
Key Takeaways
- AWS has paused some data center lease negotiations, according to a research note by Wells Fargo analysts.
- Though AWS hasn’t canceled any leases yet, the hyperscaler giant is focusing on the “colocation side.”
- AWS’s VP of Global Data Centers, Kevin Miller, confirmed that the slowdown is part of “routine capacity management.”
Wells Fargo sparked conversation this week after its analysts caught wind from “several industry sources” that AWS paused some talks about its data center leases, according to Reuters.
The information, which was released via research note, clarified that AWS is not canceling deals but is “digesting aggressive recent lease-up deals,” suggesting a focus on more current leasing agreements.
These discussions reportedly involve AWS’s colocation strategy, which is where it rents space in third-party data centers instead of building its own.
This comes just a week after its fellow hyperscaler, Microsoft, announced it would also slow down its expansion plans, after it recently halted a $1 billion data center project in Ohio.
Why the Colocation Pause Matters
Colocation is helpful for web hosting providers and SaaS platforms that want to scale quickly but don’t have the capital to do so.
Providers like Liquid Web, WP Engine, Kinsta, and Cloudways depend on hyperscaler colocation infrastructure to grow their global reach.

A slowdown in this leasing activity could have implications for data center operators who rely on hyperscalers like AWS for their colocation services.
A Wells Fargo analyst said that it’s too early to say whether AWS’s slowdown should raise concerns, noting that it’s not uncommon to have a pause in leasing activity.
Theories Behind the Slowdown
With the Big Three cloud providers — AWS, Microsoft, and Google — projected to spend upward of $130 billion on cloud data center investments in 2025, why slow down now?
There are a few theories, with one analyst saying it may come down to capacity.
“It does appear like the hyperscalers (big cloud companies) are being more discerning with leasing large clusters of power, and tightening up pre-lease windows for capacity that (would) be delivered before the end of 2026,” the analysts said in the note.
This was reiterated by Kevin Miller, one of AWS’s Vice Presidents of Global Data Centers.
He said in a LinkedIn post that the pause is just “routine capacity management” and that “there haven’t been any recent fundamental changes in our expansion plans.”
Miller added Amazon continues “to see strong demand for both Generative AI and foundational workloads on AWS.”
Another possibility is that demand for these high-power, AI-intensive data centers isn’t scaling as fast as expected.
After the announcement regarding Microsoft’s slowdown, analysts suggested that it may be due to having more data center capacity than what’s needed based on current demand forecasts.
Another probable cause is the current geopolitical state: Rising tariffs could also prompt a more cautious approach, especially considering the soaring cost of AI hardware from China and Taiwan.
At this point, mostly everything is speculative.
But whether this is a temporary pause or an early sign of shifting hyperscaler behavior, data center providers, colocation partners, and web hosts should keep a close eye on what’s next.