Amazon.com Inc. launched an eight-part U.S. dollar bond sale Tuesday targeting at least $25 billion, the company's latest push to finance its expanding artificial intelligence infrastructure build-out.
"The bond market remains the most efficient source of long-term capital for hyperscale AI investment," said Hans Mikkelsen, managing director of investment-grade credit strategy at TD Securities. "Amazon's A1/AA/AA- ratings give it the flexibility to raise large sums at attractive spreads relative to historical levels."
The offering includes floating-rate notes maturing in 2029 priced at the secured overnight financing rate, alongside fixed-rate tranches with maturities of three, five, seven, 10, 20, 30 and 40 years. Initial price talk ranges from 65 basis points over Treasuries for the three-year note to 145 basis points for the 40-year bond maturing in 2066, according to people familiar with the matter. Barclays Plc, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley are managing the sale.
Amazon's debt issuance comes as Big Tech pours hundreds of billions into AI capacity. Meta Platforms Inc. sold $25 billion of investment-grade bonds earlier this year following a $30 billion offering in 2025 — the company's largest ever. Alphabet Inc. last month announced plans to raise about $85 billion through an equity sale. Collectively, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft Corp. and Meta are expected to spend more than $700 billion on AI this year, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.
The bond sale proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes, which may include debt repayment, acquisitions and capital expenditures, the company said in a regulatory filing. Amazon carries ratings of A1 from Moody's Ratings, AA from S&P Global Ratings and AA- from Fitch Ratings. The size of the offering could increase depending on investor demand, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private details.
Amazon's AI spending spree mirrors a broader industry shift where cloud providers are borrowing at investment-grade rates to fund data center construction and GPU procurement. The company's cloud unit, Amazon Web Services, remains the largest public cloud provider by market share, though it faces intensifying competition from Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud, both of which have accelerated their own AI infrastructure spending.
The last time Amazon tapped the bond market at this scale was in 2024, when it raised $16 billion across multiple tranches. Tuesday's offering, if fully subscribed at $25 billion, would rank among the largest investment-grade corporate bond sales this year, trailing only Meta's $25 billion deal and approaching the record $30 billion Meta raised in 2025.
For credit investors, the deal tests appetite for long-dated tech debt at a time when the Federal Reserve's rate path remains uncertain. The 40-year tranche at 145 basis points over Treasuries offers a yield premium that has attracted demand from pension funds and insurers seeking duration, the people said. The bonds are expected to price later Tuesday.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.