Big Tech’s appetite for debt has gotten so large that Wall Street had to build entirely new markets just to manage the risk. Credit default swap volumes tied to US technology companies have surged 90% since early September 2025, driven by an unprecedented wave of borrowing aimed at funding AI infrastructure and data centers.

The scale here is hard to overstate. Hyperscalers collectively accumulated $121 billion in new debt during 2025, a figure that’s more than quadruple the average borrowing pace of the past five years. Meta alone raised $30 billion, while Alphabet contributed $25 billion to that total. And this might just be the warm-up act, with analysts projecting an additional $1.5 trillion in tech sector borrowing through 2028 for AI-related projects.

Why Wall Street is scrambling for hedges

Banks that are packaging and selling these massive offerings need a way to protect themselves during the distribution window, and credit default swaps are the tool of choice. When you’re suddenly underwriting debt at four times the historical pace, your demand for that insurance goes through the roof.

The result is that entirely new single-name CDS markets have materialized for high-grade tech firms that lacked any meaningful liquidity just a year ago. Some of these contracts now rank among the most actively traded US CDS outside of the financial sector. Data from the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. confirms a notable rise in non-financial sector CDS transactions, underscoring how dramatically the landscape has shifted.