Data center real estate investment trusts are trading near their highest levels in years as hyperscaler demand outpaces supply by orders of magnitude. Amazon recently announced it will spend more than $100 billion on artificial intelligence infrastructure. That spending flows directly into the landlords who build, own, and operate the facilities housing AI servers.
The structural shift in data center demand
Traditional data centers delivered steady cash flow with moderate growth. AI has rewritten the economics. Training and running large AI models requires enormous compute density. Each new hyperscaler contract carries long lease terms, credit-backed guarantees, and built-in rent escalators. The result is a defensive real estate category embedded in a structural technology growth story.
Equinix, the largest global data center REIT by market capitalization, has reported record leasing activity powered by AI deployments. Digital Realty has signed multiyear contracts at premium rates. Prologis, though primarily an industrial REIT, has positioned itself to capture adjacent AI power and fiber opportunities through its land holdings near fiber routes and substations.
Data center REIT comparison for income investors
| REIT | Ticker | Focus | AI exposure |
| Equinix | EQIX | Global colocation | Very high |
| Digital Realty | DLR | Data center colocation | Very high |
| Prologis | PLD | Industrial + power | Medium-high |
| American Tower | AMT | Wireless towers | Medium |
The spread between current data center supply and hyperscaler demand is the widest it has been in a decade. New construction timelines have stretched to three years or more because power availability and permitting constraints act as bottlenecks. That gives existing landlords unusual pricing power for the next several years.
How conservative investors should approach the sector
Data center REITs should be treated as a technology allocation, not traditional real estate. They carry higher growth rates but also higher valuation multiples. Investors who need immediate income may find yields lower than those of mortgage REITs or healthcare REITs, but the quality and duration of the cash flow is superior.
A modest position of 3 to 5 percent of total portfolio value is appropriate for most conservative investors. Combine data center exposure with traditional equity REITs such as Realty Income or consumer staples to maintain sector balance and dividend stability.
| Allocation for $500K portfolio | ~$15K to $25K (3-5%) |
| Typical data center REIT yield | 1.5% to 2.5% |
| Dividend growth outlook | Above average due to AI demand |
| Primary risk | Interest rates and supply overbuild |
Risks to watch
Power availability is the single biggest constraint. Many planned facilities cannot secure grid connection fast enough to meet hyperscaler demand. Interest rate sensitivity remains a risk for all REITs, though long lease terms partially insulate data centers from short-term rate volatility.
A sustained downturn in AI capital expenditure budgets could cool demand, but that is unlikely before late 2027 or 2028. Most hyperscalers have committed to multi-year deployment plans. The more pressing risk is overbuilding if every developer rushes to the market simultaneously, which would compress rents and yields.
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