AI Investing and the CPA: A Seismic Shift and the AI Gold Rush

by Greg Scrofani, MBA, Mezzasalma Advisors – March 9, 2026
AI Investing and the CPA: A Seismic Shift and the AI Gold Rush

Artificial intelligence (AI) has arrived with force, and its presence is becoming impossible to ignore. If you’re a CPA, this is your moment of truth. The profession built on reason, order, rules, reconciliations and watching pennies like a hawk is suddenly staring at a financial earthquake.

The New Landscape

Over the past 12 months, an avalanche of capital has slammed into the AI ecosystem. Chipmakers are printing money, data-center operators are building digital cathedrals that glow from outer space and Big Tech has transformed itself into something between a military contractor and a wizard’s guild. The investment industry, never one to shy away from theatrics, has responded with a tidal wave of AI-themed exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and indexes — each promising to give investors a slice of the future, neatly packaged between two ticker symbols.

These aren’t your grandfather’s index funds. Some, like Artificial Intelligence & Technology (AIQ) and iShares Future AI and Tech ETF (ARTY), cast a giant net over anything remotely AI-adjacent. Others, like First Trust Nasdaq Artificial Intelligence and Robotics ETF (ROBT) and Robotics & Artificial Intelligence ETF (BOTZ), are full-blown tributes to robots, automation and the machine-driven economy. And then there are the wildcards — funds powered by machine-learning algorithms that choose their own holdings. Yes, you read that right: AI picking AI, a financial ouroboros devouring its own tail.

If this sounds insane, that’s because it kind of is. But it’s also where the world is heading.

The catch — and it’s a big one — is that beneath the slick marketing lies a messy, volatile, sometimes downright dangerous landscape. Many AI funds are wildly concentrated in a handful of mega-tech titans. Some rely on index methodology so loose that a company using AI to predict office coffee orders could qualify. Expense ratios climb. Turnover spikes. And retail investors get sucked in without understanding what they’re really holding.

Enter the CPA — the person expected to cut through the noise and tell the truth.

Advising Clients

Clients are going to ask whether they should buy a piece of this AI wonderland or whether they already unknowingly own half the AI universe through their regular index funds. Boards will ask whether excess corporate cash should get deployed into AI-themed ETFs. Colleagues will whisper about generative models replacing analysts. And the world will look to the profession known for its skepticism and say, “Okay, what’s real here?”

CPAs can’t shrug and pretend this is someone else’s problem. AI isn’t just trans­forming back-office processes; it’s reshaping markets, capital flows, valuations and risk models. It’s rewriting how companies invest, how they spend and how they grow. This isn’t a warning. This is a wake-up call.

Technological investment has long been the most reliable lever for reducing fixed costs and increasing productivity. What AI brings to the table is the acceleration of this equation at an unprecedented scale. It’s no longer a tech trend — it’s an industrial superstorm. And the investors who understand it, question it, dissect it and challenge its assumptions will thrive. The ones who ignore it will end up trying to explain to clients — or bosses — why they slept through the biggest capital shift of their careers.

The implications for investors are both exciting and sobering. The current environment will produce clear winners: firms that build or enable the AI infrastructure — names like Nvidia, Microsoft and Amazon Web Services come to mind — as well as nimble players in specialized verticals. But there will also be disruption. Industries reliant on human-driven labor, such as accounting, or legacy systems may struggle to compete unless they evolve.

The prudent CPA must do more than monitor earnings reports or follow sector trends. Now is the time to look around the corner — to anticipate where this wave is heading and how portfolios can be posi­tioned accordingly. That includes assessing clients’ risk tolerance in light of growing volatility and structural realignments.

AI may well become the defining technological force of the next decade. Its ability to drive productivity, reduce costs and reshape markets is real — and it’s happening faster than most imagined. Those who adapt and invest strategically may reap significant rewards. Those who don’t could be left behind.


Greg Scrofani

Greg Scrofani, MBA, is vice president of portfolio management at Mezzasalma Advisors.

 

 

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