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US stock markets have been hit by a further wave of AI jitters, this time from yet another viral – and completely speculative – warning about the impact of the technology on the world’s largest economy. The latest foreboding is from Citrini Research, a little-known US firm that provides insights on “transformative ‘megatrends’”. Its post on Substack, which it called a “scenario, not a prediction”, rattled investors by portraying a near future in which autonomous AI systems – or agents – upend the entire US economy, from jobs to markets and mortgages.
Citrini’s scenario begins now and ends in June 2028, with US unemployment cresting over 10% and an Occupy Silicon Valley movement setting up camp outside OpenAI and Anthropic’s offices. In the interim, a series of events triggered by the widespread use of AI agents guts software companies and ripples outwards, hitting private credit and mortgages, and leading to an unchecked downward spiral.
Speculative as it is, the scenario has unnerved investors. The S&P dropped more than 1% on Monday, and the software component of the index fell to its lowest level since Trump’s “liberation day” tariff announcement in April. Doubtless some of the wobble is attributable to Trump’s latest tariffs, but Uber, American Express, Mastercard and DoorDash, specifically named in Citrini’s report, all lost between 4% and 6%.
“It’s real doomsday porn stuff, which is always lapped up by readers and market commentators and the press,” said Neil Wilson, an analyst at Saxo Capital Markets. “I don’t think it’s necessarily going to play out as they see it, but it’s a bit of a wake-up call that the economy already no longer resembles the one just a few years ago.”
Citrini’s scenario evolves as follows:
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2. Mass white-collar unemployment
4. Downward spirals
Human is not a viable species. I will add - a viable species does not look for ways to eliminate its pursuit of survival; it survives. The flaw in human is that it cannot see that AI is a path that permits both survival and evolution. It is always blinded by, unnecessary to survival, greed and tribalism. We met AI too early. We don't understand that evolution might just be elimination of the necessity of warrior competition in favor of creative competition. If religious and other old text is considered, we have always known we cannot survive and have dwelt on describing the final days and the beyond. We are, perhaps, better creators than warriors already. Too bad we are not a viable species and will not create the next newly evolved species.
In terms of AI scenarios that is why my only AI-related stock investments are in energy and utilities ... AI needs both and if AI dies, people still need it, too.
The obvious conclusion at that point, is that humans are a total liability. Of course, at any point before that actually occurs, humans can simply pull the plug. Much sci-fi has explored that scenario. One where "thinking machines" are outlawed (or turn on humans) - Dune, Battlestart Gallactica, Warhammer, Terminator.
In an overly simplistic POV, the very wealthy own stocks too. Will they be complicit in their own demise? Will the populace? Will that be the brakes?
I don't know what to make of this, which seems to start at ~4 minute mark of the video.
We are doomed. lol
But, if it is any consolation, so is Tesla. If their robots were doing that, it would be all over Xitter.
@Sven I had overlooked that one.
I, Robot (movie) was based on an Asimov book. A collection of stories, really. Written in the 1940s and 1950s. Which makes it even more remarkable. Asimov was an amazing futurist. As was Arthur C Clarke. Both were decades ahead in their thinking.
Yes, that distinction of actual consciousness is really tricky. We are biased, in making that determination, I suppose. We decide how to define it, with our human thumb on the scale.
Its failure to recognize obvious recent events is disconcerting.
https://www.morningstar.com/markets/ai-can-do-many-things-market-analysis-isnt-one-them-yet
TLDR: Emphasis is in the original piece
This is historically the case, as you present.
Most of my comments are a bit tongue-in-cheek. If that isn't obvious. People fear change. Change this rapid is unnerving. Hopefully, it will all lead to the same incremental growth, as in the past. We should be so lucky!
I am sure that there will be big disruptions. But, I doubt we will be shooting at robot drones in a post-apocalyptic wasteland any time soon.
BTW, Rekenthaler should have asked Claude.