Artificial intelligence enterprise spending is entering an aggressive, leverage-fueled phase. A new comprehensive banking report from Morgan Stanley indicates that global AI-focused companies are on track to borrow an unprecedented $570 billion.
Driven by an insatiable need to fund data center expansions, purchase cutting-edge graphics processing units (GPUs), and secure robust energy infrastructure, big tech is leaning on the credit markets like never before.
High-Bandwidth Spending Strains Corporate Credit
As of late May, AI-related debt issuance had already climbed to a staggering $236 billion—a metric four times higher than the identical period last year.
| Metric | Last Year (YoY) | Current Year Baseline |
| YTD Debt Issuance | ~$59 Billion | $236 Billion |
| Projected Annual Total | $145 Billion | $570 Billion |
| Est. Hyperscaler Capex | $412 Billion | $755 Billion |
The core risk is whether these capital expenditures will yield immediate, cash-flow-positive productivity gains, or if companies are significantly overbuilding capacity. While semiconductor giants and memory chip designers continue to report robust near-term backlogs, the sheer velocity of capital deployment has ignited a fierce Wall Street debate over whether the current tech cycle is sustainable or shifting into an overleveraged bubble.
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