The AI boom is minting big valuations but not yet broad profits. As Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI spotlights a now fully capitalist sector, OpenAI reportedly missed revenue targets even as hyperscalers—Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft—logged robust Q1 results and plan more than $700 billion in AI-related investment this year. The cash-rich giants, with nearly $150 billion in combined recent quarterly net income, are financing a debt-fueled infrastructure build-out alongside Oracle and neo-cloud players, pushing AI-related borrowing past $300 billion. Meanwhile, Anthropic’s enterprise traction has surged, citing a $30 billion run-rate and 300,000 business customers, even as many firms still await hard ROI. Surveys from McKinsey and Dataiku suggest budgets could stall if tangible paybacks don’t materialize by midyear. Monetization remains unsettled: subscriptions have limits, while targeted advertising could scale, with Google already crediting AI features for a 19% lift in search revenue. Market structure is also in flux; network effects could concentrate profits in a few winners, raising questions for others pouring billions into models and data centers. For now, hardware vendors and cloud platforms capture much of the value. Whether this becomes a “productive bubble,” as Bill Janeway argues, will hinge on whether AI applications can throw off enough cash to justify unprecedented capex.
Related articles:
Nvidia’s Data Center Platform and the AI Infrastructure Boom






























