On February 25, Moody's released an in-depth industry report highlighting significant financial risks emerging from the technology sector's race to build artificial intelligence infrastructure. According to BlockBeats, the five largest U.S. cloud service providers have collectively committed to future data center leases amounting to $662 billion. These leases have not yet commenced, and therefore, are not currently reflected as liabilities on their balance sheets. However, as these leases begin over the coming years, more than $500 billion in data center activities will be formally recorded.
Moody's report analyzed the financial disclosures of Amazon, Meta, Alphabet (Google's parent company), Microsoft, and Oracle, noting that the unprecedented scale of AI data center construction is exerting significant pressure on traditional accounting metrics. By the end of 2025, the cumulative undiscounted future lease commitments of these tech giants will reach $969 billion, with over two-thirds, or $662 billion, representing leases that have yet to start. Under U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), these companies are not required to record these substantial obligations on their current balance sheets. These "off-balance sheet" commitments are akin to implicit debt, which, once converted to on-balance sheet liabilities, will significantly increase adjusted debt levels and potentially impact financial flexibility and credit ratings.