According to Cointelegraph, the Bank of England (BOE) is conducting an investigation into the increasing trend of financiers lending to data centers, a move seen as speculative on the future of artificial intelligence (AI). This inquiry comes amid concerns that AI companies may not meet their high valuations, potentially leading to a market correction similar to the dot-com bubble of the early 2000s.
The BOE is examining the relationship between AI firms and financiers eager to invest in the AI sector. Although lending to data centers remains a niche market, it is expected to become a vital funding source, with McKinsey & Co estimating that $6.7 trillion will be required by 2030 to meet the growing demand for AI infrastructure. This investigation was initiated after the BOE observed a shift in funds from hiring staff to investing billions in data center construction.
With limited AI-native stocks and the crypto tokenization of private AI stocks not yet scalable, data-center lending has emerged as one of the few avenues for substantial investment in the AI industry. However, the BOE's probe could lead to future regulatory constraints, potentially affecting returns and slowing AI innovation. UK crypto groups have criticized the BOE's proposal to limit individual stablecoin holdings, arguing that it is restrictive and costly to implement. Despite assurances that these restrictions are not permanent, UK banks have imposed their own measures, with 40% of surveyed crypto investors reporting payment delays or blocks by their banks.
The BOE is concerned that these emerging lending practices could pose risks to financial stability. It stated that if the anticipated scale of debt-financed AI and related energy infrastructure investment materializes over the next decade, financial stability risks are likely to increase. Banks could be directly exposed through their credit exposures to AI companies and indirectly through loans and credit facilities to private credit funds and other financial institutions affected by AI-related asset prices.