Google CEO Sundar Pichai just delivered a blunt reality check to the tech world: no company enjoys AI immunity. If the red-hot AI investment bubble bursts, every giant will feel the pain, including Google itself.
In a fresh BBC interview, Pichai called the current AI boom an “extraordinary moment” but admitted the market shows clear “elements of irrationality.” He compared today’s frenzy to the dot-com era’s “irrational exuberance” and stressed that even Alphabet (Google’s parent) cannot escape damage if valuations crash.
AI Immunity: Why Even the Biggest Players Face Risk

Pichai’s warning comes as Alphabet shares jumped 46% this year on AI bets, yet investors grow nervous. Here’s what fuels the bubble fears about AI Immunity:
- Trillions of dollars pour into AI data centers, chips, and startups
- Early-stage AI companies get sky-high valuations with tiny revenue
- Massive energy demands push back Google’s net-zero climate goals
- Bank of England warns global markets could crash if AI excitement fades fast
Despite the risks, Pichai remains optimistic about real progress. Google just pledged £5 billion for UK AI infrastructure and will soon train models in Britain to help the country become the world’s third AI superpower.
Top voices stay divided on the bubble question:
- OpenAI CEO Sam Altman: “Investors are overexcited… someone will lose a phenomenal amount of money.”
- Amazon founder Jeff Bezos: Excitement funds bad ideas too, but society wins when the real winners emerge.
- Goldman Sachs economist Joseph Briggs: The huge spending looks sustainable for now.
- “Big Short” investor Michael Burry: Already betting against Nvidia and other AI stars.
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While some executives downplay the danger, Pichai’s message is crystal clear: no one gets AI immunity. The race to build tomorrow’s technology is real, but the billions flying around today carry big risks for everyone. As the Google boss put it: “I think no company is going to be immune, including us.” Investors, startups, and tech giants are all watching the same question: will the AI boom end with a bang or a painful pop?
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