BGC Group is turning AI compute capacity into a tradeable asset class, opening a secondary market for the chips and memory powering the artificial intelligence boom.
BGC Group Inc. launched a dedicated business to broker trading in AI compute and memory capacity, seeking to bring price transparency and hedging to a market projected to reach $10.9 billion by 2026.
"AI infrastructure is exhibiting the same supply-demand imbalances and price volatility that defined early commodity markets," Marc Kuber, who leads the new unit alongside Zach Espinosa, said in a statement.
The unit, BGC Compute Infrastructure Markets, operates within the company's Energy, Commodities and Shipping segment, offering brokerage services for sourcing, pricing and managing AI infrastructure capacity. Clients gain access to Fenics Market Data and Lucera, BGC's connectivity network, for price discovery and execution. The over-the-counter marketplace targets firms seeking to buy, sell or hedge compute and memory capacity as AI workloads expand.
For BGC, the move extends its brokerage model into an emerging asset class that could diversify revenue streams beyond traditional commodities. The company's shares have gained 34.2 percent over the past six months, compared with 6.6 percent growth for the broader industry, as investors price in new growth avenues.
Compute Capacity as a Commodity
The initiative positions BGC at the intersection of financial markets and AI infrastructure, where growing demand for advanced chips and servers has exposed supply imbalances and heightened price volatility. These characteristics mirror those found in traditional commodity markets, BGC said, creating demand for mechanisms that enable price transparency, liquidity and risk management.
The agentic AI market — systems capable of autonomous decision-making and task execution — is projected to climb to $182.9 billion by 2033 from $10.9 billion in 2026, according to industry estimates. That growth trajectory is driving demand for compute capacity that BGC aims to intermediate.
Tech Giants Race Into AI Agents
BGC's launch comes as major technology companies compete to embed AI agents into their platforms. Meta Platforms Inc. this month unveiled Business Agent, an AI system that can answer customer questions and process transactions within WhatsApp and Instagram, at its annual Conversations conference in London. Microsoft Corp. and Amazon Web Services are embedding autonomous agents into enterprise software such as Dynamics 365, while OpenAI pushes custom multi-agent frameworks.
For BGC, the compute infrastructure unit draws on expertise developed in its energy and commodities franchise, an area that has benefited from organic growth and acquisitions. The company's brokerage revenues have been improving, aided by strong activity across asset classes.
BGC shares trade at a premium earnings multiple relative to peers, reflecting market expectations for the compute initiative to contribute over time. Simply Wall St's community fair value estimate sits near US$3.10, below recent trading levels and the consensus analyst target, suggesting divergent views on how quickly the new unit can scale. If secondary trading in compute capacity gains traction, BGC could deepen client relationships and reinforce its role as a facilitator of emerging commodity markets — but near-term earnings impact will depend on volume trends and execution in a nascent asset class.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.