Artificial intelligence is reshaping nearly every corner of the technology industry, but it is also transforming corporate finance. Companies are no longer just competing for customers or market share. They are competing for computing power, data centers, semiconductors, and energy infrastructure.
Building that foundation requires enormous amounts of capital, and the U.S.’s largest technology companies are increasingly turning to the bond market to get it. The numbers coming out of 2026 suggest this investment cycle is unlike anything investors have seen before.
Big Tech’s Borrowing Spree Is Breaking Records
According to Dealogic data, five of the largest technology companies in the world — Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG | GOOG Price Prediction), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), and Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) — have already issued a combined $159 billion in corporate bonds through the first five months of 2026.
That figure exceeds the entire 2025 total by $51 billion, or 47%, despite the year not yet reaching its halfway point. The Wall Street Journal says that’s even larger as a percentage of the economy than the 1850’s railroad expansion.
The pace becomes even more striking when viewed over a longer timeframe.
| Period | Total Debt Issued |
| 2020-2024 Combined | ~$150 Billion |
| 2025 | ~$108 Billion |
| 2026 (So Far) | $159 Billion |
In other words, these five companies have already borrowed more in five months than they did during the entire five-year period from 2020 through 2024.
That’s not normal corporate financing activity. It’s evidence of a massive investment cycle underway.
AI Is Driving the Demand for Capital
Here is where much of this money is going. Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle are all racing to build AI infrastructure. That includes data centers, networking equipment, advanced processors, and power generation capacity.
Recent earnings reports from these companies have already pointed to soaring capital expenditures. Amazon alone expects capital spending to approach $200 billion this year, while Microsoft, Alphabet, and Meta are each committing hundreds of billions more to AI-related projects.
Oracle stands out as perhaps the clearest example of the trend. The company has issued $43 billion in debt since last September, and it just announced plans to raise $40 billion more through debt and equity financing — including a $20 billion share sale announced earlier.
That borrowing reflects Oracle’s aggressive push into cloud computing and AI infrastructure, areas where it is attempting to gain ground against larger rivals such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft’s Azure platform.
Surprisingly, investors appear comfortable funding this expansion despite higher interest rates than those that prevailed during much of the last decade.
The Bond Market Is Betting on AI’s Future
Morgan Stanley expects global AI-related debt issuance to exceed $570 billion in 2026, more than double previous records.
That forecast highlights an important point for investors: this borrowing surge is not isolated to a handful of companies. It reflects a broader belief that AI will generate returns large enough to justify today’s spending.
Granted, higher debt levels always introduce risk. If AI adoption slows or expected returns fail to materialize, companies could face pressure from rising interest expenses and slower cash-flow growth.
That said, these aren’t heavily indebted businesses scrambling for financing. Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta collectively generate hundreds of billions of dollars in annual operating cash flow. They are borrowing from a position of financial strength, not weakness, though Oracle did report negative free cash flow for the year.
The bond market appears to recognize that distinction.
Key Takeaway
In short, Big Tech’s record-breaking debt issuance is perhaps less a warning sign than a measure of the AI arms race currently underway. Debt tends to be less risky than equity. The credit markets are viewing the hyperscalers as a safe bet as the situation would have to significantly deteriorate before they lose money
For investors, the key question isn’t whether these companies are borrowing more. The real question is whether the AI infrastructure being built today generates enough revenue tomorrow to justify the spending.
So far, both management teams and bond investors appear confident the answer is yes. Investors, though, may want to be more circumspect.