Tap to Trade in Gate Square, Win up to 50 GT & Merch!
Click the trading widget in Gate Square content, complete a transaction, and take home 50 GT, Position Experience Vouchers, or exclusive Spring Festival merchandise.
Click the registration link to join
https://www.gate.com/questionnaire/7401
Enter Gate Square daily and click any trading pair or trading card within the content to complete a transaction. The top 10 users by trading volume will win GT, Gate merchandise boxes, position experience vouchers, and more.
The top prize: 50 GT.
 is even more exaggerated. In 2022, Zuckerberg’s cash was three times his debt; by the last quarter, his debt had overtaken cash reserves by 15%.
Amazon, which already loved high leverage, now has debt half again as large as its cash. As for Oracle, the once cash-rich software empire, it now faces cash flow shortages and carries a mountain of debt.
In just four years, Silicon Valley giants have changed. To chase the elusive “Holy Grail” of AI, to avoid being left behind in the next industrial revolution, they have not only drained their reserves but also mortgaged future income, signing huge IOUs.
02 The “Real Estate” That Can’t Be Abandoned
This isn’t just about money; it’s a story of “no way out.”
Recall the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis: when house prices collapsed and pockets were empty, heavily indebted homeowners made a painful but rational decision: hand over the keys to the bank and walk away. That’s personal default — leaving the mess to the bank, life goes on.
But in the AI game, there is no option to “hand over the keys” to the bank.
Microsoft, Oracle, Meta — they are not like homeowners; they are more like developers who must complete their projects. When they sign hundreds of billions in chip contracts, or when server farms on the wasteland start piling up, they are signing a “blood oath.”
If tomorrow credit tightens and they can’t borrow money, can Oracle point to a half-built data center and say, “I’m out”? No.
Because if these semi-finished projects are not completed, they are worthless and face huge penalties, which could cause their core competitiveness to collapse instantly.
So, even if it’s a fire pit ahead, they have no choice but to keep burning money.
This is a classic debt trap: no matter whether AI can make money now, you can’t stop. Stop, and those hundreds of billions invested will instantly become zero;
Keep going, and you need continuous credit infusion.
That’s why the AI bubble is more terrifying than the stock market bubble. If the stock market crashes (like in 2000), it’s just people’s wealth shrinking and life tightening; but if credit collapses, preventing these giants from maintaining infrastructure, it’s a cardiac arrest.
03 Fear, the Highest Leverage
Why are these top CEOs collectively pushing themselves into this corner?
Because of fear.
It’s not just greed; it’s a deep-seated survival anxiety. At the crossroads of technological change, not participating means death. If you dare to sit on the sidelines and watch, you are doomed to miss the next great voyage. To stay at the table, giants have no choice but to borrow heavily.
Thus, we see this huge two-way gamble:
If AI succeeds: it might take 6 to 10 years. But during this decade, companies will carry heavy interest burdens, and money that could have been used for R&D will go to debt repayment. This will make once-light tech giants stumble.
If credit collapses first: before AI truly makes big money, if banks see too much risk and tighten the purse strings, this business cycle built on borrowing will snap like a taut string in an instant.
Today’s tech scene is like pouring gasoline on a smoldering fire. On the surface, we see stock market frenzy, but underground, accumulated debt fuel has infiltrated every inch of soil.
04 The Endgame
Most investors think: “I’m smart, I can escape before the bubble bursts.”
This is a typical survivor’s illusion. Everyone fantasizes about cashing out at the peak, buying government bonds, and then sunbathing on the beach. But history never plays out this way.
It’s like riding an escalator upstairs — smooth, comfortable, sleepy; but going down often means jumping into the elevator shaft. When the heavy door of the credit cycle suddenly closes, everyone is packed on the crowded track — in those core tech stocks — and the exit can be blocked instantly.
So, stop fixating only on whether Nvidia’s stock will rise or fall tomorrow. The real risk lies in whether the credit foundation supporting all this prosperity remains solid.
When Microsoft starts operating like a highly leveraged real estate developer, we should wake up: this is no longer just about tech dreams; it’s a brutal story of how to find a glimmer of survival in the debt swamp.
This article is compiled from Eurodollar University podcast content and is for reference only, not investment advice.