The gap between capital spending on artificial intelligence (AI) and its real payback is becoming critical. According to a Goldman Sachs report, financial returns remain minimal across most sectors despite the unprecedented pace of technology adoption.
The bank’s analysts note that 95% of companies embracing AI have yet to record a notable return on investment (ROI). Although mass consumers are adopting AI faster than they did the internet or personal computers, monetization is stalling. Most users prefer free versions of chatbots, which limits revenue generation for developers.
Ecosystem imbalance
Right now, the bulk of profits in this cycle is grabbed by chipmakers. Model developers and cloud providers, by contrast, are increasingly struggling to justify the enormous infrastructure costs. Goldman Sachs calls this skew in the value chain “unsustainable.”
Things are dubious within the corporate sector. While top executives report productivity gains, front‑line staff do not admit real-time savings. Most companies still have not found AI use cases that create genuine added value rather than merely increasing operating costs.
FOMO and infrastructure risks
Large high-tech companies continue to ramp up spending on data centers despite stagnant share prices. Analysts attribute this to fear of missing out (FOMO) and the need to keep pace in a competitive race.
Experts warn that without deep reorganization of corporate data and clear investment strategies, AI spending will remain inefficient. Early adopters might encounter high costs while implementing raw solutions that will not deliver proportional long‑term benefits. Experts urge companies to be cautious: buying powerful tools does not substitute for lacking business logic.