H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

AI is indeed coming – but there is also evidence to allay investor fears

1 day ago
A picture


The message from investors to the software, wealth management, legal services and logistics industries this month has been clear: AI is coming for your business.The release of new, ever more powerful AI tools has coincided with a stock market slide, which has swept up sectors as diverse as drug distribution, commercial property and price comparison sites.Advances in the technology are giving increasing credulity to predictions that it could render millions of white-collar jobs obsolete – or, at least, eat into the profits of established companies.Carl Benedikt Frey, the author of How Progress Ends and an associate professor of AI and work at the University of Oxford, says investors are reassessing the value of companies that rely heavily on selling software or specialist knowledge.“AI turns once-scarce expertise into output that’s cheaper, faster, and increasingly comparable, which compresses margins long before whole jobs disappear.

”Fears over widespread job losses were amplified this week by a viral essay, penned by AI entrepreneur Matt Shumer, titled: Something big is happening.In it, Shumer purports to explain to the world outside Silicon Valley that new models will come for coding jobs and then “everything else”, comparing the present moment with the February just before the Covid pandemic.The post was viewed 80m times on X, triggering fear and fury – including from people pointing out that Shumer has a history of AI hype.(He previously excited the internet by announcing the release of the world’s “top open-source model”, which it was not.)Shumer and the markets were reacting to the capabilities of recently released models such as Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.

6 and OpenAI’s GPT-5,3-Codex, both improvements on previous, powerful AI products,But there are other reasons for the febrility of the moment, not least the companies that are building these models,AI “hyperscalers” – the term for the big US tech players in the field – collectively plan to spend $660bn (£484bn) this year,This follows a year of colossal, often circular deals between the world’s biggest tech companies.

However, cracks have appeared in these numbers, as well as questions about what they actually mean,Nvidia and OpenAI recently appeared to drop a $100bn deal, replacing it with an as yet unknown, smaller commitment,Meanwhile, none of the AI model-builders – not OpenAI, xAI or Anthropic – have a clear path to the enormous revenue that would justify this spend; the revenue from the entire global software sector this year is projected to be just $780bn,It has appeared this week that both arguments about AI – that it is an unsustainable boom or heralds a destructive revolution in white-collar work – have been entertained by some investors, after shares in Google’s parent company, Alphabet, and Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta were affected by apparent concerns about a spending bubble,Bluntly, investors expect these companies to recoup their investment via hordes of individuals and businesses paying for their tools, because they allow certain tasks and jobs to be carried out by fewer people or over fewer hours.

Or in economic jargon, a productivity boom.“The two themes are inherently linked but not necessarily contradictory,” says Jason Borbora-Sheen, a portfolio manager at investment management firm Ninety One.At first, investors backed expenditure by the “hyperscalers” in the initial phase of the AI gold rush.Those concerns have now flipped to cash burn and the sheer scale of investment needed to stay competitive, says Borbora-Sheen, while at the same time the share prices of wealth managers and others have been affected by the perception that AI is “now here, will evolve and can displace”.Companies have cited AI as an influence on job-cutting plans, including British American Tobacco this week, but there has not been a wave of wholesale disruption yet.

Greg Thwaites, a research director at the UK thinktank the Resolution Foundation and an associate professor at the University of Nottingham, says evidence of a tangible AI jobs impact on large western economies is “quite ambiguous so far”.Not all white-collar work will be affected, he says, although AI might test axioms around the age-old capitalist concept of “creative destruction”, which involves entirely new jobs replacing outdated ones, such as car mechanics replacing farriers.Will AI be a different case because the change has come so fast or because it will be good at absolutely everything?He adds: “There are some jobs that are going to look very different quite quickly.But the idea that there are going to be bands of unemployed lawyers and accountants roaming around London within a few years seems like a stretch to me.”Alvin Nguyen, an analyst at Forrester, says the fears that shook the stock market are based on sentiment and not evidence: no one has had time to evaluate the performance of an Opus 4.

6-powered wealth manager.“It’s a kneejerk reaction,” he said.“How true is it? Look, there’s plenty of leaders out there who thought, I can replace people with AI at the beginning.And a lot of people acted on that.And I think one of the things that’s being found out is that for a lot of cases, no, it hasn’t panned out.

”Aaron Rosenberg, a partner at venture capital firm Radical Ventures, – whose investments include leading AI firm Cohere – and former head of strategy and operations at Google’s AI unit DeepMind, says the impact of AI is being underestimated in the long term but adoption of groundbreaking models will not be uniform.“History shows a repeated pattern of there being a significant lag between a technology working in a lab and it permeating the wider economy, as well as a chasm between early adopters and the majority of users,” he says.More new models will come; other huge AI deals could wobble as well.Meanwhile, this month there were low-level rumblings of discontent from high-profile tech workers; a slew of departures from AI companies for reasons as various as boredom, AI doomerism and concerns over the prospect of adult content in ChatGPT.There is a nervous, unfocused energy afoot.

As Borbora-Sheen says: “There is a strong winners versus losers dynamic.”
sportSee all
A picture

Scotland 31-20 England: Six Nations – as it happened

Rob Kitson’s report has landed so I’ll sign off.What a day of rugby that was. Two cracking games. I had so much fun calling them both for you. I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did

about 3 hours ago
A picture

‘A big call for the IOC’: is the fight over Olympic rowing on Australia’s predator-infested Fitzroy River all a croc?

An act of God cancelled rowing at the first Olympics of the modern age.But since stormy seas off Athens scuppered the sport in 1896, rowing has featured in every Games since.Now, the deputy premier of an Australian state appears to have threatened to upend what would be 136 years of history by scrapping rowing from the 2032 Brisbane Games – unless international Olympic and rowing officials agree to race on a river some have expressed concerns may not be up to standard, and one which is within the natural habitat of one of the most deadly predators on Earth: the saltwater crocodile.The Queensland infrastructure and planning minister, Jarrod Bleijie, raised the stakes on his government’s bid to have the central Queensland city of Rockhampton host rowing in 2032 on Wednesday, sending a message to the International Olympic Committee that there was no option other than the “mighty Fitzroy River”.“Rowing is gonna be in Rocky,” Bleijie said

about 3 hours ago
A picture

Canada’s curling war of words with Sweden escalates after warning over ‘F-bomb’

The Canadian curler at the centre of a cheating row at the Winter Olympics has denied any wrongdoing, accusing the Swedish team of deliberately trying to “catch us in the act”.On Saturday, World Curling confirmed that Canada had escaped punishment despite being accused of breaking the rules in the 8-6 victory over Sweden on Friday night. However, the sport’s governing body did warn Canada about their abusive langugage and introduced emergency spot checks on Saturday afternoon to make sure teams were not cheating when releasing the stone.A bad-tempered game erupted when Sweden’s Oskar Eriksson told Canada’s Marc Kennedy he was double-touching the stone on the penultimate end, which led to Kennedy responding with an expletive.Speaking after Canada had lost 9-5 to Switzerland on Saturday afternoon, Kennedy insisted he was innocent of any wrongdoing

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Two races, two golds: Jordan Stolz smashes another Olympic record in 500m

The men’s 500m is speed skating distilled to its most unforgiving form: one and a quarter laps of the oval, no pacing, no recovery window, no margin for technical compromise. On Saturday afternoon in Milan’s western suburbs, Jordan Stolz mastered the sport’s fastest and most unpredictable race and pushed his Olympic campaign toward historic territory.The 21-year-old American won the 500m in an Olympic-record 33.77 seconds, securing his second gold medal of the Milano Cortina Olympics and adding pace behind what is rapidly becoming one of the defining individual campaigns of these Winter Games.It also means Stolz has opened these Games with two races, two gold medals and two Olympic records

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Ireland 20-13 Italy: Six Nations rugby union – as it happened

Time to sign off with Brendan Fanning’s report from the Aviva Stadium. Thanks for joining us. Until next time …A huge game at Murrayfield, with kick-off in 10 minutes time …Some post-game reaction from Cormac Izuchukwu, via RTÉ. “We needed more fight and edge about us [after losing to France], and we showed that in the second half. It was tough this week, maybe we pushed too much

about 5 hours ago
A picture

Baloucoune spares Ireland’s Six Nations blushes as they recover to see off Italy

After what felt like 40 days and 40 nights of darkness and rain, the sun came out in Dublin. Cold, yes, and a grey day by kick-off, but bright enough to throw light on an Ireland side scrambling for their footing, and a bullish Italy one looking to break new ground.Neither quite worked out. Never having won a Six Nations game in Dublin might be the sort of statistic to weigh you down but the Azzurri carried it here like a backpack with only a couple of bits and bobs. What they achieved was to give the Championship a highly competitive performance that was heartening, but not worthy of a note in history

about 5 hours ago
businessSee all
A picture

US inflation falls to 2.4% in January after Trump’s tariffs led to price fluctuations

1 day ago
A picture

Bank bosses get huge pay rises in sign top City salaries back to pre-crash highs

1 day ago
A picture

Shares in trucking and logistics firms plunge after AI freight tool launch

1 day ago
A picture

Tony Blair’s oil lobbying is a misleading rehash of fossil fuel industry spin

2 days ago
A picture

UK economy grows by only 0.1% amid falling business investment

2 days ago
A picture

Jim Ratcliffe apologises for ‘choice of language’ after saying immigrants ‘colonising’ UK

2 days ago