Meta’s US$29 billion deal marks pivotal moment for private credit
[LOS ANGELES] The heavy hitters of private credit have been waiting for this moment for years.
Major lenders, which often cater to companies with dented credit, talk endlessly about the opportunities in investment-grade debt and in financing the breakneck growth of artificial intelligence (AI). They’ve done smaller deals, but this week they caught the biggest fish yet: a US$29 billion financing package for Meta Platforms’ massive data centre in Louisiana.
That transaction, led by Pacific Investment Management and Blue Owl Capital, hits all the high notes: It’s a top-notch business in a hot sector. It disrupts the usual route that companies like Meta travel to get money from investors through banks. And, it’s huge.
“Private credit has been itching to get into this space,” said John Medina, senior vice-president on the global project and infrastructure finance team at Moody’s Ratings. “This deal is one of the first of its kind for private credit and if it is successful, we would expect to see more.”
The biggest technology companies are in an AI arms race now, and they need cash to win. Elon Musk’s xAI recently told investors it plans to spend US$18 billion on data centres, and is looking at raising debt backed by projects rather than at the corporate level. Others including Amazon.com and OpenAI are pursuing their own sites across the US. Morgan Stanley estimates that capital expenditures on AI could exceed US$3 trillion in the next three years.
For Meta, Pimco is planning to arrange US$26 billion in debt and Blue Owl is providing US$3 billion in equity. The debt portion is likely to be issued in the form of investment-grade bonds backed by the data centre’s assets, people familiar with the matter said, adding that the final structure is still in flux.
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The bidding war for the financing lasted months. It was competitive because private credit firms have been all-but-begging for access to the investment-grade debt world that banks dominate. Other private credit firms that grappled for the top spot include Apollo Global Management and KKR & Co, which made it to the final round, as well as Brookfield Asset Management, Blackstone and Ares Management, said the people, who were not authorised to speak publicly. Morgan Stanley advised Meta on the deal but isn’t leading the financing.
It is the largest funding package related to a specific AI data centre by a mile, with others involving xAI or Coreweave well below US$10 billion. Microsoft, BlackRock and the United Arab Emirates’ MGX investment vehicle are teaming up to raise US$30 billion of private equity that can be leveraged to US$100 billion, with Nvidia and xAI also joining in, but that money is for a series of data warehouses and energy infrastructure rather than an individual project.
The most recent debt deal of any kind that’s even near the size of Meta’s was a US$26 billion bond sale to support Mars’ purchase of rival food-maker Kellanova in March. A group of banks put together the financing, which was funnelled through to their typical investors in the syndicated market.
Dry powder
Private credit firms have about US$450 billion of dry powder to invest, according to Preqin data, and are clamouring for this kind of business.
The corporate acquisitions that often fuel private credit deals are practically at a standstill. And these firms aspire to more fully become rivals to traditional Wall Street banks – handling everything from advising companies to structuring their debt to providing some of it themselves. Expanding further into investment-grade deals could help make private credit a US$40 trillion market, according to an estimate from Apollo.
“This ecosystem of private investment-grade is a massive market with a huge tailwind,” Michael Zawadzki, global chief investment officer at Blackstone’s credit and insurance unit, said last year.
Representatives for Apollo, Meta, Pimco, Blue Owl, Brookfield, Blackstone, Ares and Morgan Stanley declined to comment. Those for KKR and xAI didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
KKR and Energy Capital Partners last year agreed to a US$50 billion partnership to accelerate the development of infrastructure for artificial intelligence. Blue Owl chief executive Marc Lipschultz has compared the AI craze to the Gold Rush: though lenders aren’t out there digging for treasure, they can provide the “picks and shovels” that technology firms need.
“In this case, it takes the modern version, the data centres,” he said during a conference call on Jul 31. “And we are the best-placed firm to help develop and to help fund those data centres.” BLOOMBERG
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