- AI hyperscalers — Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle — have issued $159 billion in bonds globally in 2026, up from $108 billion all of last year and just $17 billion in 2024, as demand for data-center financing explodes.
- Alphabet announced an $85 billion equity raise; SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI are each poised for public listings that could make 2026 the biggest year on record for IPO capital raised.
- Spending on AI infrastructure by just four major tech companies is expected to exceed $670 billion this year — a larger share of the economy than the U.S. railroad expansion of the 1850s — and investor appetite has not yet blinked.
- Anthropic is on track to double revenue to $10.9 billion in Q2, turning its first quarterly profit ahead of expectations, providing a fundamental anchor for an investment thesis that previously relied largely on faith.
What Happened?
Wall Street’s financing of the AI build-out has reached a new level of intensity across every asset class. The five major AI hyperscalers have issued $159 billion in bonds globally this year — a pace roughly 10 times the 2024 total — with Alphabet alone borrowing in seven currencies, including a rare 100-year bond in British pounds and $1 billion in the California municipal-bond market. Alphabet also announced an $85 billion equity raise, the latest in a string of headline capital events. Meanwhile, IPO filings from Anthropic, OpenAI, and SpaceX are setting up what could be the largest year for public listings in history. The high-yield bond market, private credit, and bank lending are filling the gaps for smaller AI infrastructure players like CoreWeave, which has raised more than $20 billion through stock and debt in 2026 alone. Tech stocks rebounded Monday, with the Nasdaq gaining 0.9%.
Why It Matters?
The scale of AI capital formation is without modern precedent. Investment-grade corporate bond spreads are hovering near multidecade lows, suggesting credit markets are broadly comfortable absorbing the supply — but the volume is enormous. The optimism has been buttressed by actual results: Anthropic is poised to double revenue to $10.9 billion in Q2 and post its first profitable quarter, validating the thesis that AI infrastructure spending can generate returns. Tech stocks in the S&P 500 are up 31% this quarter. Still, risks exist: increased equity issuance can dilute existing shareholders — a possible contributor to last week’s tech selloff — and Oracle’s bond spreads already trade closer to speculative territory given its aggressive transformation bet.
What’s Next?
The IPO pipeline is the next major catalyst. OpenAI has filed for an IPO; Anthropic and SpaceX listings would represent some of the most consequential public market events in years. Amazon was set to issue Canadian-dollar bonds this week, extending its international borrowing footprint. Most analysts say the AI build-out is still in its early phases, with the central question being whether AI monetization can scale fast enough to justify the capital deployed — and Anthropic’s Q2 profit milestone is the first hard datapoint suggesting it can.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












