How to Play The AI Boom And NASDAQ Rally

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In this piece we will talk about how to play the AI boom and the NASDAQ rally according to hedge fund manager Brad Gerstner.

One of the craziest trends these days is artificial intelligence. If you had asked the biggest hedge fund and analyst gurus last year if artificial intelligence would be dominating the airwaves as the next big thing this year, very few would have comfortably predicted this. Yet, here we are, and it's all because of a chatbot called Chat GPT.

Ever since the first news of how ChatGPT was one of the strongest artificial intelligence powered conversational chatbots to be programmed, the media is full of how this is the age of AI and thousands of jobs are at risk. These reports are fueled by investment banks as well. For instance, a report from the investment bank Goldman Sachs estimates that AI could cost a stunning 300 million jobs - compare this with the population of the U.S., which sits at close to 332 million according to the latest estimates. However, the investment bank adds that while jobs will be lost, new ones will be added as well along with a productivity boom from those workers that have kept their jobs improving their output.

At the same time, for the savvy investor, artificial intelligence is nothing short of a boon. In fact, it's a ray of hope in a market that is consistently plagued with the worry of a recession and the specter of rising interest rates. And, there's one investor whose quite vocal about the benefit of artificial intelligence and the companies that are at the heart of this latest technological revolution. This investor is none other than Brad Gerstner of Altimeter Capital. When compared to some of the hedge fund behemoths in the financial industry which have portfolios worth tens of billions of dollars, Altimeter holds its ground with Insider Monkey's research showing that it had a portfolio of $4.5 billion as of the first quarter of this year.

Mr. Gerstner recently made an appearance on CNBC, where he was nothing short of praise for artificial intelligence. In his talk, he shared that while the concerns of AI impacting the job market are valid; nevertheless, the market has seen a similar chorus each time a disruptive new technology surfaces. He outlined one such example in the form of the Internet and the talk around in the late 1990s - when some had worried that people would stop reading books due to the Web. However, right now, according to the hedge fund boss, the world is better now than it was back then - and we'd like to add that books are still sold today as well.