
Alpha Vibes - The Architecture of Disruption


Horacio Coutino, Multi-asset Strategist
“The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function."
— F. Scott Fitzgerald
The AI buildout is no longer an abstract software story, but a capital‐intensive story that is reshaping bond markets, power grids and equity leadership across the cycle. It begins with a physical footprint that has few historical precedents: hyperscalers have committed CapEx to data centres whose power density, design churn and cost per megawatt are rising fast enough to turn yesterday’s ‘long‐lived’ infrastructure into tomorrow’s stranded assets. That buildout is being financed through an increasingly complex architecture of on‐balance‐sheet bond issuance and off‐balance‐sheet shadow borrowing, a structure that is quietly expanding investment‐grade duration supply and steepening the long end of the US yield curve.
At the same time, the AI capex super‐cycle is colliding with geopolitical and commodity constraints. The Iran shock has exposed how vulnerable the ecosystem is to LNG, helium and tungsten bottlenecks, turning energy prices and critical minerals into binding constraints on semiconductor output just as GPU demand inflects.
Against this backdrop, this analysis organises the AI taxonomy into seven investable layers: fabrication tools and process materials, memory, compute, networking, physical infrastructure, power and applications. It then builds concentrated baskets of listed companies that best capture each layer’s signal. Using forward EPS, EBITDA, FCF margins and EV/EBITDA, it shows that earnings power and valuation have re-rated unevenly across the buildout.
This article is provided to you for informational purposes only and should not be regarded as an offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any investments or related services that may be referenced here. Trading financial instruments involves significant risk of loss and may not be suitable for all investors. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.




