Uphoff on Media Podcast
A couple of weeks ago I gave a talk to the Southern California chapter of the Counselors of Real Estate. Seasoned operators. People who have financed, built, and managed commercial real estate through multiple cycles. Smart, experienced, skeptical. When I shared a slide showing that five technology companies plan to spend nearly $700 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026 alone, the room went quiet. Thanks for reading Uphoff on Media! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. Not skeptical quiet. Stunned quiet. During the Q&A session, someone said what everyone was thinking: “Those numbers can’t be real.” They are real. And understanding why they’re real, and what they mean, matters for every business leader working in B2B markets right now. We Have Seen This Before. Just Not at This Scale. The human mind has trouble processing numbers beyond a certain size. $700 billion is difficult to put into context. It doesn’t connect to lived experience the way a house price or a company budget does. So let’s anchor it. The U.S. Interstate Highway System remains the benchmark for transformative American infrastructure. Eisenhower signed it into law in 1956. It took more than 35 years to complete. Its final cost, in 1991 dollars, was $128.9 billion. That investment is credited with generating $1.80 in economic output for every dollar spent. The foundation of American commerce for half a century. The AI infrastructure build will exceed that total in a single year. The Hoover Dam, one of the engineering wonders of the 20th century, cost $49 million in 1931 dollars, roughly $811 million today. It powered the American Southwest and enabled the growth of cities like Las Vegas and Phoenix. Its construction required an act of Congress, years of planning, and thousands of workers. Amazon alone is projecting $200 billion in capital expenditure this year. That’s roughly 250 Hoover Dams. In one year. By one company. The Manhattan Project, which produced the atomic bomb and reshaped the post-war world order, cost approximately $24 billion in today’s dollars. The five largest AI infrastructure investors: Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Oracle, will spend that amount every few weeks. This Is Not a Tech Story. It’s an Infrastructure Story. The numbers become comprehensible when you stop thinking about them as technology spending and start thinking about them as infrastructure investment. Every transformative infrastructure build in history produced numbers that seemed disconnected from reality at the time. Because they were. They were civilization-scale investments, not household-scale ones. The people financing the transcontinental railroad or rural electrification weren’t spending money in the same category as a business investment. They were building the foundation an entire future economy would run on top of. That is exactly what is happening now. Goldman Sachs projects total hyperscaler capital expenditure from 2025 through 2027 will reach $1.15 trillion. More than double the $477 billion spent from 2022 through 2024. Global AI spending is projected to reach nearly $1.5 trillion this year and exceed $2 trillion in 2026. This is not a bubble narrative or a FOMO story. It is a recognition that compute, in the machine age, is what roads and rails and electrical grids were in prior eras. It is the foundation everything else gets built on. And building that foundation at civilizational scale costs civilizational money. The Nearest Comp: The Fiber Buildout of the Late 1990s There is one prior episode that maps to this moment more closely than any government project. Not the dot-com stock bubble. The actual physical buildout underneath it. Between 1996 and 2001, telecom companies spent more than $500 billion laying fiber optic cable across the United States, with global totals estimated as high as $1 trillion to $2 trillion once equipment, acquisitions, and debt-financed expansion are included. Telecom companies issued more than $500 billion in new bonds in that window alone, betting that internet traffic would grow fast enough to fill the capacity they were building. It didn’t. Not on that timeline. By 2001, an estimated 95 percent of the fiber laid during the boom was dark, built, buried, and unused. The companies that built it mostly went bankrupt. Capital markets had financed a buildout years ahead of the demand curve. Here is the part that matters most for this conversation: the infrastructure was not the mistake. The financing structure and the timeline were the mistake. And the dark fiber didn’t just eventually get used, it changed what was economically possible. Bandwidth costs collapsed so far, so fast, that companies could build business models that made no sense at 1999 prices. Netflix could not have pivoted from DVDs-by-mail to streaming in 2007 if it had been paying 1999 bandwidth rates. Amazon Web Services launched in 2006 by renting out infrastructure capacity that existed only because so much had been overbuilt. YouTube’s 2005 bet that ordinary people would upload and stream video at scale only worked because bandwidth was nearly free. None of this was the plan in 1999. It was the byproduct of a trillion-dollar overbuild that bankrupted the companies that financed it and then handed the next generation of entrepreneurs capacity at a fraction of its true cost. It would be an overstatement to say none of this happens without the fiber bust. Someone, eventually, would have built the bandwidth the modern internet needed. What the overbuild actually bought was time and price. Cloud computing, SaaS, and streaming video arrived years earlier, and at a dramatically lower cost basis, because a previous generation of investors had already paid for capacity the market wasn't ready to use. The infrastructure outlived the investors who built it. The value accrued downstream, to companies and business models that didn’t exist yet when the fiber went into the ground. That is the precedent that matters here. Not as proof the AI buildout is a bubble. Not as proof it isn’t. As a reminder that physical buildout and financial outcome are two different questions, and history answers them on different timelines. The fiber was real. The capacity was real. The mistake was assuming the company that laid the cable would be the company that profited from it. The Valuation Numbers Follow the Same Logic The IPO and valuation numbers circulating right now are equally disorienting. OpenAI closed a funding round in March 2026 at a post-money valuation of $852 billion, with a public listing targeting above $1 trillion. SpaceX has confidentially filed for an IPO at a reported target valuation of $1.75 trillion to above $2 trillion. For context: the largest IPO in history remains Saudi Aramco’s 2019 listing at a valuation of roughly $1.7 trillion. Aramco sits on the largest proven oil reserves on the planet. It was built over decades with the backing of a sovereign government. AI companies are approaching those numbers in years, not decades, with private capital. That either means the market is pricing the AI infrastructure build as one of comparable civilizational importance to the petroleum economy. Or it means the market is wrong Both are possible. History will settle it. But the framing matters: these are not tech stock valuations. They are bets on which companies will own the infrastructure layer of the next economic era. What B2B Markets Need to Understand I’ve made two arguments here on Uphoff on Media that this build puts to the test. The first: The Vertical Intelligence Company [https://tonyuphoff.substack.com/p/the-vertical-intelligence-company], not the traditional media company, is the sustainable model, one that lets business information companies scale at software margins. The second: brand is the one thing AI cannot manufacture, the case I made in Your B2B Marketing Career in the Age of Agentic AI. [https://tonyuphoff.substack.com/p/your-b2b-marketing-career-in-the] The infrastructure build makes both arguments more urgent. For B2B Marketing, this build is what makes agentic AI execution at scale possible in the first place. Content generation, campaign orchestration, and personalization down to the individual account are becoming nearly free. That should terrify anyone whose value proposition was “we can produce more content than you can.” It should not terrify anyone whose value proposition was trust, relationships, and brand. Execution is being industrialized. Judgment and brand are what’s left standing. Here is the pattern history keeps repeating: the companies that built the great infrastructure of each era rarely captured the most value from it. The railroad barons were real. So was the destruction of railroad economics once the infrastructure became commoditized. The fiber companies of the late 1990s built the network and mostly didn’t survive to use it. The electricity utilities built the grid. The consumer products companies, the manufacturers, the retailers — they built the businesses that ran on the grid. AI infrastructure is being built at a scale and speed that will make it a commodity faster than most people expect. The economics will shift to the companies that know how to use it — not the ones that own the pipes. For investors: it means the infrastructure bet is largely made. The application layer is where the next generation of value will be created. The Numbers Are Real. The Question Is What You Do With Them. The CRE professionals in that room were right to be stunned. These numbers are stunning. What they shouldn’t be is paralyzing. Eisenhower’s highway system seemed incomprehensibly expensive in 1956. It became incomprehensibly valuable. The question for every business leader in that moment was not “are these numbers real?” It was “what do I build on these roads?” That is the right question now. The infrastructure is going in. The roads are being paved. The machine age is not arriving. It has arrived. The only remaining question is what you build on it. The views expressed in Uphoff on Media are entirely my own. They don’t represent the opinions of any company I’ve led, any board I’ve sat on, or any investor who’s had the pleasure of debating strategy with me over the years. If something I write here sounds brilliant, I’ll take full credit. If it turns out to be wrong, I was clearly misquoted by myself. “Uphoff on Media” is published by Tony Uphoff, Founder and Managing Partner of Uphoff Advisory, LLC [https://uphoffadvisory.com/]: a strategic advisory practice for founders, CEOs, and investors in B2B media, marketing, and technology. The businesses that drive business. Thanks for reading Uphoff on Media! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit tonyuphoff.substack.com [https://tonyuphoff.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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