Key Takeaways:
Artificial intelligence ranked among the most-cited risks in the Fed’s latest financial stability survey.Debt-funded AI spending could increase leverage across companies, lenders, and funding markets.Private credit and labor pressures may widen AI’s impact if market expectations weaken.The survey appears in the Fed’s Financial Stability Report, which presents the central bank’s current assessment of the U.S. financial system. The Fed said financial stability supports full employment, stable prices, a safe banking system, and an efficient payments system. AI’s growing presence in the survey reflects broader concern that the technology could affect multiple parts of the financial system, including asset valuations, borrowing levels, labor markets, and credit conditions.
The report stated:
“AI-related risks were in focus as well, particularly concerns around equity valuations, debt-financed capital spending, and risks to the labor market.”
During March and April, New York Fed staff surveyed 20 financial-market participants, including professionals at broker-dealers, banks, investment funds, and advisory firms. They were asked which shocks could have the largest negative effect on U.S. financial stability over the next 12 to 18 months. The report said the findings reflect market participants’ views, not official positions of the Federal Reserve Board or the New York Fed.
Debt-Funded AI Spending Creates a Wider Risk ChannelCapital spending tied to AI drew attention as more investment is being financed through borrowing. The Fed did not predict an AI-driven crisis or say AI spending is already destabilizing markets. Still, the survey shows market professionals are watching how AI-related debt could interact with high asset prices and tighter financial conditions if expectations change.
The Fed report detailed:
Private credit added another channel. Respondents said AI-driven disruption could weaken credit quality for some borrowers. The report also noted redemption requests and weaker sentiment in parts of private credit. That makes AI relevant beyond public technology shares, linking it to borrowers, lenders, leveraged financing, and broader market confidence.



















