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The Credit Market Lens

AI Financing Needs Do Not Override Cyclical Drivers of Yield

Structural pressures from the AI buildout are real, but they are growing slowly, not driving the yield moves investors are watching right now.
AI Financing Needs Do Not Override Cyclical Drivers of Yield
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Key takeaways

  • Structural shifts vs. cyclical moves: Debt-funded AI capex may ultimately become a secular driver of risk premia, but any such transition is likely to unfold over years – leaving cyclical forces firmly in control of market dynamics in the interim.
  • The recent rise in longer-dated U.S. Treasury yields isn’t really about AI: The back-up in yields since late February reflects shifting policy expectations far more than any meaningful repricing of the term premium tied to AI.
  • Cyclical factors still support the hedging role of bonds: Even against a backdrop of larger deficits and prospective AI-driven borrowing, higher starting yields reinforce bonds’ ability to cushion portfolios and enhance total return potential – especially in a growth slowdown.
  • For now, AI’s footprint is concentrated in hyperscalers’ long-dated spreads: In contrast to the broader non-financial corporate market, spreads on hyperscalers’ long-dated bonds have widened – largely a function of heavier issuance, particularly in the 30-year segment.

AI is a transformative technology with both near-term and long-term implications for the economy. For investors, while the debt-funded AI buildout has the potential to become a secular driver of risk premia, we believe any such shift would only play out through a multi-year adjustment and would not override the cyclical forces that affect markets.

For that reason, the idea that the year-to-date surge in AI-related debt issuance has been a contributor to the recent rise in long-dated U.S. Treasury yields appears overstated. Instead, the move seems driven primarily by shifting policy expectations and a repricing of the Federal Reserve’s expected rate path, not by a meaningful rise in AI-induced term premium or related indigestion about duration (interest rate risk).

A simple decomposition of the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield move since the start of the Iran conflict makes the point: Most of the increase has come from the rate expectations component rather than the term premium. Since 27 February (the last business day prior to the conflict), 10-year Treasury yields have risen by roughly 51 basis points (bps), of which 38 bps reflects shifting rate expectations and just 13 bps a higher term premium (see Figure 1).

Figure 1: The bulk of the recent move higher in U.S. Treasury yields has been driven by shifting rate expectations

Source: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, Haver Analytics, PIMCO as of 27 May 2026. The term premium and rate expectations estimates are from the Christensen and Rudebusch model.

Just as important, the duration supply shock has not fully arrived. Measures such as the average duration of the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate and Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Investment Grade indices remain well below their post-COVID peaks, suggesting the market has not yet had to absorb the full long-duration footprint that a sustained, debt-funded AI capex cycle could eventually create (see Figure 2). That risk is real, but it is more likely to build as a slow-moving structural pressure than to explain the recent move in yields.

Figure 2: The average durations of the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate and Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Investment Grade indices remain well below their post-COVID peaks

Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 26 May 2026

Figure 3: Hyperscalers’ 10s30s spread curves continue diverging from their nonfinancial peers

Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO. Data as of 28 May 2026. The 10s30s curve formula is as follows: For a given issuer’s 10-year and 30-year bonds, we calculate the spread above like-maturity U.S. Treasuries, and then calculate the difference in those bond spreads for each issuer. Lastly, we take the average of this difference across issuers.
For the broader market, the elevated absolute level of U.S. Treasury yields continues to draw all-in yield buyers into long-dated corporate credit. But there is also a technical tailwind: After stripping out hyperscaler issuance, the gross supply share of U.S.-dollar-denominated (USD) 30-year investment grade (IG) credit is running at its lowest rate in several years – under 10% of overall supply, by our calculations (see Figure 4).

Figure 4: The USD investment grade credit 30-year supply share, ex hyperscalers, is at its lowest run rate of the post-COVID period

Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 27 May 2026. Data encompasses the universe of USD IG credit issuance.
Hyperscalers, by contrast, have shown a strong preference to lock in yields at much longer maturities. Figure 5 shows that while hyperscalers accounted for 13% of year-to-date 10-year supply (approximately $21 billion), they constitute more than 30% of 30-year issuance (approximately $32 billion).

Figure 5: AI hyperscalers disproportionately have preferred 30-year issuance

Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO as of 27 May 2026

And this isn’t just a phenomenon for USD-denominated debt – it’s been a multi-currency affair. The bond markets denominated in euro (EUR), British pound sterling (GBP), Canadian dollars (CAD), Japanese yen (JPY), and Swiss francs (CHF) have all seen hyperscaler issuance at the 25+ year part of the curve; Alphabet even issued a century bond in GBP in February. While some of these markets are accustomed to longer-dated bonds, for EUR and CHF investors in particular, these maturities are unusual for corporate issuers. We believe they largely reflect a need to diversify across currency benchmarks to mitigate ticker concentration risk within investor portfolios.

The takeaway is straightforward: The steepening in hyperscalers’ long-end slopes is a direct reflection of investors demanding more risk premium exactly where issuance has been heaviest.

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