Mohamed El-Erian, the Allianz Chief Economic Adviser and Wharton professor, shared in a CNBC interview on Monday that he believes the bond market has hit a hard capacity ceiling because there are too many borrowers and not enough marginal buyers.
“There is no way this bond market can fund all that the tech platforms need, all that the governments need and all that the other corporate needs. Without higher yields, it just doesn’t add up,” El-Erian said.
Too Many Borrowers Are Fighting Over Too Little Money
El-Erian’s arithmetic is structural. “If you look, the sources of funding is a little bit less. The uses of funds is a lot more. And the only way you get this to equal without a recession or anything awful is higher yields,” he said. He also flagged that traditional Middle Eastern funding sources will be less forthcoming as those economies redirect capital toward local reconstruction and resilience-building.
The 10-year Treasury yield sat at 4.54% on July 9, 2026, in the 95th percentile of its 12-month range, while the 20-year yield had climbed to 5.08% and the 30-year to 5.06% by July 10. The 10Y-2Y spread has compressed from 0.74% in February 2026 to 0.35%, a flattening consistent with a market absorbing supply at the long end while short rates hold firm.
Amazon’s Weak Bond Deal May Be the Warning Sign
El-Erian sees Amazon’s weak bond issuance as a potential sign of further problems for the bond market down the road. “You saw that in Amazon. Two things happen in Amazon. One is people had to sell something else to buy Amazon. And despite that, Amazon had a lackluster performance last week in terms of its new bond issuance,” he said.
Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) reported Q1 FY2026 capital expenditures of $44.20 billion, and CEO Andy Jassy has guided to roughly $200 billion in capex across Amazon in 2026 for AI infrastructure, custom silicon, robotics, and the Leo satellite constellation. Long-term debt has climbed to $119.1 billion from $65.6 billion.
AI Investors Are Being Forced to Think Like Venture Capitalists
El-Erian also believes that AI economics have gotten worse than investors originally expected they’d be. “It’s more expensive than we thought. And two, not everybody is going to win. So the venture capitalist mindset is starting to set in,” he said.
NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) sits at the center of that spend. The company posted Q1 FY2027 revenue of $81.62 billion, up 85.2% year over year, with Data Center revenue of $75.25 billion, and disclosed $119 billion of total supply-related commitments.
Jensen Huang has called AI factory construction “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history.” That expansion has to be paid for, and El-Erian’s point is that the bond buyers are getting pickier.
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) illustrates the dispersion El-Erian is warning about. Q3 FY2026 capex hit $30.88 billion, up 84.39% year over year, while commercial remaining performance obligations reached $627 billion, up 99% year over year. Yet Microsoft shares are down 20.02% year to date through July 10, versus Amazon’s 6.29% gain and NVIDIA’s 13.25% advance.
Key Takeaways
El-Erian believes the bond market cannot fund massive borrowing by governments, technology companies, and other corporations at today’s interest rates. With demand for capital rising faster than the pool of available funding, yields may need to remain elevated to attract more buyers.
Amazon’s weak bond issuance could be an early sign that investors are becoming more selective, even with high-quality borrowers. For investors, that means AI spending alone may no longer lift every company. Higher financing costs and uncertain returns make it increasingly important to identify which businesses can turn massive AI investments into sustainable profits.
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