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Morgan Stanley: AI 基础设施投资或引发更大金融风险
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提供了详细的资金构成和风险警示,值得关注 AI 基础设施的融资方式对金融稳定的潜在影响。核心解读
Morgan Stanley 估计,到 2028 年全球数据中心建设支出约 2.9 万亿美元,资金来源包括 1.4 万亿美元超大云现金流、200 亿美元公司债券、150 亿美元证券化信用、800 亿美元私人信用等。NYU Stern 教授 Damodaran 指出,与 dot-com 泡沫不同,本轮 AI 基础设施投资规模空前,融资方式以债务为主,若市场调整,损失可能扩散至社会范围。
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Morgan Stanley estimates about $2.9 trillion capital expenditure of global data-center construction through 2028.
With funding sources including $1.4T from hyperscaler cash flows, $200B corporate debt, $150B securitized credit, $800B private credit / asset-based finance / JV debt, and $350B other capital.
i.e. AI capex is increasingly credit-funded, so losses could spill beyond shareholders.

> **引用原帖 Rohan Paul (@rohanpaul_ai):**
> dot-com bubble vs. a possible AI bubble.
> From the famous "Dean of Valuation", Professor Aswath Damodaran, of NYU Stern School of Business,
> “And that’s the real big difference between the dot-com boom and bust and the AI boom. We don’t know whether there’ll be a bust. History suggests there will be a bust.
> The dot-com boom and bust had no huge capital expenditure in that cycle. In fact, there was very little traditional CapEx, or even R&D, driving it. People started apps. They basically started going on it.
> This has been the biggest infrastructure run-up I think I’ve ever seen in business. You can go back and compare it to the automobile business 100 years ago. The amount of money that’s being put into AI CapEx is immense, which means that when the correction comes, the pain will be more intense.
> And herein lies the second problem. The dot-com boom and bust was almost entirely equity-funded. You think, so what? Well, when the bust came, those shareholders lost 60%, 70%, 80%, or 90% of their money. You felt sorry for them, but the loss was restricted to the shareholders.
> The problem with the AI CapEx boom is that not only is it immense, but a big chunk of it is funded with debt, and the debt is coming from private capital rather than banks. There’s a very real chance that if there’s a correction and companies start having problems, that problem is going to show up as distress and default, and that really doesn’t stay restricted. It spills over into the rest of society.
> I’m not saying it’s going to be 2008, but 2008 is an example of what happens when lenders overreach, when they lend money at too low a rate, and the correction comes. The pain spills over.
> So that is my concern with this big market illusion: the potential societal cost of having to deal with debt coming due that you’re unable to pay. It’s much more painful than your share price dropping 90% and you feeling the pain."
> ----
> From "Excess Returns" YouTube channel, (link in comment)
> https://x.com/rohanpaul_ai/status/2068071430592635090
Rohan Paul (@rohanpaul_ai): https://t.co/LOS6fdms02