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Top strategist Paul Dietrich shares 2 picks to ride out an AI crash

October 9, 2025
in News
Top strategist Paul Dietrich shares 2 picks to ride out an AI crash
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Wedbush's Paul Dietrich is worried about the stock market and economy.
Wedbush’s Paul Dietrich is worried about the stock market and economy.

Osmancan Gurdogan/Anadolu via Getty Images

  • Paul Dietrich shared two alternative investments to AI, saying the tech boom is a bubble.
  • Wedbush’s chief strategist recommended utilities and gold as two solid bets to ride out any trouble.
  • “People just think there is no limit on these things, but there always is,” he said of the AI bull run.

Top strategist Paul Dietrich has warned that the AI boom is a bubble, and suggested where investors should take shelter.

Those betting on the tech are wagering it will supercharge productivity and mint profits for the businesses harnessing it, fueling a growing debate about whether surging AI stocks warrant their sky-high valuations or are destined to crash.

Dietrich, Wedbush’s chief investment strategist, told Business Insider that the bull run reminded him of the hype and speculation during the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s and the housing bubble in the mid-2000s.

“They made no sense,” he said. “Things just kept going up and up and up.”

Dietrich said of the internet bubble, “I’d go to a party and everybody was telling me what dot-com stock that they had just gotten into. The same thing is happening today.”

Nvidia shares have soared about 13-fold since the start of 2023, catapulting the chipmaker to a $4.5 trillion market capitalization. That figure exceeds the combined value of Berkshire Hathaway, JPMorgan, Walmart, Eli Lilly, and Visa.

Dietrich, who manages money for private investors, institutions, and retirement funds, said he believed AI would “change everything” but added that valuations were “out of whack.”

“People just think there is no limit on these things, but there always is,” he said. Dietrich added that blue-chip stocks such as Microsoft tanked during the dot-com crash. The enterprise-software giant’s shares fell 63% over the course of 2000.

He also said he was alarmed about retail investors using borrowed money to place bigger and riskier bets in a bid to amplify their returns.

“More people are in leveraged ETFs, especially in technology,” he said. “We’ve never, ever seen a big market downturn with the kind of leverage that I see underlying the stock buying. This is my biggest worry right now.”

“If the market starts going down, you want to get out of those things really quickly,” he said.

Dietrich said the government’s injection of trillions into the economy over the past five years may have shored up demand and staved off trouble.

“It’s pushed off the recession,” he said. “But it hasn’t repealed the laws of gravity.”

Where to invest if AI is a bubble

Dietrich predicted the sprawling data centers supporting AI would become a “commodity business,” with their makers becoming the “utilities of the future” and looking more like AT&T than Apple.

The centers require huge amounts of energy and water to run. That makes utilities “probably one of the best investments for a long period of time going forward,” he said, especially as they can switch energy sources as needed and regulators ensure they earn sufficient profits.

“Just invest in a utility because they’re going to get this guaranteed return,” he said, calling it a “quasi-bond” as it pays large and reliable dividends.

Dietrich also said it “makes sense” to invest in gold, which breached $4,000 a troy ounce for the first time this week. He added that all his clients have at least 25% of their portfolios in the metal.

The financial guru said he was also bullish on gold because he believed the US government was trying to devalue the dollar to make exports more competitive and reduce the real value of the national debt, making it easier to pay off.

Gold can also be a good hedge against inflation accelerating because of tariffs, he said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Top strategist Paul Dietrich shares 2 picks to ride out an AI crash appeared first on Business Insider.

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