Markets are jittery, but at least one voice is urging investors not to flinch.

According to a Motley Fool analysis syndicated this week across Yahoo Finance, MSN, and The Globe and Mail, the broader market is "panicking" — yet the piece argues that investors should keep buying shares of what it calls an artificial intelligence "powerhouse."

The headline framing is deliberately contrarian: rather than selling into a downturn, the author makes the case for holding course and adding to a position in a leading AI company. The story appeared under the AI stocks and AI chips categories, suggesting the company in question is tied to the hardware or core technology driving the current AI boom.

The Motley Fool, a personal-finance and investing media outlet, frequently publishes single-stock commentary aimed at long-term retail investors. The same article was picked up and redistributed by several major financial news aggregators, a common pattern for widely circulated investing takes.

It's worth being clear about what these sources do — and don't — establish. The available items are headlines and syndication notices; they do not name the specific company, cite a target price, or detail the financial reasoning behind the recommendation. They reflect one publication's opinion, not a market consensus or a guarantee of returns.

Why it matters: with AI valuations swinging sharply, the debate over whether recent volatility is a buying opportunity or a warning sign is one that directly affects millions of ordinary investors' portfolios.