Debt Issuance

  • Tech IPO Frenzy Overshadowed by Looming $1 Trillion Debt Issuance

    The tech world is prioritizing debt issuance over IPOs, with major players like Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft funneling nearly $700 billion into AI infrastructure. This trend, driven by immense demand for computing power, has raised concerns about a potential AI bubble and its wider economic impact. Analysts predict a significant increase in global tech and AI-related debt, even as the IPO market remains subdued due to market volatility and geopolitical uncertainties. This debt surge presents both opportunities and risks for investors and could drive up borrowing costs for other industries.

    2026年2月17日
  • Alphabet’s Century Bond: A New Debt Frontier in the AI Arms Race

    Alphabet’s issuance of a 100-year sterling bond, part of a massive debt drive for AI infrastructure, signals strong credit market exuberance. This rare corporate move, attracting significant institutional demand, highlights the immense capital needs of AI expansion. While diversifying funding and meeting long-term investor liabilities, the extended maturity and tight credit spreads raise questions about market froth. This strategy, mirrored by other tech giants, tests uncharted corporate debt territory.

    2026年2月17日
  • Alphabet Aims to Raise Over $30 Billion in Global Debt Offering: Sources

    Alphabet is expanding its debt issuance, reportedly finalizing a global bond sale exceeding $30 billion. This surge, up from $20 billion, highlights the immense capital demands of the AI race and broader tech sector. The company’s increased borrowing aligns with aggressive AI investment strategies seen across hyperscalers, prioritizing infrastructure like chips and data centers. This move reflects a strategic approach to funding long-term growth while aiming for fiscal responsibility.

    2026年2月17日
  • Investors Grow Nervous Over Oracle’s AI-Driven Debt Burden Ahead of Earnings

    Oracle’s AI‑driven expansion has lifted its stock over 30% YTD, though October saw a 23% drop. New co‑CEOs Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia face pressure as the company prepares Q2 earnings and funds a $300 billion, five‑year OpenAI compute deal. Financing will require $20‑30 billion of debt annually, adding to $111.6 billion of existing obligations after an $18 billion bond sale. Credit investors warn of heightened risk, with CDS spreads at multi‑year highs. Analysts await proof of revenue growth—15% to $16.2 billion—and a stronger cash‑flow backbone to support the debt load.

    2026年1月18日