Amazon has halted some data center leasing talks, Wells Fargo analysts say


FILE PHOTO: Amazon logo is seen in this illustration taken February 11, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

(Reuters) -Amazon.com has paused some data center lease talks for its cloud division, particularly in overseas markets, suggesting a short-term slowdown in leasing for large-scale facilities, Wells Fargo analysts said on Monday.

The move by the largest U.S. cloud company is the latest sign that rising economic uncertainty could be forcing companies to rethink how they spend the billions of dollars they have earmarked for AI infrastructure including pricey Nvidia chips.

Wells Fargo analysts said the magnitude of Amazon's pause was unclear, but it was similar to Microsoft's recent pullback.

Rather than canceling any signed deals, Amazon is "digesting aggressive recent lease-up deals," the analysts said.

"It does appear like the hyperscalers (big cloud companies) are being more discerning with leasing large clusters of power, and tightening up pre-lease windows for capacity that (would) be delivered before the end of 2026," they said in a note, adding that the likes of Meta, Alphabet-owned Google and Oracle remain active in leasing.

Amazon downplayed the note. "This is routine capacity management, and there haven't been any recent fundamental changes in our expansion plans," said Kevin Miller, vice president of Amazon Web Services Global Data Centers in a post on LinkedIn.

Rival Microsoft abandoned data center projects set to use 2 gigawatts of electricity in the U.S. and Europe in the last six months due to an oversupply relative to its current demand forecast, TD Cowen analysts had said in March.

Investor skepticism about the hefty artificial intelligence spending by U.S. tech firms has increased due to slow payoffs and the rise of Chinese startup DeepSeek, which showcased AI technology at a much lower cost than its Western rivals.

Like rivals, Amazon is investing heavily in generative AI, including releasing a variety of chatbots serving sellers, businesses and consumers.

CEO Andy Jassy justified its billions of dollars in outlays for artificial intelligence development earlier this month, saying the investment was necessary to remain competitive.

(Reporting by Juby Babu in Mexico City; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Italian court rules Netflix price-hike clauses are void, orders refunds
Trump administration proposes expanding Chinese tech gear crackdown
Moscow shoppers and travellers hit by payment system problem
Streaming channel for pets launched in China
Samsung Elec likely to report stupendous surge in quarterly profit to record level
AI-generated 'Fruit Love Island' takes TikTok by storm
Kremlin's drive for a state-backed messaging app touches a nerve for some
Chromebook remorse: Tech backlash at schools extends beyond phones
A US$280mil crypto hack exposes a human weak link in DeFi
Doctors couldn’t help them. They rolled the dice with AI.

Others Also Read