'Falling apart in real time.' Former star Fidelity manager warns on OpenAI, tells investors to shelter in these assets.

Dow Jones01-21

MW 'Falling apart in real time.' Former star Fidelity manager warns on OpenAI, tells investors to shelter in these assets.

By Barbara Kollmeyer

George Noble says 'the low-hanging fruit is gone'

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman pictured on February 3, 2025. Ex-Fidelity manager George Noble says the AI researcher is "falling apart in real time."

Bearing the brunt of Tuesday's steep 2% retreat in the S&P 500 was tech, as the Magnificent 7 shed a collective $683 billion in market cap, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

Our call of the day from ex-Fidelity manager George Noble warns of an "astronomical" risk profile from adjacent investment plays to AI researcher and developer OpenAI.

Flagging his post on X was "The Big Short's" Michael Burry, a steady critic of the AI boom who shot to fame for accurately calling the housing bust. "This is not surprising and will not end with OpenAI," he said of Noble's post.

A respected Wall Street veteran, Noble's career began in the early 1980s at Fidelity, where he worked alongside legendary investor Peter Lynch and ran the company's first international fund, the Fidelity Overseas Fund FOSFX, which was the No. 1 fund in the U.S. for several years. He also launched two billion-dollar hedge funds.

Noble's Monday post - "OPENAI IS FALLING APART IN REAL TIME" (yes, all caps) - is a rundown of the warning signs he sees over OpenAI, such as rising competition and falling traffic for ChatGPT. He also flags its heavy losses, quoting Deutsche Bank estimates that the company would see $143 billion in cumulative negative cash flow before turning a profit.

"I've watched companies implode for decades. This one has all the warning signs," he wrote.

Noble said there's been little discussion of the vast energy needed to keep these AI companies going, saying it will cost five times the energy and money to make models two times better.

"The low-hanging fruit is gone. Every incremental improvement now requires exponentially more computer, more data centers, more power," said Noble. Add to that its failures with GPT-5, a "talent exodus," and then a lawsuit by Elon Musk, he said.

"Here's what I think happens next: The AI hype cycle is peaking. The diminishing returns are becoming impossible to hide. Competitors are catching up," he said.

"OpenAI needs to generate $200 billion in annual revenue by 2030 to justify their projections. That's 15x growth in five years while costs keep exploding," said Noble.

He sees high risk in AI adjacent plays, warning that valuations are way too elevated. "If you're exposed to the Magnificent 7 through AI infrastructure bets, consider trimming. The gap between promised revolution and delivered reality has never been wider," he says.

"The smart money is rotating into sectors where valuations actually reflect fundamentals. Small and midcaps are trading near decade lows relative to Big Tech while earnings growth is only marginally lower," he said. "Markets can price risk, but they can't price chaos."

Echoing concerns by others over the U.S.-Greenland feud, Noble wrote in a separate post on X that Big Tech is in trouble if Europe rolls out its Anti-Coercion Instrument or "trade bazooka."

"$108 billion in counter-tariffs. Plus restrictions on U.S. services, procurement access, regulatory approvals, and IP protections. This hits Big Tech, financial services, and the digital economy where U.S. dominance actually lives," he said.

"Smart money is repositioning: Trimming U.S. large-caps. Adding gold and silver. Building positions that don't require transatlantic trade stability. Again: NOT because Greenland matters... But because when foreign policy becomes a domestic political release valve, and trade partners respond with credibility wars instead of negotiations, you're in uncharted territory," he said.

In May 2024, Noble told Fox News that gold was a "suitable replacement for bonds," because the U.S. was "spending money like drunken sailors." He flagged SPDR Gold Shares GLD and VanEck Gold Miners ETF GDX at the time as inflation hedges.

In a separate interview in May 2025, he discussed his bearish view on Mag 7 stocks, which would go on to rally

The markets

U.S. stock futures (ES00) (YM00) (NQ00) were steady. Gold (GC00) pushed higher, while oil (CL00) was lower.

   Key asset performance                                                Last       5d      1m      YTD     1y 
   S&P 500                                                              6796.86    -2.59%  -1.19%  -0.71%  13.34% 
   Nasdaq Composite                                                     22,954.32  -3.28%  -2.03%  -1.24%  16.93% 
   10-year Treasury                                                     4.278      14.20   14.30   10.60   -33.80 
   Gold                                                                 4859.5     5.44%   8.46%   12.17%  77.91% 
   Oil                                                                  59.77      -0.12%  3.14%   4.11%   -21.74% 
   Data: MarketWatch. Treasury yields change expressed in basis points 

The buzz

President Donald Trump will speak at the World Economic Forum at 10:30 a.m. Eastern, later than initially scheduled, due to a flight delay.

Netflix $(NFLX)$ beat profit and revenue expectations and forecast solid subscriber growth, but also forecast rising costs and shares are down.

Kraft Heinz shares $(KHC)$ are dropping after the food giant disclosed in a filing that its biggest shareholder, Berkshire Hathaway $(BRK.A)$, could sell nearly its entire stake.

GameStop stock $(GME)$ is up after the videogame retailer's CEO Ryan Cohen bought 500,000 shares.

United Airlines $(UAL)$ jumped as the carrier beat earnings estimates.

Best of the web

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The case for Greenland.

The chart

Ned Davis Research shares this chart showing record-high allocation to stocks by U.S. households. Citing data from the Fed's Financial Accounts report released earlier this month, analysts say including equity mutual funds and exchange-traded funds, households held $55.9 trillion in stocks in the third quarter. That beat a 2020 peak and one just before the dot-com bust. They also point to data showing institutional allocation to stocks - $16 trillion - beat a high seen in 2007 "and has only been higher in the three quarters preceding the dot-com top." Finally, foreign investors holding of U.S. stocks jumped to a record $20.8 trillion in the period.

Top tickers

These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:

   Ticker  Security name 
   NVDA    Nvidia 
   TSLA    Tesla 
   GME     GameStop 
   NFLX    Netflix 
   TSM     Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing 
   IBRX    ImmunityBio 
   MU      Micron 
   PLTR    Palantir 
   AAPL    Apple 
   AMZN    Amazon 

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-Barbara Kollmeyer

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January 21, 2026 06:52 ET (11:52 GMT)

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