As Oracle (ORCL.US) prepares to report earnings after Wednesday's market close, Bank of America highlights growing scrutiny over its capital expenditure plans. BofA strategist Michael Hartnett notes that "bond vigilantes" have emerged as "new sheriffs" policing AI-related spending, signaling demands for growth moderation.
Investors should prioritize companies actively implementing AI rather than those merely purchasing technology, Hartnett advises, as widening credit spreads constrain corporate spending. He projects that mega-cap tech firms—including Oracle, Amazon (AMZN.US), Microsoft (MSFT.US), Alphabet (GOOGL.US), and Meta (META.US)—will increase capital expenditures from 50% of cash outflows ($240B in 2024) to 80% ($540B) by 2026.
Concerns mount as Oracle reportedly considers issuing up to $100B in debt to fund AI ambitions, driving the cost to insure its bonds against default to 2008 financial crisis levels. Morgan Stanley explores "significant risk transfer" (SRT) instruments—a form of loan-loss insurance—to mitigate exposure to tech borrowers.
Tech giants' AI financing spree has pushed global bond issuance beyond $6.46T for 2025. While Wall Street facilitates massive AI loans, lenders deploy credit derivatives and structured products to offload risks. Microsoft's 5-year CDS costs recently jumped to $34K annually per $10M debt from $20K in mid-October.
As a key AI infrastructure financier, Morgan Stanley has held preliminary talks about an SRT deal linked to AI-related corporate loans. Such transactions typically involve credit-linked notes that compensate banks for 5%-15% of defaults in designated portfolios.
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