Key Takeaways
- Legendary investor Paul Tudor Jones forecasts the AI bull market will continue for one to two additional years
- Jones expanded his AI stock portfolio, focusing on diversified baskets of technology companies
- The hedge fund manager draws parallels between today’s AI revolution and Microsoft’s 1981 PC debut plus the 1995 internet explosion
- Current market positioning suggests we’re 50–60% through the cycle with potential for 40% additional gains
- A major correction looms when market capitalization reaches 300–350% of GDP, Jones cautions
Renowned hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones sees substantial upside remaining in the artificial intelligence market rally. During his Thursday appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” Jones revealed his recent expansion into AI-related equities while projecting the sector has significant momentum ahead.
Jones explained his investment approach centers on diversified stock baskets rather than concentrated individual positions. “I’m a macro trader, so I just buy baskets,” he stated.
The billionaire investor drew connections between today’s AI transformation and two previous technology-fueled productivity explosions. The initial wave came with Microsoft’s emergence during the early 1980s. The subsequent wave arrived with internet commercialization beginning around 1995.
Jones drew a specific parallel between Anthropic’s Claude Code launch this January and Microsoft’s personal computer introduction in 1981. According to Jones, both represented pivotal moments when transformative technologies entered widespread commercial use.
“Those were both the beginning of productivity miracles that lasted four to five and a half years,” Jones explained.
His assessment places the current AI cycle at approximately 50% to 60% completion. This timeline supports his projection that the market rally has “another year or two to run.”
Echoes of the Dot-Com Era
Jones identified striking similarities between current market dynamics and late 1999, roughly one year before dot-com equities reached their zenith in early 2000. He observed that present-day valuation multiples and earnings indicators closely resemble that historical period.
The upcoming election cycle and incoming Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh represent factors that could maintain stable monetary policy, Jones suggested. This mirrors how Y2K anxieties constrained Fed action in 1999.
According to Jones, the market retains capacity for approximately 40% additional growth before topping out.
Looming Correction Risks
While maintaining a bullish stance, Jones emphasized substantial risks accompanying this growth trajectory. He identified stock market capitalization hitting 300% to 350% of gross domestic product as a threshold likely to trigger severe downward pressure.
“You just know that there’ll be some breathtaking kind of corrections,” he cautioned.
Jones extended his concerns beyond market mechanics to fundamental risks posed by artificial intelligence technology itself. He emphasized the necessity of government intervention through regulation, warning that uncontrolled AI development could pose existential threats to humanity.
As founder and chief investment officer of Tudor Investment Corporation, Jones earned legendary status for anticipating and capitalizing on the 1987 Black Monday market crash.
He currently serves as chairman of Just Capital, a nonprofit organization that evaluates U.S. publicly traded companies based on their social and environmental performance.
Jones delivered these observations at a conference prior to his Thursday CNBC segment. He declined to disclose specific AI stocks purchased or precise timing of his recent transactions.

