According to Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, on June 1, artificial intelligence infrastructure investments may exacerbate inflation in the near term, limiting the Federal Reserve's room to cut interest rates. Slok noted that AI data center construction is driving rapid growth in semiconductor, electricity, and labor demand, with major U.S. tech companies planning approximately $725 billion in capital expenditures for AI-related infrastructure this year. While AI is expected to boost productivity long-term, the near-term large-scale investment will drive up costs and price levels, exacerbating rather than restraining inflation.
U.S. inflation remains significantly above the Federal Reserve's 2% target. April PCE inflation rose 3.8% year-over-year, marking the highest level since 2023. Interest rate swap markets indicate traders now fully price in at least one rate hike by March 2027, with a roughly 50% probability of a hike in October 2026.