Summary: A $14 billion private bond offering aimed at financing a new data centre in Michigan is drawing higher demanded yields from prospective investors, who point to structural and execution risks tied to the deal.
Deal overview
Institutional investors were recently shown a private bond sale that would raise $14 billion to fund a 1 gigawatt data centre located in Saline Township, Michigan. The facility is one element of a larger $300 billion agreement to deliver 4.5 gigawatts of compute capacity to OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT. The sale was presented to a limited group of institutions over the past weeks.
Investor concerns and credit structure
Buyers have pushed for higher premiums on the bond, reflecting worry about the credit protections embedded in the financing. A central point of concern is Oracle’s role: the company is identified as the tenant of the data centre rather than a joint owner. Some investors have questioned whether Oracle would be able to guarantee debt repayment if the project encountered delays, or if Oracle were to exit the lease that underpins the project bond.
Market context
Market participants described the premium demands as indicative of broader unease about the growing amount of AI-related debt coming to market. The push for higher yields also appears tied to investor awareness of Oracle’s recent, sizeable AI spending plans in recent months, which some buyers view as increasing the financial stakes associated with such projects.
Takeaway
The bond offering highlights tension between large-scale AI infrastructure financing and investor appetite for related credit risk. With Oracle positioned as a tenant and the project connected to a sizable OpenAI computing commitment, buyers are seeking compensation for potential execution and counterparty risks until clarity on guarantees and lease commitments is established.