Regulators fear a lending frenzy tied to AI infrastructure could inflate a bubble reminiscent of the early-2000s dot-com crash.


BoE Investigates AI-Linked Lending Risks

The Bank of England (BoE) has launched a probe into the growing trend of financiers lending to data centers as a speculative bet on the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, Bloomberg reported Friday.

The central bank is increasingly concerned that AI-driven credit exposure could create a systemic risk if valuations collapse — drawing parallels to the dot-com crash that erased trillions in market value two decades ago.

Officials are examining how deeply banks and private credit funds are becoming intertwined with AI companies and infrastructure developers, as data-center construction becomes the new frontier for institutional investment.


$6.7 Trillion Infrastructure Demand

While data-center lending remains a niche segment, it is expanding rapidly. According to McKinsey & Co, roughly $6.7 trillion in new investment will be needed by 2030 to meet global demand for AI processing and energy infrastructure.

This explosive growth has made data-center lending one of the few direct avenues for financiers to gain exposure to the AI economy — especially as AI-native stocks remain scarce and tokenized private AI shares have yet to scale.

However, the BoE noted that this lending activity is shifting capital away from hiring and R&D toward infrastructure speculation, with billions now flowing into high-cost construction projects.


Regulators Fear Financial Instability

In a statement Friday, the Bank of England warned that AI-related debt financing could heighten systemic vulnerabilities:

“If the projected scale of debt-financed AI and associated energy infrastructure investment materializes over this decade, financial stability risks are likely to grow.”

The bank highlighted that lenders could face both direct and indirect exposure — from credit to AI companies to financing private credit funds that are heavily invested in AI-related assets.

Such interconnected risk could amplify contagion in the event of a market downturn, similar to how overleveraged bets fueled past financial crises.


Cautious on AI, Harsh on Crypto

The BoE’s scrutiny of AI lending comes as it continues to take a hardline stance on digital assets.

The regulator recently proposed limiting individual stablecoin holdings to between £10,000 and £20,000 ($13,300–$26,600) — a move UK crypto groups called restrictive and costly.

Meanwhile, a survey of 2,000 UK crypto investors found that around 40% reported blocked or delayed payments to crypto providers by traditional banks.


AI Hype Meets Regulatory Reality

As global capital races into AI infrastructure, the Bank of England’s probe highlights growing concern that debt-fueled enthusiasm could overheat the market.

Disclaimer

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency trading involves risk and may result in financial loss.

logo

blockto.io

info@blockto.io

Blockto.io Copyright © 2025, All rights reserved

News
Rates
Buy
More
We use cookies to personalize content and ads, provide social media features, and analyze our traffic. In accordance with GDPR/AVG and EU cookie regulations, data is processed only with your consent. We may share information about your use of our website with our social media, advertising, and analytics partners, and you can manage or withdraw your consent at any time. View more
Cookies settings
Accept
Privacy & Cookie policy
Privacy & Cookies policy
Cookie name Active

Privacy Policy

At BitxJournal.com, we respect your privacy and are committed to protecting your personal data. This Privacy Policy explains how we collect, process, store, and protect personal information in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and AVG (EU privacy legislation).

1. Data Controller

BitxJournal.com acts as the data controller for all personal data processed through this website.

2. Personal Data We Collect

We may collect and process the following categories of data:

Personal Data

  • Name and email address (when you subscribe to newsletters or contact us)

Technical & Usage Data

  • IP address, browser type, operating system

  • Device information

  • Pages visited, referral sources, and interaction data

This data is collected via cookies, log files, and analytics technologies.

3. Legal Basis for Processing

We process personal data only when a lawful basis exists, including:

  • Consent – when you explicitly agree (e.g., cookies, newsletter sign-up)

  • Legitimate interest – to operate, secure, and improve our website

  • Legal obligation – when required by applicable laws

You may withdraw your consent at any time.

4. Purpose of Data Processing

Your data is processed for the following purposes:

  • Operating and maintaining the website

  • Improving content, usability, and performance

  • Sending newsletters or updates (only with consent)

  • Analyzing traffic and user behavior

  • Responding to inquiries or support requests

5. Cookies & Consent Management

We use cookies and similar technologies in compliance with EU Cookie Law.

  • Non-essential cookies are placed only after explicit user consent

  • Users may accept, reject, or manage cookie preferences at any time

  • Consent can be withdrawn without affecting prior lawful processing

Detailed cookie information is available in our Cookie Settings panel.

6. Third-Party Data Processing

We may share limited data with trusted third-party service providers, including:

  • Analytics providers (e.g., Google Analytics)

  • Advertising partners (for personalized or non-personalized ads)

These third parties act as data processors and process data only under contractual obligations compliant with GDPR/AVG.

7. International Data Transfers

Where data is transferred outside the European Economic Area (EEA), we ensure appropriate safeguards are in place, such as Standard Contractual Clauses (SCCs) or equivalent legal mechanisms.

8. Data Retention

We retain personal data only for as long as necessary to fulfill the purposes outlined in this policy or as required by law.

9. Data Security

We implement appropriate technical and organizational security measures to protect personal data against unauthorized access, alteration, disclosure, or destruction.

10. Your GDPR Rights

Under GDPR/AVG, you have the right to:

  • Access your personal data

  • Rectify inaccurate or incomplete data

  • Request data erasure (“right to be forgotten”)

  • Restrict or object to processing

  • Data portability

  • Withdraw consent at any time

  • Lodge a complaint with a supervisory authority

11. Changes to This Privacy Policy

We reserve the right to update this Privacy Policy at any time. Any changes will be posted on this page with a revised effective date.

12. Contact Information

For privacy-related inquiries or GDPR requests, contact:

📧 Email: support@blockto.io
🌐 Website: https://blockto.io

Save settings
Cookies settings