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I asked AI for the date of the next stock market crash… was it useful?

Stocks are at all-time highs despite concerns about the global economy. Is a stock market crash due and what can we do to continue wealth-building?

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UK financial background: share prices and stock graph overlaid on an image of the Union Jack

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I’ve been fearing another stock market crash for the last six months. However, stocks have kept pushing up from their Trump-inspired ‘Liberation Day’ lows and — in the US and UK — are now at all time highs.

So I’ve turned to artificial intelligence (AI) to help me discover when the next stock market crash may occur. Sadly, the answer wasn’t overly illuminating. But it did reinforce some home truths.

XXX

Here’s what it told me

Unsurprisingly, ChatGPT didn’t have the answer, but it did say: “There is no reliable way to say when the next stock-market crash will happen — only which economic and market signals make one more likely. As of early October 2025, valuations and leverage are high while a number of macro indicators are signalling elevated risk.”

Clearly, there are some important themes here, even though it didn’t have the desired answer to my question. Everything in investing should be based on probability-weighted outcomes. In other words, how likely something is to occur based on data and market signals.

Now, as ChatGPT highlights (and I already knew), stocks are more expensive versus their earnings power than they have been in recent years. But it’s a sliding scale. Some stocks, like Palantir and other AI newcomers have valuations that are very hard to justify. Other parts of the market look quite cheap.

The wall of worry

This year global equities have continued to climb the proverbial ‘wall of worry’. Markets have shrugged off potential shocks like trade tensions and tariff threats, and ongoing conflicts.

In the US, a government shutdown has added another layer of uncertainty, while in Europe, political instability has grown. Gold has also seen its biggest rally since the 1970s.

Yet despite this backdrop, investors remain focused on resilient corporate earnings, moderating inflation, and the growing conviction that interest rates will fall further.

This, of course, creates an even more dangerous situation. It may encourage investors to overlook mounting risks and push prices ever higher, stretching valuations to unsustainable levels.

When markets rise in spite of worsening fundamentals, sentiment rather than earnings becomes the main driver. That can reverse abruptly.

Investing away from bubbles

I’ve had a lot of success investing in AI stocks. However, mine are now increasingly non-AI focused in this environment. One of which is the London Stock Exchange Group (LSE:LSEG). For me, it remains one of the FTSE 100’s most appealing long-term opportunities, based on its current valuation.

 

Despite the share price sliding roughly 21% year to date, revenue continues to expand with net sales expanding across the company’s four main segment.

Trading at around 21.5 times forecast earnings for 2025 and 19 times forecast 2026 earnings, the valuation looks undemanding for a high-margin, recurring-revenue business.

The Microsoft partnership is beginning to bear fruit, enabling AI-powered tools across capital markets and indexing. On Monday, it was announced that the London Stock Exchange Group will let customers use its licensed data to build AI agents on Microsoft’s Copilot Studio platform, through a new LSEG-managed server that connects data to external systems.

However, the main risk is competitive pressure, with Bloomberg and new fintech platforms threaten pricing power if the company’s innovation pipeline stalls.

Nonetheless, it’s a stock worth considering.

James Fox has positions in London Stock Exchange Group Plc. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Microsoft. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

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