The Journal. - The AI Economic Doomsday Report That Shook Wall Street
Episode Date: February 27, 2026A viral blog post by a relatively unknown research firm sent the stock market on a wild ride this week. The post by Citrini Research tapped into a new strain of fears about artificial intelligence, pa...inting a dark portrait of a future in which technological change leads to mass white collar unemployment. WSJ’s David Uberti explains why Wall Street is jumpy about the prospects for AI. Ryan Knutson hosts. Further Listening: - The Era of AI Layoffs Has Begun- AI Is Coming for Entry-Level Jobs And listen to Camp Swamp Road, full playlist here.Sign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Our colleague David Uberti was doom-scrolling on Sunday night, like a lot of us do, when a certain post caught his eye.
I was reading in bed on my iPad this interesting sub-sec post from a financial research firm I hadn't heard of before.
It was published by a relatively unknown firm called Citrini Research, and it was written like a memo from the future, from June 2028, looking back at how artificial intelligence transformed the economy.
economy. And they basically framed this report as sort of like a postmortem on what happened over
the time between now and then and how the economy has changed. It read to me like really good
science fiction. I didn't put it down despite the fact that it was 7,000 plus words long.
The picture the Satrini report painted in the future was bleak. We described it as a doomsday
report, and very much so it was. In the scenario that they outlined, there was something like
10.2% unemployment across the United States,
which is worse than what it was the depths of the Great Recession.
The report proposed that AI will become so good at writing code and replacing jobs
that it could become very bad for the broader economy.
Basically, the question is not whether, like, AI is bearish or bullish for the economy?
Is it what if it's so bullish that it becomes bearish?
David wasn't the only one reading the Satrini post that night.
It was going viral.
And it was freaking people out.
Pretty soon after the market opened on Monday morning,
a lot of stocks that we follow in the software space,
in particular, we're all flashing red on our screens.
And when something across the entire sector
is moving in the same direction,
it tends to mean something big is happening.
Investors, the Dow dropping about 1.6%, losing more than 800 points.
Salesforce, snowflake, two other software names.
Synchrity and Capital One, those names plunging.
Two is DoorDash and Uber.
DoorDash, that stock was down over 6%.
And all coming after that report we were talking about
from Citrini Research, where they lay out the potential
versus that AI.
Why do you think this post about a hypothetical future,
almost like science fiction,
led to such a big reaction in the stock market?
I think it really articulated a lot of existing fears
that people have about artificial intelligence.
I think people who think a lot about this space
and the uncertainty around it
are looking for ways to understand it,
and this definitely tapped into that vein.
Welcome to The Journal,
our show about money, business, and power.
I'm Ryan Knudsen.
It's Friday, February 27th.
Coming up on the show,
the AI Doomsday Report
that shook the stock market.
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At the end of last year, the biggest worry about AI in the stock market was that it was a bubble,
that the technology was overhyped and the companies were spending too much money on it.
There's a lot of questions about AI companies overinvesting in AI.
basically throwing billions upon billions of dollars into data center construction, chips, and more,
and that all of that wouldn't actually pan out.
But over the last couple of months or so, there's been a vibe shift of sorts.
And it's shifted more from this idea that there's a bubble that might burst to this idea that AI might actually pan out.
This vibe shift was sparked by massive advancements in AI tools.
Tools that allow for AI agents or digital assistants to actually do stuff,
you. And there have been advancements in coding tools like Anthropics Clod Code and OpenAI's
Codex, which make it possible for just about anyone to write computer code.
I mean, when you see people like me who are able to go into Claude with no previous
coding experience and do in a couple of hours what trained software engineers would take
much longer to do, traditionally speaking, I mean, that's a pretty big development. And it raises
the question of, you know, how quickly can people spin up?
new pieces of software.
It wouldn't take the type of massive investment
that you'd have from a traditional
software company that takes billions
upon billions of dollars to do this stuff.
The idea being that
it's actually much cheaper to do this now.
One AI founder
compared this moment to February 2020
when we could see a pandemic
brewing on the horizon in other countries
but didn't know exactly what was about to hit us.
There's been this sort of
deer in the headlights moment
on Wall Street of what
people should do. And it has left the market in this very herky-jurkey, trigger-happy mode.
So it just sort of speaks to how this particular substack post played into an existing trend,
and in many cases exacerbated that trend.
Okay, well, let's dive into that substack post. It was written by Cetrini Research. First of all,
what is Cetrini Research?
So Cetrini Research is a small research for,
They do macro and stock research, which they have published on Substack for the last couple of years or so.
They're not as widely known as a lot of the research outfits that we tend to follow,
but they have a really sizable following on Substaffed.
And in fact, they're one of the largest financial blogs on Substack.
And this went more viral than anything else that they've done previously.
Tell me more about the future world that this report lays out.
What do they think is going to happen?
The scenario at a high level is that the sort of rapid advancement in adoption of AI will lead to this sort of cascading dynamic of job losses, disinvestment in a race to the bottom-run prices.
That ultimately leads to mass unemployment among white-collar workers.
Here's one of the authors of the report, Alec Shah, in an interview with Bloomberg.
And so that's kind of the underlying thesis here, is that there's going to be significant replacement of jobs with AI,
specifically AI agents, those things only really came into fruition in the last few months.
And so as it comes through and shows up in the productivity of different corporations,
that's when things are going to get a little more interesting and where we've got to pay real attention.
The report lays out a potential downward spiral for white-collar workers.
It starts with software.
Because AI makes it so easy to create software on the cheap,
big software companies might not need as many employees.
or might not need to exist at all.
At the same time, the report suggests that consumers
will also start using AI agents to complete tasks,
like for online shopping,
as then you'll tell your AI agent to go buy shoes for you
rather than searching around for the cheapest price.
They said these agents will just sort of exist in the background
of all of the apps that you or I use,
and they will basically make decisions either autonomously
or semi-autonomously to reduce the friction
of something like ordering food to your house
to make sure that you get the lowest possible price at all times.
As AI agents take over more aspects of commerce,
they'll likely look for efficiencies that could lead to more job losses.
For instance, one of the decisions AI agents might make
is to avoid credit cards and pay with something that doesn't have fees,
like cryptocurrency.
That could devastate the credit card companies,
leading to more layoffs.
And then their hypothesis is that it will actually snowball into the broader economy
because if you have mass layoffs among white-collar workers,
those folks tend to make a lot of money.
There will be in turn a huge decline in U.S. overall consumption in the economy.
And then all sorts of financial institutions,
whether they are private lenders, mainstream banks, payment processors, mortgage lenders,
all of the financial firms that sort of exist around that space,
those firms will also suffer as well.
So they raise the question that this could also sort of lead to a financial contagion of sorts
in addition to an economic malaise.
A key point of the report is that AI will create something the author's coin is ghost GDP.
Basically, the ghost GDP idea is that all of this innovation will help create wealth
in the form of new GDP, new stuff, new value that we create in the economy,
but it won't actually go back into the quote-unquote real economy in any meaningful way.
Instead, the report suggests that the wealth created by AI will only benefit a small number of people.
Basically, all of this wealth will accrue to people or companies who win this sort of winner-take-all
situation, and the benefits of that, the financial benefits of that, won't be third,
filtered elsewhere.
This doomsday vision of the future
helped fuel Monday's huge sell-off
in the stock market for all sorts of companies
that were either named directly in the post
or that have business models that AI agents could replace.
You have DoorDash, which is your food delivery app,
you have Visa and MasterCard,
which are some of those payment processors
to take a cut of each transaction,
Salesforce, Z-Scaler, CrowdStrike,
which are all different types of software firms,
and then also some managers of private
assets, Blackstone, KKR, Apollo, Blue Owl. These are sort of integral parts of the financial plumbing
for the tech and software worlds. And this piece really sort of crystallized some of the fears
people have around those firms that have already existed. It's also worth saying that a lot of
these names have bounced back, at least to some extent since then, which I think sort of speaks
to how crazy this market is and how no one really understands how to price this.
So how concerned should we really be about the future laid out in the Satrini report?
That's next.
After Citrini's hypothetical vision of the future went viral,
critiques of it started going viral too.
Plenty of smart people have pushed back poking holes in this thesis.
Most notably, there is no mention of purchasing power here.
We have to think about what normal people can do and how their lives are going to get better.
Software engineering postings are still rising.
Data center construction.
booming. Capital spending is accelerating. The apocalypse, they argue, is simply not in the numbers.
The math doesn't math.
David says the criticism falls into two broad camps. The first has to do with that ghost GDP concept.
The idea that the value created by AI won't go back into the real economy.
It goes against a lot of what mainstream economists think and how they think about GDP.
A normal economist would tell you, if you create more money through additional productivity,
through something like AI, that money has to go somewhere.
And also it overlooks the idea of political economy at all.
The idea that the U.S. government and public policy would slow walk into this without any meaningful changes on how to tax people, for example.
If you have all of these incredible benefits accruing to a tiny number of companies or individuals in ways that really fundamentally alter the economy in a bad way, it seems unlikely that the government would just let that happen.
The second big camp of criticism is that the piece focuses too much on the negatives of AI
without getting into the possible upsides.
This post really focus on the destruction of white-collar jobs as we understand them right now.
There was no real discussion of any potential new types of jobs that might be created,
new types of businesses that might form in response to that.
Over the last century or so, whenever we've had these huge technological sea changes
and productivity has gone up, that money has gone somewhere.
it has expanded what we think of as consumption.
People in the United States have bought more stuff generally in response to all that.
That would seem to create a lot of opportunities for new businesses to pop up as well.
Right.
I've heard some critics say that human desires are limitless.
And so as long as humans have desires, there will be jobs out there to satisfy those desires.
Right.
And we can't tell what those desires are right now, right?
Like if there is this huge productivity boom, if people,
can use AI to do sort of menial tasks that free us up for more creativity. This is obviously
the optimists talking. What do we do with all that extra time? What do we do with all that
extra productivity? What other opportunities does that create? And that's not really a possibility
that this both brought up. There are a lot of jobs that don't exist anymore thanks to technological
innovation. And yet we still find businesses to create and things to spend money on. I mean,
if you told somebody 100 years ago that your job was social media influencer or
podcast host, they'd think you're insane.
But even though this whole report was just speculation,
it still had a real-world impact.
So what does this moment tell us about Wall Street's understanding of AI?
Understanding is maybe not the word I would use.
Or lack thereof, I guess.
Right, right, right.
So, I mean, a price is a powerful piece of information, right?
The price of AI is something that nobody really understands.
understands quite yet. But the even harder thing is pricing the disruption of AI. And that's kind of
what we're seeing with each of these really shoot first, ask questions later, market moves in recent
months. We talk to people on Wall Street all the time about this. A lot of them are passive
investors. They follow the trend that makes up a huge portion of like the market as we talk about
it, right? A lot of them will give you a lot of cliches about productivity,
and sort of the opportunity with AI,
but the real honest ones that we talk to say they have no idea.
And I think that uncertainty between fear and greed,
which are two of the most powerful forces and markets,
that's kind of what you're seeing at this moment, such as this week.
And it's particularly pronounced right now
because the market's so highly valued.
People have bet so much on this theme,
that any particular move, any retreat or retreat,
in the expectations around it could have a really big impact.
By the end of the week, the stocks that had dropped related to the Zatrini report had mostly bounced back,
especially as more prominent analysts started spreading their counterpoints.
David says it'll take a lot to disrupt the U.S. economy, which over time keeps proving its resilience.
I have just been struck for the last six years of how resilient the U.S. economy is.
we had the pandemic.
We had a once-in-a-generation inflationary shock
with an energy crisis laid on top of that.
And now subsequently, we've had this huge surge in financial markets
and pretty significant economic growth.
And I've just been struck over and over again
by how the U.S. economy has adapted.
Either way, there will be growing pains.
This week, the payments company Block,
which owns Cash App and Square,
announced that it was laying off 40% of its workforce.
The company's CEO, Jack Dorsey, said on X that AI was transforming how people do their jobs
and that he wanted to get ahead of it.
He wrote, quote,
we're already seeing that the intelligence tools were creating and using,
paired with smaller and flatter teams,
are enabling a new way of working,
which fundamentally changes what it means to build and run a company.
This Citrini report is, you know,
You know, it's written from the point of view of June 2028.
So I can't wait for June 2028, and we can talk again,
and we can see how much of any of this actually came true.
Happy to come back and discuss the doomsday scenario for sure.
But yeah, in the meantime, yeah, we'll be following it.
Before we go, we have a question for you.
How are you feeling about AI's role in the economy?
Are you worried, hopeful?
Are you using it?
And if so, how?
please send us an email or a voice recording to The Journal at WSJ.com.
That's The Journal at WSJ.com.
And one more thing, for those of you who have been following our series Camp Swamp Road
about the stand-your-ground shooting in South Carolina,
there have been some big developments.
And we've got a brand-new episode coming out on Sunday.
Our colleague, Valerie Borlein, reports from the courthouse,
where the shooter, Weldon Boyd, finally takes the stand.
And things will happen.
My jaw was on the floor when I heard it.
Again, that'll be in the journal feed on Sunday.
And if you haven't been listening to this series,
now's a good chance to get caught up.
There's a link to the series playlist in our show notes.
That's all for today.
Friday, February 27th.
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