Live Webinar Recap: Big Ideas 2026
ARK Invest predicts a technology revolution that will fundamentally reshape the global economy by decade's end, with GDP growth more than doubling historical norms. The firm's 104-page research report claims that AI, multiomics, autonomous vehicles, reusable rockets, and blockchain are converging to create an unprecedented investment cycle—one comparable only to the railroad boom of the 1870s. Yet skeptics question whether the massive infrastructure buildout in AI can generate returns, whether multiomics can overcome regulatory and cost barriers, and whether robo taxis will scale beyond a handful of cities. The stakes are enormous: Arc forecasts that by 2030, more than 60% of global equity market capitalization will accrue to disruptive innovation platforms, leaving traditional portfolios behind.
Kernaussagen
AI infrastructure spending is justified by massive demand: enterprise workers already achieve 50% productivity gains using AI, creating a path to $7 trillion in AI software revenue that supports over $1 trillion in data center investment.
Multiomics is becoming one of the planet's largest data generation engines, with sequencing costs falling from $3 billion per genome to $10 by 2030, enabling AI to reduce drug development time by 40% and costs by 75%, restoring biotech R&D returns to golden-age levels of 30%.
Robo taxis could reach 25 cents per mile at scale—less than one-tenth the cost of human-driven ride hail—creating a $10 trillion revenue opportunity and $34 trillion in enterprise value by 2030, with safety data already proving autonomous vehicles are over 80% safer than human drivers.
SpaceX's full reusability with Starship will cut launch costs to sub-$100 per kilogram, making orbital data centers 25% cheaper than terrestrial compute and expanding the satellite market by an order of magnitude beyond current Starlink constellations.
The convergence of these five platforms creates a diversified innovation portfolio where different commercialization timelines reduce risk: a setback in AI enterprise software is independent of multiomics pricing breakthroughs or autonomous vehicle scaling.
Kurzgesagt
ARK Invest believes we are entering a «great acceleration» driven by five converging innovation platforms, with AI serving as the central dynamo that will push global GDP growth above 7% annually through 2030—a rate unseen outside major technology transitions—and create trillions in new enterprise value for investors willing to embrace disruption over inertia.
The Great Acceleration: Five Innovation Platforms Converging
AI, multiomics, blockchain, robotics, and reusable rockets are entering simultaneous inflection points.
ARK Invest identifies five major innovation platforms converging to create what it calls «the great acceleration»: artificial intelligence as the central accelerant, multiomics (genomics and biological data), public blockchains including stablecoins and Bitcoin, robotics including humanoid and specialized robots, and reusable rockets. Each platform is hitting a critical stage of inflection simultaneously, leading to an unprecedented investment cycle. The scale of capital deployment rivals only the railroad boom of the 1870s as a percentage of GDP.
This convergence is already producing measurable macroeconomic impact. Data centers are driving marginal GDP activity, and the accelerating investment in AI agents is transforming the business landscape. Arc forecasts that this infrastructure buildout will generate positive returns and sustain compounded real global GDP growth exceeding 7% through the end of the decade. Historically, such inflections in growth rates occur only during major technology transitions—the kind that redefine economic equilibria.
The equity market implications are stark. Arc projects that more than 60% of total global equity market capitalization will accrue to disruptive innovation platforms by 2030. Investors holding traditional portfolios risk being left behind as innovation companies capture exponentially more value. The firm draws a historical parallel: in the late 1870s, 75% of US equity market cap was attributed to railroads during a similar infrastructure buildout. The message is clear—exposure to innovation is no longer optional.
AI Infrastructure: No Overbuilding, Just Massive Demand
Every GPU is in use today, unlike the dark fiber of the 1990s.
AI Reasoning Models Turbocharge GPU Demand
Long-horizon tasks now run reliably for 55+ minutes, up from 5 minutes.
AI Reasoning Models Turbocharge GPU Demand
A fundamental inflection occurred in November-December 2024 when AI models gained the ability to complete long-horizon tasks reliably. The average task duration an agent can handle increased from 5 minutes to 30 minutes over 2025, with the latest data points showing 55+ minutes. This reasoning breakthrough means AI agents no longer require constant human supervision—they can work autonomously for extended periods. The result: businesses are dramatically increasing their willingness to pay for AI subscriptions, which in turn is turbocharged demand for GPUs and data center infrastructure at a super-exponential rate.
AI Adoption and Cost Curves
AI reached 20% adoption in three years versus seven for the internet.
Multiomics: Biology as a Massive Data Engine
Sequencing costs drop from $3 billion to $10 per genome by 2030.
The convergence of AI and biology is creating what Arc calls a virtuous flywheel: better data feeds better models, which produce better diagnostics and therapeutics, which generate richer data. The team organizes this cycle around four pillars—multiomics tools, molecular diagnostics, AI-developed drugs, and curative therapies—each reinforcing the others. The Human Genome Project took 13 years and cost nearly $3 billion to sequence the first genome. Today, a whole human genome can be sequenced for $100. By 2030, Arc forecasts that cost will fall to $10.
This cost curve is fundamentally changing the paradigm for who gets tested, how often, and the volume of data generated. Arc projects the volume of genomic tests will double by 2030, and the total tokens generated will already rival the tokens used to train frontier large language models—then scale another 10x by decade's end. The data explosion is staggering: the human body contains 35 to 40 trillion cells, and single-cell sequencing is now possible. This is creating one of the largest data generation engines on the planet, powering a transformation across the entire healthcare spectrum.
AI Transforms Drug Development Economics
Gene Therapies: Reimbursement Reality and Scaling to Common Disease
90% of US patients have reimbursement access despite $2M+ price tags.
The sticker shock of gene therapies can be misleading. CRISPR Therapeutics' Casgevy, a gene editing treatment for sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia, is priced at just over $2 million—yet 90% of US patients have reimbursement access. The reason: insurers compare the one-time cure price against the lifetime cost of chronic treatments and hospitalizations, which can reach $10 to $20 million. The cure saves the healthcare system money while delivering better patient outcomes, justifying the upfront price. Arc's modeling suggests cures can be up to 20 times more valuable than traditional chronic therapies because they frontload cash, capture more patent-protected revenue, and avoid competitive overlap.
A case study illustrates the economics. Hereditary angioedema (HAE) causes painful, sometimes life-threatening swelling episodes, requiring patients to remain on chronic treatment costing $10–$20 million over their lifetime. Intellia Therapeutics is developing a gene editing treatment with promising clinical data that Arc estimates could be priced at $3 million (though the value-based price could be 3–4x higher). Applying this to all 7,000 US HAE patients represents a $52 billion cost savings to the healthcare system—even with the high upfront price. Patients eliminate the burden of lifelong symptom management.
The scaling story is equally compelling. Gene editing is transitioning from rare diseases to common conditions, including cardiovascular disease—the world's leading killer. Moving to in vivo editing (edits within the body) enables this shift. For cardiovascular applications, Arc models a value-based price of $165,000—dramatically lower than rare disease therapies—yet the total addressable market is $2.8 trillion for just the highest-risk US patients. Capturing one-twelfth of that TAM would match the cumulative sales of Lipitor, the best-selling drug of all time, over 20 years.
Robo Taxis: Cost Advantage Drives Mass Adoption
Tesla's Model Y is already 30% cheaper per mile than Waymo's Gen 5.
Autonomous vehicles represent the first large-scale implementation of embodied AI that consumers will experience, and it's already happening today. Cars with no one behind the wheel or in the passenger seat are picking up passengers in multiple cities. The underlying cost of the vehicle is critical, especially in the early days of commercialization when fleets are small and partners need convincing. Tesla's Model Y already holds a cost advantage: on an incremental cost-per-mile basis, it's over 30% cheaper than Waymo's fifth-generation vehicle. Arc expects that advantage to widen to 50% with the Cybercab versus Waymo's sixth-generation car.
Cost per mile is the metric that will drive consumer demand and market expansion. Arc believes the lowest possible price a robo taxi platform could charge at scale is around 25 cents per mile. To put that in perspective: it's less than one-tenth the cost of human-driven ride hail in Western markets, less than half the cost of driving your personal car, and cheaper than ride hail in China (which is already very inexpensive at around 50 cents per mile). This dramatic cost reduction will make low-cost point-to-point travel available to vastly more people than those who currently use ride hail services, while also making roads significantly safer.
The market potential is staggering. Arc projects robo taxis could generate $34 trillion in enterprise value opportunity by the end of the decade, accruing primarily to autonomous technology providers and platform operators—the companies developing the self-driving technology in-house and offering ride-hailing services. Total revenue TAM could reach $10 trillion or above, with revenue and earnings around $2 trillion by 2030. The platform operators capture the lion's share of economics because they enable the low prices per mile that expand the market. Electric vehicles are crucial to attractive cost-per-mile economics, which is why Arc expects the future of robo taxis to be electric.
Regulatory and Safety: The Bottleneck That Shouldn't Be
Robo taxis are already 80%+ safer than human drivers with real-world data.
“We already have the safety proof points to prove that autonomous technology is really better than the current situation that we have with human drivers.”
Reusable Rockets: Wright's Law in Action
Launch costs down 95% since 2008; sub-$100/kg unlocks orbital data centers.
SpaceX's 10-Year Lead SpaceX landed its first orbital-class booster in 2015 and has executed almost perfectly on partial reusability since. Its closest competitor only landed a booster in late 2024.
Falcon 9: 95% Cost Reduction According to Arc's research, SpaceX has cut launch costs by roughly 95% since 2008 via partial reusability, demonstrating Wright's Law: for every cumulative doubling of upmass to orbit, launch costs decline by 17%.
Starship: Full Reusability Target Falcon 9 recovers only the first stage; Starship aims to recover both stages. Full reusability could push launch costs below $100 per kilogram, down from today's roughly $1,000 per kilogram.
Orbital Data Centers Become Economic At sub-$100/kg, orbital data centers could be 25% cheaper than terrestrial compute, creating massive new demand for launch services—potentially 10x the satellite requirement of Starlink.
Satellite Connectivity Scales Starlink surpassed 10 million active subscribers. Wright's Law applies: for every cumulative doubling of gigabits per second to orbit, satellite costs decline by 44%, driving a $160 billion annual revenue opportunity.
Moon Infrastructure: Next Frontier Mass drivers on the moon could service Earth satellite constellations at around $10 per kilogram, another order-of-magnitude reduction—but requires substantial lunar infrastructure investment first.
Enterprise Software in an Agentic AI World
New AI-native competitors emerge; incumbents face pricing and growth pressure.
Enterprise Software in an Agentic AI World
AI is transformative to software, but not necessarily destructive to all incumbents. The real shift is that AI makes it easier than ever to create new software, lowering barriers to entry. Rather than every business building its own CRM or back-office tools, a new crop of AI-native competitors will emerge—more agile, more tailored to specific industries, and more cost-effective than legacy players. This changes forward expectations for revenue growth and pricing power for incumbents, which is why the market is pulling away from traditional SaaS. Cursor, a three-year-old AI coding company, crossed a $2 billion run rate—20 times the revenue milestone of cloud-era companies like Twilio in half the time with half the people. That productivity leap signals an entrepreneurial explosion ahead, even as it pressures established software giants.
The Convergence Advantage: Diversification Across Innovation
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