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Tech Giants' Depreciation Tactics Under Fire
8 Dec
Summary
- Big tech firms extend asset useful lives, impacting reported profits.
- Michael Burry criticizes extended depreciation as potential fraud.
- Accelerated depreciation may better reflect AI chip's value decline.

The accounting treatment of substantial AI infrastructure spending by major tech firms is a growing point of contention. Critics, notably Michael Burry, have raised concerns that extending the useful life of assets, such as servers and network equipment, can artificially inflate reported profits by reducing depreciation expenses.
Companies like Meta Platforms, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon have indeed shifted towards longer depreciation periods for their AI hardware. For example, Meta's recent extension reduced its depreciation expense by $2.3 billion in the first nine months of 2025. While these adjustments can amount to billions, they are examined against the backdrop of much larger overall profits and expenses.
The debate questions whether the standard straight-line depreciation method accurately reflects the economic reality for rapidly evolving tech assets. Accelerated depreciation is proposed as an alternative that might better mirror the faster value decline of equipment like Nvidia chips, though the overall impact on financial statements is debated as often based on estimations.




