Nvidia’s reported $20bn bond sale places Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC, JP Morgan Securities LLC, Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, Davis Polk & Wardwell and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP around one of the largest debt-market moves of the AI infrastructure boom.
The AI chipmaker is reported to be raising $20bn through a US bond issuance, marking its first access to the investment-grade bond market in five years. Nvidia previously raised $5bn in bonds in June 2021, before the company became the central hardware supplier behind the latest surge in artificial intelligence spending.
Nvidia’s preliminary prospectus supplement sets out seven series of senior unsecured notes due in 2028, 2029, 2031, 2033, 2036, 2046 and 2056. The notes are expected to rank equally with Nvidia’s existing and future unsecured senior debt, while remaining structurally subordinated to liabilities at its subsidiaries. Nvidia says it intends to use the net proceeds for general corporate purposes, including repayment and refinancing of outstanding notes.
The adviser and capital markets line-up gives the transaction strong institutional visibility. Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC, JP Morgan Securities LLC and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC are listed as representatives of the underwriters and joint book-running managers. Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom is passing on the validity of the notes for Nvidia, while Davis Polk & Wardwell is handling certain legal matters for the underwriters. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP is named as the independent registered public accounting firm whose audit work is incorporated by reference.
The deal comes as Nvidia, led by Jensen Huang, sits at the center of a vast AI investment cycle. Meta and Alphabet have also been active in debt markets as Big Tech companies keep funding data centers, chips, cloud infrastructure and AI model development. Nvidia is not building hyperscale data centers on the same model as its largest customers, but its processors remain central to the servers powering that spending.
The financing also shows how the AI race is moving beyond equity valuations and product launches into balance-sheet strategy. Nvidia’s return to long-dated debt, with maturities extending to 2056, gives investors another way to gain exposure to AI growth through fixed income rather than shares.
The reported $20bn raise would give Nvidia more balance-sheet flexibility as it manages refinancing needs and general corporate funding against heavy demand for advanced AI processors. The execution will be watched across Wall Street because Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley are bringing one of the AI market’s defining companies back to the bond market at scale.
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