
The AI Debt Bubble Is Here, and Wall Street Is Already Hedging Its Bets
Big tech is borrowing hundreds of billions to build AI infrastructure. Banks are quietly buying insurance against the whole thing going sideways.
Crédito da imagem: Image via source article. Used under fair use for news commentary. · source
Wall Street is placing side bets on whether the AI infrastructure boom will actually pay off, and if you've been around long enough, you know what that usually means.
The hyperscalers (that's Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, and the rest of the usual suspects) are issuing debt at a pace we haven't seen since, well, maybe ever for tech companies. Hundreds of billions of dollars flowing into data centers, custom chips, cooling systems, and all the physical infrastructure needed to keep the AI dream humming along. Bloomberg reports that this debt flood has created what traders are calling a "derivatives bonanza," which is a phrase that should make anyone who remembers 2008 a little queasy.
Here's the thing: I've seen this movie before. Not the AI part specifically, but the part where everyone's so convinced a technology will reshape everything that the financial engineering around it gets increasingly creative. And the part where banks start buying protection against their own clients.
The quiet CDS trade
Credit default swaps are back, baby! Well, they never really left, but they're having a moment. Banks that underwrite all this hyperscaler debt need to manage their exposure somehow, so they're buying CDS protection in growing volumes. On the other side of these trades? Hedge funds who see what looks like easy money, selling insurance on companies that seem too big and too important to fail.
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