CoinWorld News, January 16 — Economist Jeffrey Cleveland of Payden & Rygel stated in a report that most of the spending related to artificial intelligence primarily comes from corporate cash flow rather than excessive borrowing. He pointed out, “Although we are closely monitoring corporate leverage — a common leading indicator before economic downturns — current debt growth remains quite moderate compared to those periods of overexpansion in history.” Cleveland believes that the AI boom is unlikely to turn into a bubble and said, “For investors, the real risk today may not be entering too late, but exiting this theme too early.”
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CoinWorld News, January 16 — Economist Jeffrey Cleveland of Payden & Rygel stated in a report that most of the spending related to artificial intelligence primarily comes from corporate cash flow rather than excessive borrowing. He pointed out, “Although we are closely monitoring corporate leverage — a common leading indicator before economic downturns — current debt growth remains quite moderate compared to those periods of overexpansion in history.” Cleveland believes that the AI boom is unlikely to turn into a bubble and said, “For investors, the real risk today may not be entering too late, but exiting this theme too early.”