Speaking exclusively to CNBC-TV18 following SpaceX’s market debut, Chambers said the emergence of trillion-dollar companies is becoming increasingly common and represents only the beginning of a much larger transformation.
“If you watch how quickly companies become trillion-dollar companies today, it’s like the unicorns of old, and out of that group, you’re going to see $10 trillion companies,” Chambers said.
He said advances in AI and strategic technologies are driving investment into critical infrastructure and creating businesses of a scale that would have seemed unimaginable during previous technology cycles.
Chambers compared the current environment with the dot-com era, when Cisco briefly became the world’s most valuable company with a market capitalization of around $500 billion.
“The AI generation that’s going on will get valuations that make the very large valuations we saw when Cisco was the most valuable company in the world, at only $500 billion at one point in time, seem small,” he said.
While technology will initially drive growth, Chambers argued that future market leaders will need to prove their ability to execute, scale operations and deploy capital effectively.
“In my opinion, the challenge will be that these companies with trillion-dollar valuations have to move from leading on technology to leading on execution, implementation and the efficient use of capital,” he said.
Chambers said the transition from private to public markets will play an important role in that process, providing companies with greater access to capital while placing increased emphasis on operational performance.
He also highlighted the speed at which AI is transforming businesses, saying the technology is compressing years of innovation into much shorter timeframes.
“What you did with the internet in five years, AI companies now do in one,” Chambers said.
According to Chambers, the combination of rapid innovation, measurable business outcomes and expanding investment in strategic technologies will continue to push company valuations higher, creating a new generation of corporate giants far larger than those seen in previous technology cycles.



