Federal Reserve’s Williams warns US demand may weaken without AI investment New York Federal Reserve President John C. Williams warned that robust business investment, driven predominantly by AI-related outlays, is propping up the U.S. economy as consumer spending, residential construction, and federal government expenditures decline. Without that AI spending, Williams said U.S. demand would decline outright, highlighting the economy's increasing dependence on a single category of business spending to sustain growth. Federal Reserve’s Williams warns US demand may weaken without AI investment New York Fed president says AI spending is essentially propping up the US economy as other sectors lose steam. Take away the AI boom and the US economy looks a lot less impressive. That’s the message from New York Federal Reserve President John C. Williams, who laid out a picture of an economy that is increasingly dependent on a single category of business spending to keep the growth engine running. Williams noted that robust business investment, driven predominantly by AI-related outlays, has been compensating for declines in residential construction and federal government expenditures. Without that AI spending, US demand would decline outright. The numbers behind the argument Real GDP in the US grew 2% in 2025. Williams projects a similar pace through the rest of 2026. But peel back the layers and the composition of that growth tells a more fragile story. Consumer spending is under pressure. Residential construction is pulling back. Federal government expenditures are declining. Williams also pointed out that demand for US government debt remains “enormous” despite high borrowing levels. AI as economic shock absorber The broader conversation within the Federal Reserve has been converging on a theme: AI is boosting productivity, but it’s a double-edged sword. Williams acknowledged that while AI adoption is lifting output, it’s also contributing to softer labor demand in specific sectors. What this means for investors For crypto markets specifically, the picture is more ambiguous. Williams made no reference to digital assets in his remarks. The Fed’s economic framework for discussing growth, productivity, and investment has no crypto-shaped hole in it. AI is getting the spotlight as a serious macroeconomic force. Crypto, for now, doesn’t register in the same conversation at the central bank level. Investors should watch two things closely. First, quarterly earnings from the major AI infrastructure spenders, because any pullback in capital expenditure guidance could ripple through the entire growth outlook. Second, the labor market data in sectors most exposed to AI displacement, since deterioration there could force the Fed’s hand on rate policy sooner than expected. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .