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Financing the AI Boom: How the Tech Giants Are Funding Each Other

Artificial intelligence is the story of this decade. The models are growing, the chips are in short supply, and the infrastructure spend is mind-boggling.
But behind the headlines about ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini lies a quieter revolution — how the AI boom is being financed.

This isn’t your typical venture capital story. Today, some of the biggest players in AI are not just customers or partners — they’re shareholders in each other.

In this article, we see who’s investing in whom, why it matters, and what lessons history offers from another era of cross-company investing: 1980s Japan.


🧩 What’s Really Happening

The AI gold rush has two sides: building the technology and paying for it.

The build-out is capital-hungry — vast data centres, power-hungry GPUs, new cooling systems, and ever-expanding networks. So, instead of relying solely on outside investors, the tech giants are increasingly financing each other’s growth.

Think of it as a circular economy for capital:

  • Cloud providers invest in AI model companies that will use their infrastructure.
  • Chipmakers take stakes in data centre operators that buy their hardware.
  • AI model firms sign multi-year contracts — and sometimes buy shares — in the companies supplying their compute power.
  • Private equity and sovereign funds step in to co-finance the infrastructure backbone.

It’s all interconnected. The cash flows one way, and the equity ownership often flows right back.


🔄 Cross-Holdings: Who’s Investing in Whom

A few years ago, tech companies tried to avoid conflicts of interest. Now, many of them are locking in strategic alliances through ownership.

Some clear examples:

  • Nvidia → OpenAI
    Nvidia has reportedly agreed to invest up to $100 billion in OpenAI — part capital, part supply commitment. Nvidia provides the chips, OpenAI guarantees demand.
    Both sides win — for now.
  • BlackRock / Nvidia / Microsoft → Aligned Data Centers
    This consortium agreed to buy Aligned Data Centers for $40 billion, creating a giant AI-focused data-centre operator.
    The deal combines equity ownership with long-term leasing contracts — effectively turning AI infrastructure into a shared utility.
  • CoreWeave and OpenAI
    CoreWeave, which provides GPU-based cloud services, borrowed billions using its servers as collateral — and sold a stake to OpenAI, one of its biggest customers.
  • SoftBank and Arm
    SoftBank plans to borrow around $5 billion against its Arm shares to plough even more money into AI.
  • ASML and Mistral AI
    Dutch chip-equipment maker ASML now owns roughly 11% of French startup Mistral AI — aligning chip development with next-generation model training.

It’s an intricate web of ownership. AI firms, chipmakers, data-centre operators and financiers are all feeding each other’s growth.


⚖️ Why Companies Do It

The motivation is simple: speed and control.

Advantages:

  • Strategic alignment – You invest in the suppliers or customers you rely on most.
  • Faster decisions – You don’t wait for external investors or IPOs to fund expansion.
  • Synergies – Data, hardware, and software roadmaps stay in sync.
  • Option value – Even small stakes can turn into billion-dollar wins if the partner succeeds.

But this approach isn’t risk-free.

Disadvantages:

  • Conflicts of interest – Are you a customer or a shareholder first?
  • Opaque valuations – When companies own each other, who decides what’s really worth what?
  • Leverage risk – Borrowing against shares or GPUs can backfire fast if prices fall.
  • Capital misallocation – Some deals may be driven more by strategy than by sound economics.
  • Network fragility – If one link in the chain falters, others can feel the strain.

This kind of financial ecosystem is powerful in a boom — but can amplify pain in a downturn.


🏯 Lessons from Japan’s 1980s Cross-Shareholding Era

If this feels familiar, it should. Japan’s corporate world in the 1970s–80s was built on cross-shareholdings — a web of mutual stakes between companies, banks, and suppliers known as the keiretsu.

At first, it worked brilliantly:

  • Companies were insulated from takeovers.
  • Stock prices were stable.
  • Long-term relationships fostered industrial strength.

But over time, the system showed cracks:

  • Profits were recycled within networks rather than reinvested productively.
  • Governance weakened as no one wanted to challenge a “partner.”
  • When the 1990s recession hit, valuations collapsed and the web of inter-ownership magnified the pain.

Japan eventually had to unwind much of that structure. It took a decade to clean up.

The parallel isn’t perfect — today’s AI firms are global, not domestic — but the principle holds: cross-ownership stabilises in good times and constrains in bad.


🔍 What to Watch Next

As AI enters its “infrastructure age,” investors should keep an eye on five red flags:

  1. Transparency – Are cross-holdings clearly reported and valued?
  2. Debt levels – How much of the AI build-out is being financed with borrowed money?
  3. Interdependence risk – Could one company’s stumble cascade through the system?
  4. Regulation – Are antitrust authorities comfortable with these alliances?
  5. Exit plans – Will firms actually sell down their stakes, or will capital stay trapped?

The lesson from history: financial ecosystems that look self-sustaining may hide hidden secrets.


💡 Final Thought

AI is no longer a startup story — it’s a capital story.
The world’s biggest tech companies are acting as venture investors, infrastructure financiers, and ecosystem builders all at once.

It’s brilliant strategy and bold risk-taking rolled together.
But if the AI boom ever slows, we may find that the financial plumbing underneath it is more interconnected — and more fragile — than it looks.


Clearly Investments Blog — helping investors understand how innovation, markets, and money work.

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