The

amount of debt

tied to

artificial intelligence

has ballooned to US$1.2 trillion, making it the largest segment in the

investment-grade market

, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

AI companies

now make up 14 per cent of the high-grade market from 11.5 per cent in 2020, surpassing United States banks, the largest sector on the JPMorgan U.S. Liquid index (JULI) at 11.7 per cent, JPMorgan analysts including Nathaniel Rosenbaum and Erica Spear wrote in a note Monday.

The analysts identified 75 companies across tech, utilities and capital goods sectors that are closely tied to AI, including

Oracle Corp.

, Apple Inc. and Duke Energy Corp. Many of these firms are prolific debt issuers and in the case of tech, they are cash rich with very low net debt. The cohort trades at 74 basis points, 10 basis points tighter than the broader JULI index, they said.

Companies linked to AI

have seen their

equity valuations skyrocket

since ChatGPT launched the modern AI era three years ago, as investors rush to get exposure to the technology that has the potential to shake-up the global economy. That’s sparked concerns that any setback in earnings from mega-tech firms could trigger a broader selloff given their stretched valuations.

“Debt tied to AI companies is growing fast but it trades tight for good reasons,” wrote the analysts. They noted that most of these companies are high-quality issuers, either cash rich or not highly levered and are likely highly regulated, which justifies their outperfomance.

Debt investors are also scrambling to get a piece of the pie. Oracle’s US$18 billion bond sale last month — the second-largest high-grade deal this year, garnered nearly US$88 billion in investor demand. Banks and private credit firms have also been competing to underwrite debt deals supporting the development of large data centres.

“The torrid ascent of AI stocks has caused some angst for credit investors worried that any potential downside there could have credit implications,” wrote the analysts. “From a fundamental perspective, these fears are not justified.”

Still, an equity selloff in AI-related names would likely impact credit too, they added, given how tightly it’s trading. There is a risk if these companies use their pile of cash to fund capital expenditure or mergers and acquisitions ahead of debt redemption.

“We think select shorts in CDS can make sense as a cheaper tail hedge for a cross-asset portfolio,” they said.

Bloomberg.com