The Chairman of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., Joe Tsai, has expressed concerns about a possible bubble in the rapid expansion of data center construction, suggesting the growth may surpass the initial demand for AI technologies.
At the HSBC Global Investment Summit in Hong Kong, Tsai indicated that major tech companies, investment funds, and various entities have been aggressively building server bases across the globe without clearly defined clientele or usage plans.
Tech giants including Microsoft Corp. and SoftBank Group Corp. are heavily investing in AI infrastructure, acquiring essential chips from Nvidia Corp. and SK Hynix Inc. In line with this trend, Alibaba announced earlier this year that it would commit over 380 billion yuan ($52 billion) over the next three years to AI development.
The construction of server farms spans diverse locations, from India and Malaysia to ambitious projects in the U.S., such as “Stargate,” which envisions an investment of up to $500 billion.
Meanwhile, skepticism about this spending spree is growing on Wall Street, especially after DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup, introduced an open-source model reported to compete with existing U.S. technologies at a significantly lower cost.
Firms like Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc., and Meta Platforms Inc. are collectively planning to allocate hundreds of billions of dollars toward AI infrastructure, with Amazon alone aiming for $100 billion.
Nevertheless, TD Cowen analysts in February noted Microsoft’s cancellation of some data center leases, highlighting potential overcapacity concerns. Microsoft, on its part, maintains a bullish stance, with its executives emphasizing their unprecedented expenditure on chips and datacenters.
Following these developments, Tsai remains wary of the staggering financial commitments involved, suggesting that investments might be outpacing actual demand and projecting growth that may not materialize.