Skip to main content
JP Morgan Asset Management - Home
Financial Professional Login
Log in
  • My Collections
    View saved content and presentation slides
  • Logout
  • Products
    Overview

    Products

    • Mutual Funds
    • ETFs
    • SmartRetirement Funds
    • 529 Portfolios
    • Alternatives
    • Separately Managed Accounts
    • Money Market Funds
    • Commingled Funds
    • Featured Funds

    Asset Class Capabilities

    • Fixed Income
    • Equity
    • Multi-Asset Solutions
    • Alternatives
    • Global Liquidity
  • Investment Strategies
    Overview

    Tax Capabilities

    • Tax Active Solutions
    • Tax-Smart Platform
    • Tax Insights
    • Tax Information

    Investment Approach

    • ETF Investing
    • Model Portfolios
    • Separately Managed Accounts
    • Sustainable Investing
    • Commingled Pension Trust Funds

    Education Savings

    • 529 Plan Solutions
    • College Planning Essentials

    Defined Contribution

    • Retirement Plan Solutions
    • Target Date Strategies
    • Retirement Income
    • Startup and Micro 401(k) Plan Solutions
    • Small to Mid-market 401(k) Plan Solutions

    Annuities

    • Annuity Essentials
  • Insights
    Overview

    Market Insights

    • Market Insights Overview
    • Guide to the Markets
    • Quarterly Economic & Market Update
    • Guide to Alternatives
    • Market Updates
    • On the Minds of Investors
    • Principles for Successful Long-Term Investing
    • Weekly Market Recap

    Portfolio Insights

    • Portfolio Insights Overview
    • Asset Class Views
    • Taxes
    • Equity
    • Fixed Income
    • Alternatives
    • Long-Term Capital Market Assumptions
    • Multi-Asset Solutions Strategy Report
    • Strategic Investment Advisory Group

    Retirement Insights

    • Retirement Insights Overview
    • Guide to Retirement
    • Principles for a Successful Retirement
    • Retirement Hot Topics
    • Social Security and Medicare Hub

    ETF Insights

    • ETF Insights Overview
    • Guide to ETFs
    • Monthly Active ETF Monitor
  • Tools
    Overview

    Portfolio Construction

    • Portfolio Construction Tools Overview
    • Portfolio Analysis
    • Model Portfolios
    • Investment Comparison
    • Heatmap Analysis
    • Bond Ladder Illustrator

    Defined Contribution

    • Retirement Plan Tools & Resources Overview
    • Target Date Compass®
    • Heatmap Analysis
    • Core Menu Evaluator℠
    • Price Smart℠
  • Resources
    Overview
    • Account Service Forms
    • Tax Information
    • News & Fund Announcements
    • Insights App
    • Webcasts
    • Continuing Education Opportunities
    • Library
    • Market Response Center
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Podcasts
  • About Us
    Overview
    • Diversity, Opportunity & Inclusion
    • Spectrum: Our Investment Platform
    • Media Resources
    • Our Leadership Team
    • Our Commitment to Research
  • Contact Us
  • Role
  • Country
DST Vision
Shareholder Login
  • My Collections
    View saved content and presentation slides
  • Logout
Financial Professional Login
Search
Menu
Search
You are about to leave the site Close
J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s website and/or mobile terms, privacy and security policies don't apply to the site or app you're about to visit. Please review its terms, privacy and security policies to see how they apply to you. J.P. Morgan Asset Management isn’t responsible for (and doesn't provide) any products, services or content at this third-party site or app, except for products and services that explicitly carry the J.P. Morgan Asset Management name.
CONTINUE Go Back

Using the bond market to fund long-term AI capex is a rational decision, not a signal of financial strain.

Recent headlines around large AI-related bond deals from hyperscalers’ have raised understandable questions from investors. Is Big Tech suddenly loading up on debt to fund massive AI capex? And does that create new risks for broader credit markets and investors?

At the issuer level, we think the answer is no. The public and private companies at the center of the AI build-out have very strong balance sheets. As shown, debt to enterprise value1 across this cohort sits comfortably below 5% with only one exception. In some cases, these firms hold more cash than debt, leaving them in a net cash position even after recent bond issuance, a sign of balance sheet strength.

So, if the initial investment phase was fueled by equity and cash, why issue debt at all? For management teams, this is not a sign of stress but an exercise in capital efficiency. Issuing debt allows companies to:

  • Lock in long-dated funding that matches the multi-year nature of AI and data-center investment.
  • Preserve cash on the balance sheet for flexibility, buybacks and other strategic opportunities.
  • In most cases, the cost of investment-grade debt remains attractive relative to the cost of equity.

In summary, using the bond market to fund long-term AI capex is a rational decision, not a signal of financial strain.

The more important question, in our view, is what this wave of issuance means for broader credit markets. The size of these bond deals is massive. For context, Meta recently issued around $30 billion across a 6-part bond sale tied to data-center spending, while total new investment-grade supply month-to-date is ~$136bn2. When one issuer accounts for almost 25% of supply, that concentration has implications for valuations and liquidity. Amazon and others have also announced or completed new bond deals, further adding to technology sector supply.

In the near term, such lumpy, sector-concentrated supply can pressure spreads wider as markets digest the new paper, particularly at longer maturities. Indeed, tech sectors spreads have widened from 69bps in mid-August to 88bps, currently. Moreover, the investment-grade universe has become more tech-heavy, increasing concentration risk for passive investors and sharpening the need for active security selection. Tech has risen from <2% of the IG credit market in 2005 to roughly 10% today.

For investors, the key takeaway is that the risk is not that AI leaders are suddenly over-levered. On most balance-sheet metrics, these companies remain very strong, and their use of debt can be seen as a disciplined financing choice. The more relevant question is how this new tech supply influence sector weights, benchmark composition and spread levels. We would argue periods where spreads temporarily widen presents opportunities to add high-quality issuers.

In short, the story is less about deteriorating credit quality in Big Tech and more about how investors position around a larger, more influential technology footprint in the investment-grade credit market.

1 Net debt to enterprise value is a leverage ratio that measures total debt less cash relative to the sum of market cap, total debt, preferred equity, minority interest less cash and cash equivalents.
2 Gross new supply and does not take into account refinancing. 
 
5e5579ec-c579-11f0-be33-15e0bf589318
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Bonds
  • Credit
  • Fixed Income
  • Technology