However, institutional investors and wealth managers questioned strongly believe regulation in the UK and EU around AI and robotics is too stringent, which has curtailed creativity and innovation.
Institutional investors and wealth managers believe that the artificial intelligence (AI) market is on the brink of a seismic shift. This is according to a new global survey1 of pension funds, insurance asset managers, family offices and wealth managers with combined assets under management of $1.183 trillion, where nearly all (99%) of respondents say they agree with this view.
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The study was commissioned by fund manager Robocap – the leading investor in robotics, automation and AI listed stocks – whose Robocap UCITS Fund has delivered compound annualised net returns (CAGR) of 13.82% and a net return of 242% since its inception.2
Advances in computer power will cause explosion of investment
More than a quarter (28%) of investors and wealth managers surveyed strongly agree that groundbreaking advances in computer power, big data and next gen models will cause an explosion of investment in AI-driven automation, precision medicine, autonomous systems, and ethical AI governance, and almost three quarters (71%) slightly agree with this view.
Dell’Oro Group forecasts AI has the potential to generate more than a trillion dollars annually in AI-related infrastructure spending in cloud and enterprise data centres over the next four years, with worldwide data centre capex projected to grow at a 24% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) by 2028. 3
The research finds that more than half (55%) of survey respondents expect the AI market to reach a global market size of between $2.53 trillion and $3 trillion by 2033, while 44% say it will reach around $2.53 trillion.
Global robotics market to grow to $260 billion by 2030
Meanwhile Boston Consulting Group estimate the global robotics market is expected to be valued at between $160 billion to $260 billion by 2030.4 Almost half (49%) of professional investors and wealth managers surveyed believe the robotics market will be worth between $385 billion and $390 billion by 2033; 42% say between $383 billion and $385 billion; 5% around $383.89 billion; and 4% say between $390 billion and $400 billion.
Despite strong predictions for market growth globally, 35% of institutional investors and wealth managers questioned strongly agree and 65% slightly agree that regulation in the UK and EU around AI and robotics is too stringent which has curtailed creativity and innovation. This compares to other markets such as the US and China where more relaxed legislation has been to the benefit of leading AI and robotics companies based there.
While believing regulation has stifled AI and robotics in the UK, respondents to the survey expressed some concern about these markets. Eight out of ten investors surveyed are concerned about privacy and data security, while nearly three-quarters (71%) are worried about technological vulnerabilities and potential for AI to be hacked or manipulated highlighting the growing importance of cyber security.
Heightened concerns over autonomous AI decisions vs human intervention
Two-thirds of respondents say they are most concerned about autonomous AI systems making decisions without human intervention, while 61% are focused on the potential for job displacement and a negative impact on employment.
A further 59% are concerned about the ethical implications and potential misuse of AI; 58% believe the technology could be adversely used for surveillance or control purposes; 45% are concerned about the unintended consequences and unforeseen risks of AI deployment; 42% are focused on the uncertain long-term societal impacts of AI; and nearly one-fifth (18%) have concerns about the potential for AI to outperform or surpass human capabilities.
Jonathan Cohen, Founder and CIO at Robocap, said: “We have already seen huge growth in the AI and robotics sectors and given the major advances in computing power, big data and AI models, so we agree there will be an explosion in investment in the next decade. The AI and robotics investment universe is growing all the time, and requires the full attention of an investment team who are specialized in this rapidly expanding area.”