Speaking on the Bloomberg Podcast, former SEC Chair Gary Gensler discussed Bitcoin, artificial intelligence, and regulation. He focused on how markets often move ahead of real fundamentals. In addition, he said investors should avoid getting influenced by hype around Bitcoin and overall digital assets. Instead, he encouraged people to pay attention to actual use cases and long-term value drivers.
He also described AI as one of the most transformative technologies of the era. However, he warned that expectations in markets may be running ahead of real-world outcomes.
Here’s what he said in detail.
“You have to be very careful that you’re not trading just on sentiment.”
When asked about Bitcoin, Gensler said investors should avoid trading based on sentiment or hype. Furthermore, he argued that decisions should be grounded in understanding real-world use cases and the underlying fundamentals of assets. He advised that investors should not trade based on short-term market excitement.
On regulation, Gensler noted that governments will likely face growing pressure to put safeguards around artificial intelligence. In particular, he pointed to concerns such as privacy, bias, and accuracy, as well as how algorithmic systems make decisions. He suggested these areas will attract more regulatory attention over time.
“AI is the most transformative technology of our times.”
According to Gensler, the current AI boom resembles previous technological revolutions. In those, investors poured huge amounts of capital into infrastructure before markets eventually faced a reality check.
He noted that financial markets are currently funding an enormous wave of AI infrastructure spending. Roughly $750 billion is expected to be invested this year alone. This is nearly three times the amount spent just two years ago.
Drawing comparisons with railroads, electrification, and the internet boom, he said markets frequently overbuild infrastructure. Eventually, this leads to some form of reckoning, although the severity can vary substantially.
“Markets tend to get overenthusiastic, and then at some point we build so much infrastructure, we have a reckoning.”
Gensler explained that today’s AI trade is effectively a two-part bet. First, AI leaders and hyperscalers such as OpenAI must prove they can generate substantial revenues. Additionally, AI adoption needs to boost productivity across the broader economy enough to justify the massive capital spending currently taking place.
“Venture capitalists and sovereign wealth funds are going to want to take risk off the page.”
While acknowledging AI’s long-term potential, Gensler stressed that current valuations remain difficult to justify in some cases. This is especially true for companies trading at extremely high multiples despite limited earnings.
He warned that selling pressure could pick up when early investors like VCs start cashing out, which might also hit broader markets. Meanwhile, on talking about who will be affected most he said newly public companies and private AI firms could face additional pressure. This may happen as early investors begin taking profits.
He also said looser regulation and global competition could add uncertainty ahead.
Overall, on Bitcoin and crypto, he kept it simple: don’t get caught up in hype, focus on fundamentals.







