Tech IPO hype gets drowned out on Wall Street by prospect of $1 trillion in debt sales
Key Points
- Tech's four hyperscalers (Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Meta) are projected to spend close to $500 billion this year on AI-related capital expenditures and finance leases
- Oracle raised $25 billion and Alphabet sold over $30 billion in debt this year, with Alphabet's offerings priced at yields only narrowly higher than Treasury rates despite the risk
- Tech concentration in investment grade debt indexes is approaching 9% and could reach mid-to-high teens, raising concerns about market contagion if AI startups like OpenAI hit growth walls
AI Summary
Market Summary: Tech Sector Shifts Focus from IPOs to Massive Debt Issuance
Key Developments
While speculation around a potential SpaceX IPO generates excitement, the real action in tech capital markets is occurring in debt markets. Tech and AI-related global debt issuance more than doubled to $710 billion in 2025 and could reach $990 billion by 2026, according to UBS estimates. Goldman Sachs projects a $1.5 trillion funding gap for AI buildouts.
Major Companies and Transactions
The four tech hyperscalers (Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Alphabet) are projected to spend approximately $300 billion collectively on capital expenditures and finance leases this year for AI infrastructure.
Largest debt sales include:
- Oracle: Raised $25 billion of a planned $45-50 billion
- Alphabet: Sold over $30 billion in bonds (following $25 billion in November), with yields at 3.7% for 2029 notes and 4.1% for 2031 notes
- Meta: Filed mixed shelf registration for potential debt/equity raises
- Tesla: Considering external financing options
Market Implications
Corporate bond indexes now show tech representing approximately 9% of investment grade debt, potentially reaching mid-to-high teens. This concentration creates both opportunities and risks, particularly regarding market contagion if AI startups like OpenAI and Anthropic curtail spending.
The massive debt supply is driving concerns about:
- Rising yields for other corporate borrowers
- Higher debt servicing costs across sectors (automakers, banks)
- AI bubble risks
IPO Market Status
Despite SpaceX speculation, no notable U.S. tech IPO filings have occurred in 2026. Goldman Sachs expects 120 IPOs raising $160 billion this year, up from 61 deals in 2025, though market volatility and geopolitical concerns keep companies sidelined.
Model Analysis Breakdown
| Model | Sentiment | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| GPT-5-mini | Bearish | 82% |
| Claude 4.5 Haiku | Bearish | 78% |
| Consensus | Bearish | 80% |