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Private infrastructure, real-estate capital to play larger financing role in AI data centre boom, Goldman says

It is increasing its capex forecast for the four largest hyperscalers to US$5.3 trillion between FY2025 and FY2030

Published Wed, Jun 3, 2026 · 07:51 PM
    • Goldman Sachs said that private infrastructure’s structured income generation and inflation-protection characteristics will likely boost further growth.
    • Goldman Sachs said that private infrastructure’s structured income generation and inflation-protection characteristics will likely boost further growth. PHOTO: REUTERS

    [NEW YORK] Private infrastructure and real-estate capital are expected to play a larger role in financing the artificial intelligence-driven data-centre boom, as companies move beyond traditional forms of funding, Goldman Sachs said on Tuesday (Jun 2).

    The company increased its combined capex forecast for the four largest hyperscalers – Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, and Alphabet – to US$5.3 trillion between fiscal years 2025 and 2030.

    Prior to the start of first-quarter earnings, the Wall Street brokerage forecast capex at US$4.5 trillion for the same period.

    It expects companies to tap into public, securitised and private markets to attain the scale and scope of this funding need.

    “Private infrastructure and real estate will play an even larger role in the years ahead,” it added.

    The boundaries between private infrastructure and real estate are blurring, as data centre projects extend into different categories such as land, power, building and equipment.

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    Private infrastructure’s structured income generation and inflation-protection characteristics will likely boost further growth, the brokerage said.

    “Infrastructure sits at the epicentre of multiple structural tailwinds, which we expect will drive its growth and provide additional capacity for financing,” it added.

    From 2021 to 2024, the private infrastructure market grew at an annualised rate of roughly 11.5 per cent, Goldman said.

    It expects this growth rate to increase, potentially closer to the 16 to 17 per cent annualised growth that prevailed for much of 2012 to 2021.

    This growth rate would push the infrastructure assets under management (AUM) comfortably above US$3 trillion by 2030, the brokerage noted. REUTERS

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