top of page

Who will pay for the trillion-dollar AI boom?

Who will pay for the trillion-dollar AI boom?
Published date:
Source:
BB Finews
8/9/25, 6:46 AM

America’s biggest technology companies are combining Silicon Valley returns with Ruhr Valley balance-sheets. Investors who bought shares in Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft a decade ago are sitting on eight times their money, excluding dividends. Spending on data centres means the firms possess property and equipment (accounting-speak for hard assets) worth more than 60% of their equity book value, up from 20% over the same period. Add the capital expenditure of these firms during the past year to that of Amazon and Oracle, two more tech giants, and the sum is greater than the outlay of all America’s listed industrial companies combined. Jason Thomas of Carlyle, an investment firm, estimates that the spending boom was responsible for a third of America’s economic growth during the most recent quarter.

Financial News

How to greet people at work

BB Finews

From soil to smart contracts: How blockchain is reshaping agriculture

BB Finews

EU banking regulator finalizes draft rules for banks holding Bitcoin, Ether

BB Finews

BTCFi VC funding hits $175M as investors focus on consumer apps

BB Finews

XRP tops $3 as Ripple case nears potential SEC dismissal

BB Finews

Trump to allow crypto in 401(k) plans for US workers: White House

BB Finews

Hyperliquid drives $487B July surge in decentralized crypto trading

BB Finews

Bitcoin-DeFi startup BOB tops up funding to $21M as Castle Island, Anchorage join

BB Finews

Donald Trump’s awful trade policy will outlast him

BB Finews
  • Page 66

Disclaimer:

This article is an original work by BBFinews, with copyright owned by Jinse Finance. Unauthorized reproduction is prohibited. Authorized media must indicate: “Source: BBFinews” when using this content. Violators will be held legally accountable.

 

Risk Warning:

Investment involves risks. Please exercise caution when entering the market. This content does not constitute investment or financial advice.

bottom of page