Bond Market

Nvidia to raise $25 billion, sources say, in first corporate bond sale in five years

By Saeed Azhar, Tatiana Bautzer and Zaheer Kachwala

June 15 (Reuters) – Nvidia will raise $25 billion through a U.S. bond issuance, more than initially planned, two sources told Reuters on Monday, as it taps the debt market to increase ​liquidity.    Investor demand for the bond sale hit $85 billion, one of the ‌sources familiar with the matter said, declining to be named as the plan was still private. Nvidia was initially looking to raise $20 billion, the source had said earlier.     The bond consists of seven tranches of notes, maturing as late as 2056, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters.     Demand was ‌mainly domestic, ​the first source said, adding that bond issuance came ⁠as a surprise to investors ⁠as the company said little ahead of time.    The AI chip leader has not accessed the investment grade bond market in five years, previously raising $5 billion in June 2021, the source said.    A company spokesperson said Nvidia aims to use the ​proceeds for general corporate purposes, including the repayment and refinancing of outstanding notes. The main reason, according to one of the sources, was to establish a liquid ⁠benchmark to its cost of credit – more so ⁠than funding capital expenditures.    The chipmaker capped the bond issue at $25 ​billion to keep low credit spreads and in contrast with the hyperscalers funding their investments ​in AI, one of the sources said.     Big Tech companies have signaled ‌that spending on AI would not slow down, with combined outlays set to surpass $700 billion this year, up from around $400 billion in 2025.    Meta in October filed for its largest bond offering of up to $30 billion, while Alphabet last month disclosed its plans to ⁠sell Japanese yen-denominated bonds for the first time.    While Nvidia has not been building large-scale data centers, its chips, which are used in those servers, enjoy red-hot demand from companies ⁠looking to train, and run ‌increasingly advanced models.    In order to keep pace with the ⁠fast-evolving AI sector, Nvidia has been investing heavily in building ​the most ‌advanced processors, now releasing a new family of chips every ​year, each ⁠with higher AI capabilities than the last.     The company has $13.24 billion in cash and cash equivalents as of the quarter ended April 2026. Nvidia shares were up 3.5% in afternoon trading.     Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley are the bookrunners.

(Reporting by Saeed Azhar and Tatiana Bautzer in New York and Zaheer Kachwala in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar, Arun ​Koyyur and Deepa Babington)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button