Jul. 15 at 12:00 PM
$MAGS $META $GOOGL $NVDA $AMZN
Accelerating, Not Peaking
Current financial data and analyst projections show no evidence of hyperscaler capital expenditures peaking and tapering off by the end of 2026. Instead, evidence firmly indicates that the AI infrastructure race is accelerating, with capital intensity surging to unprecedented levels as technology companies race to clear structural supply bottlenecks.
The 2026 Capex Surge
Rather than pulling back, the top U.S. hyperscalers—Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, and Alphabet—are dramatically increasing their full-year guidance.
* Massive Aggregate Spending: Recent market reports project that these top four tech giants will collectively deploy up to
$725 billion on capex in 2026. This represents a staggering 77% year-over-year increase from 2025's record spending levels.
* Company-Specific Run Rates: Amazon's capex is projected to reach approximately
$200 billion for the year, with Microsoft following closely around
$190 billion. Alphabet and Meta have also heavily increased their spending guidance, exceeding
$175 billion and
$135 billion, respectively.
* Macroeconomic Scale: To put this into perspective, Apollo Global Management recently highlighted that
$646 billion in hyperscaler capex alone represents roughly 2% of the total U.S. GDP—a figure equivalent to the entire economic output of countries like Sweden or Argentina.
Prolonged Capacity Constraints
Management commentary across the sector confirms that this spending curve will remain elevated well beyond the current year. Microsoft has publicly stated it expects to remain capacity-constrained through at least the end of 2026 as it works to bring new GPU, CPU, and storage infrastructure online faster.
Furthermore, major supply chain partners are signaling a long-term buildout. TSMC, for instance, has indicated that due to fab construction timelines and clean room availability, significant new supply relief won't materialize meaningfully until 2028 or 2029. High-bandwidth memory (HBM) capacity is heavily sold out through 2026 with no signs of rebalancing.
The staggering scale of this capital deployment acts as a massive fundamental tailwind for the broader tech sector. It directly reinforces the structural, long-term demand for the intensive power grid allocations, GPU hardware procurement, and hyperscaler leasing agreements that high-performance computing operators like IREN and Applied Digital are actively securing.
Because the bottleneck lies in physical construction and hardware availability rather than a lack of capital or demand, the current trajectory of institutional infrastructure spending is structurally locked in and expected to expand well past the fourth quarter of 2026.