Jeff Bezos made headlines this week by pushing back against two of the biggest fears surrounding artificial intelligence: a market bubble and mass job losses.
Speaking on CNBC’s Squawk Box, the Amazon founder said people shouldn’t panic about the possibility of an AI bubble, arguing that the money being poured into the sector will ultimately benefit society regardless of what happens to individual investments.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
He compared the current AI frenzy to the biotech boom of the 1990s. That era ended in a market crash, but the drugs and treatments developed during that period remained. Bezos said AI will follow a similar path.
He acknowledged that the current excitement means “every experiment is getting funded,” including bad ideas. But he argued the winning ideas will cover the losses, pushing civilization forward in the process.
Hyperscalers like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google are expected to spend over $700 billion combined on AI infrastructure this year. OpenAI’s valuation has ballooned to more than $850 billion, and even its CEO Sam Altman has warned investors may be “overexcited.”
Bezos also addressed concerns about AI taking jobs. A recent Pew Research Center survey found half of U.S. adults are more concerned than excited about AI. Bezos called those concerns wrong.
His comments come as Amazon itself cuts 16,000 corporate jobs globally in 2026, partly to find AI efficiencies. The company is simultaneously planning to spend $200 billion on AI-related capital expenditures this year.
Amazon currently holds a consensus Strong Buy rating from 46 Wall Street analysts, with an average price target of $318.21, implying around 20% upside from current levels.
Bezos, whose net worth is estimated at $272 billion, now divides his time between Amazon, his rocket company Blue Origin, and his new AI startup Project Prometheus.
Project Prometheus launched in November with $6.2 billion in funding. The company is focused on building AI models for physical tasks like engineering, manufacturing, and drug design.
Bezos described the system as building an “artificial general engineer” — essentially a modern version of computer-aided design software.
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