AI Investment to Drive Global Growth Through 2026, BofA Says
Bitcoin miners have been among those riding the AI boom, with IREN and Cipher Mining up over 300% in 2025.

What to know:
- Bank of America expects AI-driven capital investment to boost U.S. and China GDP growth in 2026, while warning of rising volatility as the economic impact of the technology becomes clearer.
- Bitcoin miners have capitalized on AI demand by leasing data center infrastructure, with firms like IREN and Cipher Mining posting triple-digit percentage gains.
- The AI boom is pushing markets toward a capex-led recovery, creating potential openings for digital infrastructure and blockchain projects tied to computing, data, and productivity.
Bank of America’s 2026 market outlook paints a picture of strong global growth, led by AI investment, but warns that volatility could rise as investors begin to grasp the full impact of the technology on the economy.
The bank’s global research team expects U.S. GDP to grow 2.4% year-over-year by the end of 2026, above consensus, driven by business investment, fiscal stimulus, and recent rate cuts. China’s growth is also projected to beat expectations, with forecasts at 4.7% for 2026 and 4.5% in 2027.
But the most significant force shaping the bank’s forecast is artificial intelligence.
The surge in AI spending is already lifting GDP and BofA doesn’t see a bubble — yet. “We are optimistic on the two most influential economies,” said Candace Browning, head of BofA global research. “Concerns about an imminent AI bubble are overstated.” According to the report, AI-related capital investment is poised to expand further next year, supporting what some economists believe could become a new investment cycle.
Bitcoin
IREN (IREN) is up 337.15% year-to-date while Cipher Mining (CIFR) is trading nearly 300% higher. TeraWulf (WULF) is up 190% over the same period. The gains as come even as bitcoin has failed to convincingly break out this year, continuing to trade around the $90,000 area.
In effect, markets are shifting from a consumption-led recovery to one driven by capital expenditure, infrastructure, and productivity. If that shift holds, it could ripple beyond traditional equities and into areas like digital infrastructure, blockchain, and data monetization — domains where crypto projects have staked a claim.
Still, the bank sees turbulence ahead. As investors and policymakers develop a clearer picture of how AI affects inflation, labor markets, and supply chains, financial markets could experience sharp shifts. BofA warns that the ongoing “K-shaped” recovery, where some sectors soar while others lag, adds complexity to this outlook.
That disconnect could deepen if AI amplifies productivity in tech and finance while leaving slower-moving sectors behind. The result: a two-speed economy that’s harder to manage with traditional tools. For markets, it raises the risk of mispricing and sudden revaluations.
Emerging markets may benefit in the near term, especially if the U.S. dollar weakens and oil prices stay low. BofA notes that these regions are likely to see stronger performance in 2026, helped by global monetary easing. For some developing countries that skipped legacy infrastructure in favor of digital systems, growing AI demand could create new openings for alternative technologies.
Still, the tone of the report is cautiously upbeat. With two Fed cuts projected in 2026 and fiscal policy still running hot, the economic backdrop remains supportive, at least for now.
In a year where copper prices are rising on the back of supply constraints and fiscal expansion, and S&P earnings are expected to grow 14% despite muted price gains, the market seems primed for change. Whether AI becomes a productivity engine or a source of instability could be one of the defining questions of the next twelve months.
And in that debate, crypto — especially in its more infrastructure-focused forms — may have a role to play, even if it’s not at the center of the conversation yet.
More For You
‘Bitcoin to zero’ searches spike in the U.S., but the bottom signal is mixed

Google Trends data shows the term hit a record high in the U.S. this month, though global interest has fallen since peaking in August.
What to know:
- U.S. searches for “bitcoin zero” on Google hit a record high in February as BTC slid toward $60,000 after hitting a peak in October.
- In the rest of the world, searches for the term peaked in August, suggesting fear is concentrated in the U.S. rather than worldwide.
- Similar U.S. search spikes in 2021 and 2022 coincided with local bottoms.
- Because Google Trends measures relative interest on a 0-to-100 scale amid a much larger bitcoin user base today, the latest U.S. spike signals elevated retail anxiety, but does not reliably guarantee a clean contrarian reversal.











