The chipmaker's largest-ever debt offering will fund AI chip production and data center expansion as tech giants race to lock in capital
Nvidia is tapping the bond market for over $20 billion, marking the largest debt offering in the company’s history. It’s also the clearest signal yet that Big Tech’s appetite for AI infrastructure has moved well beyond what even record-breaking profits can finance alone.
The offering, announced on June 15, 2026, is Nvidia’s first corporate bond sale in five years. The last time the company visited the debt window was June 2021, when it raised $5 billion. This deal is four times that size.
Inside the deal structure #
The bond offering is structured across seven tranches, with maturities stretching all the way to 2056. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley are running the books.
The proceeds are earmarked for two things: scaling AI chip production and expanding data center infrastructure. Both are areas where Nvidia has been spending aggressively, driven by what the company reported as record data center revenue in the quarter ending May 2026. That quarter’s performance was largely powered by its Blackwell chips.
Nvidia is also funneling capital toward an $80 billion share buyback program and a dividend increase of 25 times.
Why borrow when you’re printing money #
By borrowing at favorable rates across a multi-decade maturity schedule, Nvidia preserves its cash position and avoids issuing new shares that would water down existing stockholders.
Nvidia isn’t alone in this strategy. Alphabet executed a similar $20 billion bond issuance back in February 2026, also directed toward AI expansion.
What this means for investors #
The market’s initial reaction was positive. Nvidia’s stock price climbed more than 2% on the announcement, with AI-adjacent names like AMD and Micron also catching a bid.
The 30-year maturity on the longest tranche is particularly worth watching. Nvidia is essentially asking bondholders to trust that the company will still be generating enough cash flow in 2056 to make good on those obligations.
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