The Stock
Market Could Crash in an AI Doomsday Scenario, According to Analysts. Wall
Street Is Panicking.
Trevor
Jennewine, The Motley Fool
Wed,
February 25, 2026 at 10:08 AM GMT+1 5 min read
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stock-market-could-crash-ai-090800885.html
The
S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC), and Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) dropped sharply on Monday as
investors contemplated a report from Citrini Research about how artificial
intelligence could reshape the economy .
In recent
months, investors have become increasingly concerned that AI code generation
tools will disrupt the software industry. The Citrini report extended that
anxiety to multiple industries by describing a doomsday scenario in which
autonomous machines bring about an economic disaster.
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While the
work is mostly fiction and intended to be through-provoking, it clearly struck
a nerve on Wall Street. Here are the important details.
Citrini
Research says AI agents could lead to an economic disaster
The
Citrini Research report reads like a movie script. It starts with a
flash-forward. The real publication date (Feb. 22, 2026) is struck through and
replaced with a future date (June 30, 2028). The fictional work sets the scene
by explaining unemployment has topped 10% and the S&P 500 has plunged 38%
from its high.
How did
we get there? Artificial intelligence worked too well. Machines replaced human
labor as AI agents became increasingly productive, while never needing sleep,
sick days, or health insurance. The impact was most profound among white-collar
workers like accountants, lawyers, marketers, software engineers, and systems
administrators.
So, while
economic output continued to grow on paper, white-collar unemployment spiked
and consumer spending dropped sharply. That prompted companies to reduce wages
for blue-collar workers and increase spending on AI agents, which created a
feedback loop without brakes. White-collar unemployment continued to rise and
consumer spending continued to fall.
Ultimately,
many borrowers (even those who once had high-paying jobs and excellent credit
scores) began to default on loans. That forced financial institutions to
tighten their lending standards, which led to a further reduction in consumer
spending. The economy eventually spiraled into a recession and the stock market
crashed.
The
Citrini report ends with a reflection: "We are certain some of these
scenarios won't materialized. We're equally certain that machine intelligence
will continue to accelerate," the authors state. "As investors, we
still have time to assess how much of our portfolios are built upon assumptions
that won't survive the decade."
History
says the AI doomsday scenario detailed by Citrini Research is unlikely
Michael
O'Rourke, chief market strategist at Jonestrading, expressed surprise about how
investors reacted to the Citrini Research report. "I have seen this market
exhibit incredible resilience in the face of actual negative news. Now, a
literal work of fiction sends it into a tailspin."
Indeed,
while the Citrini report raises valid questions about how the economy will
adapt to AI, the doomsday scenario described is unlikely. While new
technologies often boost productivity in a way that causes some degree of
strife by displacing workers, the economy has always reached a new equilibrium
as businesses restructured around new industries.
The most
recent example is the internet boom in the 1990s. Mainstream adoption of the
internet displaced workers in physical retail, music distribution, print media,
video rentals, and travel agencies. But businesses adapted to changes in
consumer behavior and new industries took shape, including e-commerce, cloud
computing, digital advertising, and streaming media.
Those new
industries created new jobs, or increased the prevalence of jobs that did not
exist at scale before the internet. E-commerce created demand for fulfillment
workers, last-mile delivery drivers, supply chain specialists, and web
designers. Cloud computing created demand for software engineers, data
scientists, and cybersecurity analysts.
The
internet boom also drove adoption of mobile gaming, social media, ridesharing,
food delivery, and fintech services. The AI boom will likely follow a similar
path. Some workers will be displaced, but new industries and jobs will be
created, some of which we cannot imagine today. Ultimately, people may wonder
how previous generations survived without AI.
Here's
the big picture: Technological innovation has been constant throughout history.
Hand-crafted goods were replaced by machine-made goods in the first industrial
revolution. Steam-powered production gave way to electrified production in the
second industrial revolution. And paper-based systems were replaced by digital
systems in the third industrial revolution. Economic prosperity increased every
time.
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