The AI-driven cost crisis Wall Street has not started pricing yet
Key takeaways
- For the AI software industry, that moment may be arriving faster than investors expected.
- The numbers that triggered the conversation are not subtle.
- Below it, the companies running on that infrastructure are facing a different version of the same pressure.
The AI-driven cost crisis Wall Street has not started pricing yet Hillary Remy Fri, June 19, 2026 at 9:07 PM GMT+7 6 min read GOOG AMZN META MSFT Every technology boom eventually arrives at the same uncomfortable moment: when the question stops being who is growing fastest and starts being who can actually afford to keep growing. For the AI software industry, that moment may be arriving faster than investors expected.
The numbers that triggered the conversation are not subtle. The four largest US technology companies alone (Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft) are forecast to spend $650 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, according to Bloomberg. Wall Street analysts at Evercore and Bank of America are already projecting that total hyperscaler AI capex could cross $1 trillion in 2027, according to CNBC.
That is the top of the stack. Below it, the companies running on that infrastructure are facing a different version of the same pressure. According to CloudZero's report, average monthly AI spending among enterprise software companies jumped 36% year over year, from $62,964 to $85,521, while the share planning to spend more than $100,000 per month more than doubled, from 20% to 45%.