Alphabet bonds’ lack of guardrails highlights investor confidence

By Matt Tracy Feb 13 (Reuters) – Alphabet Inc’s global bond sale this week underscored the high level of investor demand for the major AI hyperscalers, but raised concerns about the debt’s lack of โ€Œprotections for existing and future bondholders. Google parent Alphabet raised $31.51 billion across U.S. dollar, sterling and Swiss franc โ€Œbond markets…


Alphabet bonds’ lack of guardrails highlights investor confidence
Alphabet bonds’ lack of guardrails highlights investor confidence

By Matt Tracy

Feb 13 (Reuters) – Alphabet Inc’s global bond sale this week underscored the high level of investor demand for the major AI hyperscalers, but raised concerns about the debt’s lack of โ€Œprotections for existing and future bondholders.

Google parent Alphabet raised $31.51 billion across U.S. dollar, sterling and Swiss franc โ€Œbond markets in a global bond raise on Monday and Tuesday, as artificial intelligence-driven spending sparks a surge in borrowing at U.S. tech giants.

Alphabet’s โ€‹bond sale stood out in several ways, including its use of a so-called 100-year “century” bond in the sterling market.

These and other hyperscalers’ recent bond sales have garnered strong reception with Alphabet’s $20 billion U.S. bond sale drawing over $100 billion in demand. But the growing hyperscaler debt pile has raised concerns about their lack of investor protections compared to other bonds.

“What stands โ€Œout is whatโ€™s missing,” said Julia Khandoshko, โ the CEO of Cyprus-based broker Mind Money. “Once a big name gets covenant-light terms through, others will try the same.”

“Naturally, that creates a second-market problem, where the next buyer has fewer ‘rules’ โ to rely on, while prices will swing more on rates, mood, and liquidity,” she added.

Investment-grade borrowers with strong credit profiles typically include fewer covenants in debt agreements than their junk-rated counterparts.

Yet most include basic investor guardrails, especially a standard change-in-control covenant protecting โ€‹investors โ€‹in the event of M&A or another change in ownership. โ€‹Alphabet’s bonds do not carry these protections, noted โ€ŒAnthony Canales, head of global research at New York-based Covenant Review.

The five major AI hyperscalers – Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle – issued $121 billion in U.S. corporate bonds last year, according to a January report by BofA Securities.

Alphabet and Amazon did not respond to requests for comment, while Oracle, Meta and Microsoft declined to comment.

Oracle’s $25 billion note offering on February 2, and Meta’s $30 billion bond offering in October, similarly lacked change-in-control and other basic covenants, Canales noted.

“In most IG โ€Œcovenant packages you would expect to see a change-in-control covenant,” Canales โ€‹said. “But these are huge companies where the investors don’t believe there’s great โ€‹risk they’ll need these protections.”

Future tech issuers, especially โ€‹smaller and lower-rated companies, could run into obstacles if they attempt to model their covenants โ€Œafter Alphabet, he added.

New debt issuance in 2026 โ€‹from the five major hyperscalers โ€‹could reach more than $300 billion as their spending needs around AI buildout increase, BofA Securities analyst Tom Curcurro wrote in a January 12 report.

“This massive AI infrastructure buildout requires so much capex from the hyperscalers โ€‹that they want to reduce the technical โ€Œimpact on their bonds,” said Jordan Chalfin, senior analyst at the New York-based research firm CreditSights, โ€‹noting the benefits to issuers from flexible covenant structures.

“I wouldnโ€™t expect there to be any real โ€‹covenant protections.”

(Reporting by Matt Tracy in WashingtonEditing by Nick Zieminski)

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