corporate earnings growth since 1871 has averaged 4% per year. It also shows that, in strong periods, earnings growth has been much higher.

We wondered how fast profits would have to grow to unwind the excess in the U.S. stock market. Assuming a three-year horizon for a return to fair value, the answer is about 40% per year. This is double the annualized rate of the 1920s, when electricity lit up the nation—not to mention economic output and corporate income statements. 

Even assuming an AI-driven economic boom in 2025, U.S. stocks appear overvalued

“Growing out” of the overvaluation requires earnings to grow at roughly 40% per year

A bar chart shows that U.S. corporate earnings have grown at an annualized rate of 4.1% since 1871. It also shows three examples of periods in which earnings grew more quickly. They rose at a 21.5% annual rate in the era of national electrification, 15.1% in the era of personal computers and the internet, and 13.3% in the COVID-19 era. Finally, the chart shows that earnings would have to grow by about 40% per year for stocks to return to fair value over the next three years.

Notes: "Full history” refers to the period from January 1871 to March 2024. “Electricity” refers to the period from December 1921 to March 1930. “Personal computer and internet” refers to the period from March 1992 (after the early 1990s recession) to December 1999. “COVID-19 era” refers to the period from March 2020 to March 2024. The bar “Required to return to fair value in three years” represents the required annualized earnings growth rate for the cyclically adjusted price/earnings ratio to revert to a fair value of 23.8 by December 2027, assuming an annualized S&P 500 Index price increase of 5% and inflation at 2%.

Sources: Vanguard calculations, based on data from Robert Shiller, available at https://shillerdata.com/.

With profit margins close to record highs, most of a hypothetical 40% annualized profits jump would have to come from soaring corporate revenues. But slowing economic growth precludes soaring sales. My team’s forecast of U.S. economic growth in 2025 is 1%–1.5%, which would be down from our expectations of 2% growth this year. 

Amid the fervor over AI, human intelligence remains irreplaceable
 

The promise of AI is real. Our research suggests that the odds of an AI-driven surge in labor productivity are between 45% and 55%. In that scenario, we believe the U.S. economy would grow at a real (inflation-adjusted) annualized rate of about 3.1% between 2028 and 2040. The intervening years reflect the need for additional investments in the technology and time for them to pay off.

At the same time, we see meaningful risk—a 30% to 40% chance—that AI produces more modest benefits that are insufficient to overcome ever-larger government deficits driven by age-related spending. In that case, long-term economic growth might reach only about 1% per year.

Investors looking to connect the dots between the current level of share prices, probable levels of economic activity, and the widespread enthusiasm for AI would be well-advised to temper any expectations that economic growth and corporate profits are set for near-term acceleration. Instead, as ever, they’d be well-served to apply good sense in building and maintaining well-diversified portfolios that reflect their tolerance for risk and their investment horizons. Given growth rates, they should also be prepared to endure periodic downturns that would push stock prices closer to their fair values. 

1 See, for example, Goldman Sachs’ Gen AI: Too Much Spend, Too Little Benefit? (June 2024). 

2 Our fair-value CAPE uses the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index as a proxy for the market. It is defined as the price level of the index divided by the 10-year average of the real (inflation-adjusted) aggregate earnings of the index’s constituent companies. Our fair-value adjustment also considers the changing levels of market interest rates. 

Note: All investing is subject to risk, including the possible loss of the money you invest. 

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