AI Debt Boom Accelerates U.S. Private Bond Market — Bloomberg Analysts
AI companies are increasingly financing data center and GPU cluster construction through the private debt market, bypassing public exchanges. Bloomberg…
AI-processed from Bloomberg Tech; edited by Hamidun News
The U.S. private debt market is recording a new trend: companies financing AI infrastructure construction are massively entering the private bond market. Bloomberg Television discussed this shift on the program "The Close" on July 1, 2026, with leading Wall Street analysts — strategists from Charles Schwab, analysts from Bank of America, Guggenheim Partners, and a number of other experts.
Why AI Companies Are Moving to the Private Debt Market
Financing AI infrastructure — GPU clusters, data centers, power generation capacity — requires significant amounts of capital in compressed timeframes. Public bond markets do not always meet these requirements: regulatory procedures drag on for months, and covenants can be restrictive.
The private credit market offers fundamentally different logic:
- Deals close within weeks, not months
- Flexible structure: direct loans backed by AI equipment collateral
- Confidentiality of terms — critical for strategic AI projects
- Volumes from hundreds of millions to several billion dollars within a single transaction
As a result, major AI platforms, data center operators, and hyperscalers are forming a new class of borrowers, substantially shifting the balance of supply and demand on the private debt market.
Who Benefits from AI Debt Expansion
Institutional investors — pension funds, insurance companies, and asset managers — have long sought alternatives to traditional asset classes with moderate returns. AI infrastructure debt responds to this demand on several parameters.
Returns on private loans to AI companies typically exceed rates on public investment-grade bonds. The collateral base — data centers and GPU clusters — represents liquid assets with understandable market value. Meanwhile, the unceasing growth of AI infrastructure investments creates a continuous flow of new deals.
Analysts from Bank of America and Guggenheim Partners, who participated in the discussion on Bloomberg, are recording growing interest among institutional investors in this segment. Economists at the Conference Board, tracking corporate debt flows, reflect a comparable picture.
Risks of Debt Expansion
Accelerated growth in debt burden among AI companies carries obvious risks. First, AI projects often rely on optimistic monetization forecasts that may not materialize within stated timeframes. Second, the cost of GPU clusters is volatile: asset devaluation during a technological generation shift can hit creditors hard. Third, concentration of risk in a single sector creates systemic vulnerability for the entire private credit market.
These considerations prompt some asset managers — in particular, analysts at Kayne Anderson Rudnick, who participated in the discussion — to approach AI debt instruments with heightened caution.
What It Means
The AI debt boom is forming a separate segment in the private credit market. For AI companies, it is a way to finance growth without diluting shareholders. For investors, it is a source of returns with real collateral. The scale of AI capital investments in 2026 demonstrates that this trend will only intensify — along with the risks it carries.
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