Why a collapse in $1 trillion AI spending boom could hit Bitcoin traders first

by admin

Over the past year, the artificial intelligence trade has become one of the main pillars supporting global risk appetite.

However, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) is now warning that the same spending boom could become a source of financial stress if expected returns fail to arrive.

The Basel-based organization, which advises central banks, said in its annual economic report that the five largest hyperscalers are on track to spend more than $1 trillion on AI-related capital expenditure across 2025 and 2026.

The BIS said the scale of investment has raised questions about whether companies are committing too much capital before the business case has been fully proved.

According to the BIS:

“Disappointment in returns could trigger a sudden pullback in financing and turn the capex boom into a protracted investment bust, with potential knock-on effects on financial conditions.”

For Bitcoin traders, the warning reaches beyond Silicon Valley’s race for chips and data centers.

A sharp reversal in AI spending could tighten liquidity across equities and credit, forcing crypto into a difficult test: whether Bitcoin trades first as another risk asset in a selloff, or whether its longer-term monetary argument begins to regain force after the shock.

AI spending boom draws central-bank scrutiny

The BIS, which serves as a forum for central banks, used its annual economic report to warn that the race to dominate artificial intelligence may be pushing investment beyond levels that future returns can support.

BIS stated:

“The current surge in capital expenditure could prove unsustainable if supply bottlenecks restrain production. Intense competition for market leadership may fuel overinvestment further, as seen in previous innovation waves, increasing the risk of a sharp reversal if AI payoffs disappoint.”

The concern is not that AI lacks economic potential. The BIS said the technology could eventually lift productivity in ways that separate it from earlier waves of automation and software development. If AI systems become capable of improving their own performance and helping generate new ideas, the long-term macroeconomic impact could be significant.

However, the near-term financial risk is different. Companies like Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic are committing enormous sums before there is clarity on how much revenue the spending will produce, how durable that revenue will be, and how quickly the infrastructure behind AI will become obsolete.

Indeed, the largest technology companies have poured money into chips, cloud capacity, data centers, electricity supply and networking equipment as they compete for users and market share.

AI Infrastructure Spending
AI Infrastructure Spending (Source: BIS)

The scale of that race has helped reinforce investor confidence in technology stocks, while also lifting demand across suppliers and infrastructure firms tied to the AI buildout.

However, the BIS warned that fierce competition can create its own vulnerability. If every major player spends heavily to avoid falling behind, the sector can end up with too much capacity, lower returns, and a financing structure that becomes difficult to sustain once optimism fades.

That dynamic has appeared before. The BIS pointed to earlier investment booms tied to canals, railways, electrification and the internet.

While each technology later changed the economy, they also produced periods when investors financed too much too quickly, which eventually resulted in painful reversals.

In view of this, the BIC concluded:

“The scale and pace of the current AI investment boom accompanied by expectations of large productivity payoffs bear resemblance to these precedents, highlighting potential downside risks in the near term.”

Compounding the problem are severe physical bottlenecks. The voracious appetite for computational power is straining the supply of advanced semiconductors, grid equipment, and raw electricity.

According to the BIS, this surging demand is already pressuring electricity prices upward, threatening to bleed into broader inflation metrics at a time when geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East have independently strained global supply chains.

Credit risks build beneath the equity rally

Meanwhile, the BIS concern extends far beyond a simple stock market correction and into how the AI shock could impact the broader financial system.

While the early stages of AI development were largely financed through the massive cash reserves of Silicon Valley leaders, the current trillion-dollar scale of investment requires a heavier reliance on debt and increasingly opaque financing structures.

BIS pointed out that AI infrastructure now reaches across corporate debt markets, private credit, lease financing, data-center construction, energy contracts and supplier agreements.

Chipmakers, cloud providers, AI labs, and data-center operators are increasingly linked through equity stakes, purchase commitments and long-term capacity deals.

In fact, Onramp Bitcoin, a BTC-focused financial service firm, recently pointed out that:

“A web of overlapping commitments now binds the AI buildout into a roughly $1 trillion loop: Nvidia invests in AI labs like OpenAI, the labs rent cloud capacity from Oracle and CoreWeave, and the clouds buy Nvidia chips. The same dollar can be booked as investment, funding, revenue, and sales at once, so the headline demand figures stop meaning quite what they seem to.”

AI Firms $1 Trillion Investment
AI Firms $1 Trillion Cyclical Investment (Source: Onramp Bitcoin)

The BIS warned that those arrangements can make risks harder to see, noting that the web of claims is built on expected future demand. If AI adoption keeps accelerating, the structure can reinforce itself.

However, stress can move back through the chain if demand disappoints.

This would result in a situation where suppliers may lose orders, and data-center developers may struggle to fill capacity.

At the same time, private credit funds may face pressure on loans tied to software, infrastructure or technology borrowers. And banks may find that their exposure to private credit and nonbank finance is more complicated than headline numbers suggest.

That is why the BIS warning extends beyond technology shares. A fall in AI-related equities would hurt investors directly. A broader reassessment of AI financing could tighten credit conditions for companies that depend on the same funding environment.

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