A primary market risk is a sudden stop in the AI investment cycle. While this would clearly pressure equities, it could counter-intuitively benefit investment-grade credit by reducing new bond issuance—the main factor forecast to widen spreads.

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Unlike prior tech revolutions funded mainly by equity, the AI infrastructure build-out is increasingly reliant on debt. This blurs the line between speculative growth capital (equity) and financing for predictable cash flows (debt), magnifying potential losses and increasing systemic failure risk if the AI boom falters.

While default risk exists, the more pressing problem for credit investors is a severe supply-demand imbalance. A shortage of new M&A and corporate issuance, combined with massive sideline capital (e.g., $8T in money markets), keeps spreads historically tight and makes finding attractive opportunities the main challenge.

The greatest systemic threat from the booming private credit market isn't excessive leverage but its heavy concentration in technology companies. A significant drop in tech enterprise value multiples could trigger a widespread event, as tech constitutes roughly half of private credit portfolios.

The massive ~$1.5 trillion in debt financing required for AI infrastructure will create a supply glut in the investment-grade (IG) bond market. This technical pressure, despite solid company fundamentals, makes IG bonds less attractive. High-yield (HY) bonds are favored as they don't face this supply headwind and default rates are expected to fall.

The expected wave of M&A and LBOs has not materialized, leaving the deal pipeline thin. This lack of new debt supply provides a strong supportive backdrop for credit spreads, allowing the market to absorb geopolitical volatility more easily than fundamentals would otherwise suggest.

Instead of an imminent collapse, the credit market is likely poised for a final surge in risk-taking. A combination of AI enthusiasm, Fed easing, and fiscal spending will probably drive markets higher and fuel more corporate debt issuance. This growth in leverage will sow the seeds for the eventual downturn.

Barclays forecasts a 40% jump in net investment-grade debt supply in 2026, driven by tech sector CapEx and renewed M&A activity. This massive influx of new bonds will test market demand and could lead to wider credit spreads, even if economic fundamentals remain stable.

The AI market won't just pop; it will unwind in a specific sequence. Traditional companies will first scale back AI investment, which reveals OpenAI's inability to fund massive chip purchases. This craters NVIDIA's stock, triggering a multi-trillion-dollar market destruction and leading to a broader economic recession.

History shows a significant delay between tech investment and productivity gains—10 years for PCs, 5-6 for the internet. The current AI CapEx boom faces a similar risk. An 'AI wobble' may occur when impatient investors begin questioning the long-delayed returns.

A surge in investment-grade bond issuance to fund AI capital expenditures will insulate the high-yield market. This technical factor is expected to drive high-yield bond outperformance versus higher-quality corporate bonds, which will face supply pressure.