Madeleine Ronner, senior portfolio manager at DWS, expects earnings-season commentary from hyperscalers to remain supportive of further investment.
"The surprise would be if it's not like that," she said, also noting that buy-side forecasts for 2027 spending remain materially above analyst estimates.
DWS has taken some profits in semiconductor stocks after their strong run but remains overweight the sector, and certain funds have added industrial and electrical equipment exposure following the pullback.
Growing local opposition to U.S. data centers could also stall spending growth. Empirical estimates about 70% of projects face some degree of pushback.
New York on Tuesday became the first U.S. state to halt construction of large new data centers, imposing a one-year moratorium as concerns grow that the facilities driving the AI boom are raising power costs, straining water supplies and burdening local communities.
Still, investor appetite for AI infrastructure remains strong. Morningstar data show chip-focused funds attracted record net inflows of $10 billion through May.
Fidelity Investments' Director of Global Macro Jurrien Timmer says demand for compute capacity is robust and recent volatility may prove to be just another shakeout.
He compared recent pullbacks to the periodic corrections seen during previous tech booms, noting that leading stocks during the late-1990s internet rally suffered repeated 20-30% declines before resuming their advance.
"The AI story is well known, it's ongoing, the earnings are still supporting the trend," Timmer said.
Even so, he believes investors should diversify, noting that beneficiaries of AI adoption such as financials may increasingly matter alongside beneficiaries of AI construction.
"I want to participate in the boom, but I also want to protect myself in case that boom is overdone," Timmer said.