By Rocky Swift
TOKYO, March 31 (Reuters) – Massive investments in artificial intelligence that underpinned record runs in equities face a major โhurdle as the Middle East crisis clouds prospects for growth โand energy costs, said Melissa Otto, head of research at S&P Global Visible Alpha.
Before the โIran war broke out, tech giants Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet and Meta planned to spend about $635 billion on data centres, chips, and other AI infrastructure in 2026, S&P Global has said.
That figure was up from $383 billion the โprior year and just $80 โ billion in 2019.
Although tech companies have yet to signal cutbacks in those capital investments, persistently high oil prices could โ force spending revisions in the first and second quarters, bringing a “really meaningful correction in all equity markets,” Otto said.
“I think if the capex numbers โget pulled โback, if in fact energy prices โare not reflected in earnings, โthat could be a catalyst,” she added in an interview in Tokyo on Monday.
Euphoria over AI had carried global stock indexes beyond the highs of 2025, with bright hopes for the trend to run further, but it has lost steam since the conflict.
At the same time, โenergy costs are becoming a constraint.
Data centres โrequire vast amounts of electricity, making the โAI dependent on power prices โand infrastructure capacity.
At the CERAWeek energy conference in Houston โlast week, oil executives warned supply โrisks are not โfully reflected in prices, Otto said, raising concerns about further increases with ripple effects for the global economy.
“We’re seeing this big โquestion around global growth,” โOtto added. “Because if you have energy prices jumping 30%, that’s โgoing to hurt consumers, that’s going to hurt companies.”
(Reporting by โRocky Swift; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)