AI platforms can scale by contracting suppliers and investors to borrow and build the physical compute and power capacity, leaving the platform light on its own balance sheet while concentrating financial, energy, and operational risk in partner firms and their lenders. If demand or monetization lags, defaults could cascade through specialised data‑centre builders, equipment financiers, and regional power markets.
— This reframes AI industrial policy as a systemic finance and infrastructure risk that touches banking supervision, export/FDI screens, energy planning, and competition oversight.
EditorDavid
2025.11.30
75% relevant
The piece highlights construction loans where Oracle is a future tenant as a driver of hedging — an example of how platform and data‑center buildouts shift financing risk into banks, landlords and contractors, consistent with the idea that AI projects externalize concentrated debt and operational risk across partners.
msmash
2025.11.29
100% relevant
FT report that SoftBank, Oracle and CoreWeave have borrowed at least $30bn, Blue Owl/Crusoe $28bn, and banks are negotiating a further $38bn — plus the OpenAI executive quote: 'How does [OpenAI] leverage other people's balance sheets?'
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