Companies that have overstated their artificial intelligence capabilities to investors are facing rising securities litigation and an approaching enforcement push from regulators.
What AI-Washing Means for Capital Markets
The Fortune piece frames AI as a capital markets story as much as a technology one. The report arrives alongside a Bloomberg opinion piece examining how Sullivan & Cromwell filed a court document containing AI-generated errors, denting the productivity narrative around AI legal tools.
When AI narratives drive equity valuations, inflated claims become potential securities violations. Baker McKenzie has advised clients that regulators are now treating AI capability disclosures with the same scrutiny applied to financial projections. The SEC has already brought enforcement actions against companies for misleading AI-related statements in prior years.
The Sullivan & Cromwell incident adds a different dimension.
The firm apologized to the chief judge of Manhattan's US Bankruptcy Court after a court filing contained inaccurate AI-generated content. The episode became a high-profile example of AI productivity claims failing in a high-stakes professional setting.
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Background
The SEC first began warning about AI-washing in 2023. By 2024, two investment advisers settled charges for falsely claiming AI-driven portfolio management.
The enforcement pattern accelerated as AI narrative became a dominant driver of public company valuations. Baker McKenzie's 2026 analysis suggests the litigation wave is now entering a new phase, with private plaintiff class actions joining regulatory enforcement. This mirrors the trajectory of ESG-washing litigation, which followed a similar path from regulatory caution to active securities claims.
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Implications for Crypto AI Narratives
The crypto sector has its own exposure to AI-washing risk. Dozens of tokens launched in 2024 and 2025 under AI-agent or AI-infrastructure narratives.
Some projects made capability claims that have not been independently verified. As regulatory frameworks tighten around AI disclosures in traditional capital markets, similar scrutiny may extend to token issuers and crypto firms citing AI as a core value driver. No enforcement actions against crypto-specific AI projects have been announced to date.
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