Nvidia Corp. is tapping investment-grade bond markets for the first time in nearly four years, joining a wave of technology giants raising debt to fund artificial intelligence infrastructure.
Nvidia Corp. plans to raise at least $20 billion through a seven-part investment-grade bond offering, its first such issuance since June 2021, as the chipmaker refinances existing debt while demand for AI computing capacity surges.
"Nvidia's return to the bond market after four years signals confidence in its credit profile even as it ramps up capital spending," a person familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News.
The offering includes seven tranches spanning two-year to 30-year maturities, with the longest-dated portion priced at about 90 basis points over comparable Treasuries, the people said. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley are joint bookrunners. Nvidia last sold investment-grade bonds in June 2021, when it raised $5 billion.
The debt sale shows how the AI boom is reshaping corporate finance. Nvidia, which has seen its market value swell to more than $3 trillion, joins peers including Alphabet Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. in tapping bond markets to fund the massive data center buildout required for AI workloads. Amazon earlier this week completed a record-breaking bond sale in the Canadian dollar market.
The proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes, including repaying and refinancing existing notes, Nvidia said. The company's credit ratings — Ba3 from Moody's Ratings, B+ from S&P Global Ratings and BB- from Fitch Ratings — place it in the lower rungs of investment grade, giving institutional investors a rare opportunity to add AI-exposed debt to their portfolios.
AI Infrastructure Financing Surge
The offering is part of a broader wave of AI-related fundraising. CoreWeave Inc., an AI infrastructure provider that counts Nvidia as both an investor and customer, has secured more than $20 billion in funding during 2026, including an $8.5 billion delayed draw term loan facility and a $3.1 billion GPU-backed loan. The company is now engaging European high-yield investors for potential euro-denominated bond offerings, according to a Bloomberg report Tuesday.
Norwegian data center operator PolarDC raised €800 million ($925 million) through a high-yield bond offering last month, highlighting investor appetite for AI infrastructure credit.
What the Bond Sale Means for Investors
For fixed-income investors, Nvidia's debut in the investment-grade market at this scale offers direct exposure to the AI theme through a credit lens. The 30-year tranche's 90-basis-point spread over Treasuries represents a modest premium for a company with Nvidia's cash flow profile, reflecting both the strength of its business and the broader demand for AI-themed paper.
The offering also tests whether the market can absorb the growing supply of technology debt. Alphabet and Amazon have collectively raised tens of billions of dollars in recent quarters, and the pace shows no sign of slowing as hyperscale cloud providers compete for scarce AI chips and data center capacity.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.