The current AI spending frenzy uniquely merges elements from all major historical bubbles—real estate (data centers), technology, loose credit, and a government backstop—making a soft landing improbable. This convergence of risk factors is unprecedented.
Large tech companies are buying up compute from smaller cloud providers not for immediate need, but as a defensive strategy. By hoarding scarce GPU capacity, they prevent competitors from accessing critical resources, effectively cornering the market and stifling innovation from rivals.
AI data center financing is built on a dangerous "temporal mismatch." The core collateral—GPUs—has a useful life of just 18-24 months due to intense use, while being financed by long-term debt. This creates a constant, high-stakes refinancing risk.
Current AI models suffer from negative unit economics, where costs rise with usage. To justify immense spending despite this, builders pivot from business ROI to "faith-based" arguments about AGI, framing it as an invaluable call option on the future.
China is gaining an efficiency edge in AI by using "distillation"—training smaller, cheaper models from larger ones. This "train the trainer" approach is much faster and challenges the capital-intensive US strategy, highlighting how inefficient and "bloated" current Western foundational models are.
A financial flywheel, reminiscent of the pre-2008 crisis, is fueling the AI data center boom. Demand for yield-generating securities from investors incentivizes the creation of more data center projects, decoupling the financing from the actual viability or profitability of the underlying AI technology.
The true commercial impact of AI will likely come from small, specialized "micro models" solving boring, high-volume business tasks. While highly valuable, these models are cheap to run and cannot economically justify the current massive capital expenditure on AGI-focused data centers.
Cash-rich hyperscalers like Meta utilize Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) to finance data centers. This strategy keeps billions in debt off their main balance sheets, appeasing shareholders and protecting credit ratings, but creates complex and opaque financial structures.
