Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street. Upgrade Now
Microsoft's Satya Nadella Just Gave Nvidia Stock a Reality Check

In This Article:

Tech giants are going all-in on artificial intelligence (AI). Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) recently announced plans to spend $80 billion this year building out AI data centers to support training advanced AI models and deploying those models to the cloud. Meta Platforms is following suit, with up to $65 billion allocated for AI infrastructure in 2025.

Not to be outdone, Amazon has upped its capital spending plan to $100 billion for the year, although not all of this will go toward AI computing capacity. Lastly, Alphabet boosted its capital spending plan to $75 billion for 2025, with much of that related to AI.

On top of all this spending, the Trump Administration's Stargate project involves another $500 billion in AI investments over the next four years, and the European Union is aiming to mobilize 200 billion euros ($209 billion) for AI investments. Long story short, an enormous amount of capital is rapidly being spent on AI data centers and the necessary equipment to train and run powerful AI models, particularly graphics processing units (GPUs) from Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).

Raining on Nvidia's parade

Demand for Nvidia's data center GPUs will likely remain strong for the time being as companies and governments go wild on AI spending. What happens after that? It depends on whether demand for AI computing capacity rises to meet an exploding amount of supply.

In a recent interview, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said something curious that should give Nvidia investors pause. While Microsoft is investing heavily in AI computing capacity, Nadella essentially predicted an oversupply sometime in the next few years. The company plans to lease "a lot of capacity" in 2027 and 2028 rather than build out additional capacity of its own. Here's the kicker:

"Because I look at the builds, and I'm saying, 'This is fantastic.' The only thing that's going to happen with all the compute build is the prices are going to come down."

One way a bubble can form is through overinvestment. Companies and governments are building out massive quantities of AI computing capacity independently without any real idea of what demand will look like a few years from now. It won't take much of a miscalculation for supply to greatly exceed demand once this current build-out is complete.

The closest historical parallel to this AI spending bonanza is not the dot-com bubble but the railroad bubble of the late 1800s. Far too much capital was spent building out railroad capacity, leading to an enormous oversupply that sent railroads into bankruptcy and helped trigger a financial panic. The railroad, like AI, was a revolutionary technology that fundamentally changed the world, but that fact didn't save investors.