DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Apollo’s president warns the AI spending boom may not pay off for investors

April 17, 2026
in News
Apollo’s president warns the AI spending boom may not pay off for investors
Jim Zelter, president of Apollo Global Management.
Apollo Global Management President Jim Zelter urged caution about assuming strong returns from AI spending. APFIS
  • Apollo President Jim Zelter says AI will transform the economy, but investment returns are uncertain.
  • AI is driving a spending boom, making tech companies more capital intensive.
  • His warning comes as debate grows over whether the AI boom may be veering into hype.

Tech companies are pouring trillions into artificial intelligence, but investors shouldn’t assume the bets will pay off, Jim Zelter, president of Apollo Global Management, said.

“We’ve seen this many times in our last 30 years, whether it’s cell phones or other technology uses. There’s no doubt they’re going to have a massive utility,” Zelter said on Goldman Sachs’ “Exchanges” podcast published on Thursday.

“But is the economic owner going to harvest the right returns for that investment?” he asked.

The buildout is already reshaping the industry’s economics. Zelter estimated that US data centers alone could require $5 trillion to $6 trillion over the next five years.

“There’s a massive capex cycle going on that’s turning an asset-light business into asset-heavy,” he said.

And a key question, he added, is what returns shareholders will ultimately see.

“Just because companies need capital, doesn’t mean they’re all great investments,” Zelter said.

For Apollo, the surge in spending represents a financing opportunity — but one that requires discipline.

Zelter said investors shouldn’t treat equity-like risk as if it were safe, fixed-income exposure. He emphasized that higher-risk investments need to be compensated accordingly, while lenders should ensure they have strong downside protections.

Zelter’s caution comes as debate grows over whether the AI boom is veering into hype.

Other big-name investors have also raised concerns about investor exuberance in AI.

Howard Marks, the cofounder of Oaktree Capital Management, said in December that too many investors have a “lottery-ticket mentality” when it comes to AI.

In February, veteran trader and economist Steve Hanke told Business Insider that AI is “overhyped and potentially dangerous.”

A recent KPMG US survey found that three-quarters of large-company CEOs said generative AI may have been overhyped over the past year, even as many said its longer-term disruptive potential remains underappreciated.

But they’re still spending: Nearly 80% of the CEOs told KPMG they plan to allocate at least 5% of capital to AI this year.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Apollo’s president warns the AI spending boom may not pay off for investors appeared first on Business Insider.

The most politically charged World Cup ever puts the U.S. and Iran on a collision course while America co-hosts with neighbors it has tariffed
News

The most politically charged World Cup ever puts the U.S. and Iran on a collision course while America co-hosts with neighbors it has tariffed

by Fortune
April 19, 2026

The World Cup has never been free of politics, yet this year’s event may be in a league of its ...

Read more
News

Humanoid Robot Filmed Chasing a Pack of Wild Boars, and It Looks as Weird as It Sounds

April 19, 2026
News

They built an AI tool that called 20,000 gas stations. Here’s their advice for aspiring engineers.

April 19, 2026
News

Restaurants ban diners’ phones during meals as no-scroll trend grows: put it away or else

April 19, 2026
News

These 3 Zodiac Signs Will Feel Major Relationship Shakeups With the Mars-Saturn Conjunction

April 19, 2026
I’m a millennial pastor in Hawaii who started renting out my car to pay for diapers. I made $3 million last year.

I’m a millennial pastor in Hawaii who started renting out my car to pay for diapers. I made $3 million last year.

April 19, 2026
Las Vegas veteran pushes back after HOA reportedly targeted front yard hydrant display: ‘The last straw’

Las Vegas veteran pushes back after HOA reportedly targeted front yard hydrant display: ‘The last straw’

April 19, 2026
Las Vegas veteran pushes back after HOA reportedly targeted front yard hydrant display: ‘The last straw’

Las Vegas veteran pushes back after HOA reportedly targeted front yard hydrant display: ‘The last straw’

April 19, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026