While the headlines focus on tech stock volatility, the world’s biggest pools of capital are making a massive, 15-month-long bet on U.S. corporate debt. According to Citigroup, global investors are aggressively rotating into Technology, Media, and Telecom (TMT) bonds, favoring long-term stability over the banking sector.
💰 THE METRICS (The Tech vs. Financial Shift):
- The TMT Surge: Foreign purchases of TMT corporate bonds jumped to 26.1% in 2026, up from 17.1% last year.
- The Financial Retreat: Exposure to financial debt plummeted to 39% from 53.8% as investors seek to diversify away from traditional banking risks.
- The “Long Duration” Play: Demand for bonds maturing in 15+ years nearly doubled, rising to 44.1% of total purchases.
- Global Cash Inflows: Canada, Japan, Norway, and Hong Kong are leading the charge, with Hong Kong holdings surging 19.4% following recent regulatory shifts.
🌍 THE MACRO CATALYST (The AI Infrastructure Moat):
- AI as a Credit Positive: Despite high debt levels at firms like Oracle, Citigroup highlights that AI infrastructure buildouts are actually improving credit profiles. Companies like Analog Devices (ADI), American Tower (AMT), and Cadence Design Systems (CDNS) have seen positive rating actions thanks to their roles in the AI revolution.
- No Scalable Alternatives: Citi notes that global pension and insurance funds seeking long-duration credit “have no viable alternatives at scale” outside of the U.S. market.
- The $11.6T Liquidity King: U.S. companies issue the vast majority of top-rated, long-term corporate bonds globally, creating a “structural barrier” that prevents a widespread rotation away from American assets.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: The world isn’t just buying U.S. tech stocks; it’s funding the AI revolution through the bond market. By locking in 15-year+ maturities in TMT debt, global investors are signaling that they view U.S. technology infrastructure as the new “Global Safe Haven.” Even as corporate debt levels rise to fund AI data centers, the lack of comparable bond markets in Europe or Asia ensures that U.S. corporates remain the only game in town for long-term, high-quality yield.
