The Federal Reserve’s usual monetary policy levers are proving less capable of reining in the surge of AI-driven expenditures by major technology companies, a pattern that supports recent remarks by Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Even as interest rates have climbed in an effort to temper inflation, firms such as
The magnitude of these investments is remarkable. In the latest quarter, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, and Microsoft together allocated nearly $97 billion to capital projects, not counting finance leases, which would push the total past $100 billion. Looking ahead to 2025, Microsoft alone expects to spend $80 billion on AI-powered data centers, while Meta has increased its capital expenditure forecast to between $70 billion and $72 billion, with further growth anticipated in 2026. Meanwhile,
Yet, investor confidence is showing signs of strain. Meta’s stock tumbled 11.8% in late October after the company revealed it would ramp up AI spending more than expected, while Microsoft’s shares slipped 3.5% after reporting a record $34.9 billion in capital outlays, according to Yahoo Finance. These declines reflect fears that such heavy investments may not deliver immediate revenue, reminiscent of Meta’s costly foray into the metaverse. OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman has cautioned that the current excitement around AI is “overexcited,” warning that the sector could face a correction similar to the dot-com bust of the 1990s.
Amazon, on the other hand, stands apart;
The race to dominate AI has also revealed deeper changes in financial markets. Much of the funding for this infrastructure expansion now comes from private credit and long-term bonds, with data center investments increasingly backed by private capital. Torsten Slok of Apollo Global Management pointed out that outside of AI, corporate capital spending has largely stalled, emphasizing the sector’s disproportionate impact on GDP growth, as detailed in
As the conversation about AI’s long-term prospects heats up, the Federal Reserve’s ability to shape corporate strategies seems increasingly limited. Powell’s observation that AI investments are “not sensitive to interest rates” is being confirmed as companies focus on long-term strategic advantage rather than short-term costs. While some warn that the sector is inflating a bubble, others believe it is laying the groundwork for lasting innovation. The next few months will reveal whether these massive investments lead to transformative progress or become another lesson in the dangers of overinvestment.