Investment Strategies
UBS Predicts "Mid-Teens" AI Investment Returns In 2025

The global wealth management arm of the Swiss bank says that while tariffs and other forces will cause AI-related stocks to be choppy, the overall investment case is robust, and has laid out market assumptions for this year and 2026.
UBS predicts “returns of
around mid-teens” for global AI stocks this year and underlying
technology developments will withstand volatility that rising
tariffs may bring.
The bank commented a few weeks after revelations of China’s
DeepSeek AI App –
allegedly costing a fraction of what Western AI has cost to
develop – sent shares in Big Techs such as chipmaker Nvidia down
sharply. On the other hand, as if to drive home the AI theme, PC
maker Lenovo Group yesterday posted a faster-than-anticipated 20
per cent rise jump in quarterly revenue thanks to demand for AI
computing infrastructure.
AI, the Swiss banking group says, is likely to be the dominant
technology story of the decade, affecting areas including
financial services and wealth management, as this news service is
exploring.
“For global markets, excluding China, we forecast total AI
spending to be close to $500 billion in 2026, the fourth year
since the `ChatGPT moment,’ based on current and guided capex
commitments from major tech companies,” the UBS Global Wealth
Management Chief Investment Office said in a note. “We expect
AI-related revenues, both direct and indirect, to also reach $500
billion by then. As a result, the combined AI end-demand
opportunity in 2026 is likely to be close to $1 trillion."
UBS said that assuming an operating margin of 35 per cent, which
it said is at the lower end of cloud platforms’ margins of 35 to
40 per cent and AI semiconductors’ 50 per cent, the operating
profit opportunity for global AI should stand at around $350
billion in 2026. The bank has put a multiple of 30x next year’s
operating profits, in line with levels seen in quality growth
companies, to get a sense of the market capitalisation of the
sector. As such, UBS said that by the end of 2025, the sector’s
market cap will stand at $10.5 trillion.
“Looking at what has been priced in so far – $9 trillion in
market capitalisation for global AI names – we see returns
of around mid-teens for 2025,” UBS continued.
“We continue to highlight that tariff- and export control-related
uncertainty will likely spur periods of tech volatility ahead.
But we also see solid fundamentals from quality AI companies that
continue to point to strong investment commitments and improving
monetisation trends. Investors should consider taking advantage
of volatility through structured strategies and by buying the dip
in quality AI names,” UBS said.