Massive, strategically crucial AI capital expenditures by the world's wealthiest companies could create a new risk. These firms may be less sensitive to borrowing costs, potentially issuing debt even into a weakening market, which could drive credit spreads wider for all issuers.

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Massive AI and cloud infrastructure spending by tech giants is flooding the market with new debt. For the first time since the 2008 crisis, this oversupply, not macroeconomic fears, is becoming a primary driver of market volatility and repricing risk for existing corporate bonds.

A surge in corporate spending on AI, capex, and M&A can boost stock prices. However, this same activity often requires issuing large amounts of new debt, increasing supply and causing credit spreads to widen, leading to underperformance versus equities.

Morgan Stanley predicts the AI investment cycle, plus M&A and capex, will drive a 60% surge in U.S. investment-grade bond issuance in 2026. This massive supply increase is expected to push U.S. credit spreads wider, even if the underlying economy remains healthy and demand is strong.

Trillion-dollar tech companies are issuing massive bonds to fund AI CapEx, attracting immense demand from yield-hungry institutions. This 'hoovers' up available capital, making it harder and more expensive for smaller, middle-market businesses to secure financing and deepening the K-shaped economic divide.

Tech giants are issuing massive amounts of highly-rated debt at a discount to fund AI expansion. This makes existing, lower-rated corporate bonds from other sectors look less attractive by comparison, forcing a repricing of risk and higher borrowing costs across the credit spectrum.

The AI buildout is forcing mega-cap tech companies to abandon their high-margin, asset-light models for a CapEx-heavy approach. This transition is increasingly funded by debt, not cash flow, which fundamentally alters their risk profile and valuation logic, as seen in Meta's stock drop after raising CapEx guidance.

The enormous capital needed for AI data centers is forcing a shift in tech financing. The appearance of credit default swaps on Oracle debt signals the re-emergence of large-scale debt and leverage, a departure from the equity and free-cash-flow models that have characterized the industry for two decades.

Unlike past tech booms funded by venture capital, the next wave of AI investment will come from hyperscalers like Google and Meta leveraging their pristine balance sheets to take on massive corporate debt. Their capacity to raise capital this way dwarfs the entire VC ecosystem, enabling unprecedented spending.

Tech giants are no longer funding AI capital expenditures solely with their massive free cash flow. They are increasingly turning to debt issuance, which fundamentally alters their risk profile. This introduces default risk and requires a repricing of their credit spreads and equity valuations.

Unlike the dot-com bubble's weak issuers, the current AI debt boom is driven by investment-grade giants. However, the risk is that these stable companies are using debt to finance speculative, 'equity-like' technology ventures, a concerning trend for credit investors.

Price-Insensitive AI Spending by Big Tech Poses a Novel Risk to Corporate Credit Markets | RiffOn