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The AI Infrastructure Boom Is Reshaping the Treasury Market

A massive wave of corporate debt issuance by big tech firms is putting unexpected pressure on long-term Treasury yields. As companies like Meta and Oracle borrow billions to fund data centers and power systems, their appetite for capital is beginning to mirror the scale of federal infrastructure spending.

The AI Infrastructure Boom Is Reshaping the Treasury Market

Global technology companies have raised $250 billion in debt markets this year, according to Morgan Stanley. This surge in borrowing is increasingly viewed as a structural force behind the volatility in Treasury yields, which spiked in May to their highest levels since 2007. Thomas Urano of Sage Advisory compares the current pace of capital expenditure—approaching $1 trillion annually—to a federal stimulus program, noting its profound impact on bond market liquidity.

Investment-grade tech giants are shifting their financing strategies to match the long lifecycle of data center infrastructure, which requires power grids and physical facilities lasting decades. Srini Ramaswamy, a senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, highlights that AI-related debt now accounts for roughly 15% of the duration supplied by total Treasury issuance. Oracle has emerged as a primary driver of this trend, significantly increasing its long-term debt load to satisfy massive infrastructure demands.

Market complexities run deeper than official issuance figures suggest. Many firms use interest-rate swaps to convert shorter-dated or floating-rate debt into long-term fixed-rate exposure to bypass institutional investment limits. Ramaswamy estimates this hidden activity added approximately $50 billion in 10-year-equivalent supply during the fourth quarter alone. While Federal Reserve policy and fiscal deficits remain the primary influences on yields, the persistent demand for AI-driven capital has become a critical, under-the-radar factor for bond investors. Barclays strategist Jonathan Hill observes that the current rise in real yields, coupled with stable inflation expectations, confirms that the AI buildout is creating a distinct, sustained pressure on global capital markets.

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