Nvidia is preparing one of the largest corporate bond sales in recent memory, with reports putting the figure at $20 billion according to MSN, and as high as $25 billion according to TradingView — all aimed at funding the company's aggressive push into AI infrastructure.
The bond offering signals that even a company swimming in GPU revenue is turning to debt markets to keep pace with soaring demand. Among the deals reportedly tied to this expansion is a 20-year lease arrangement with OpenAI in Ohio, suggesting Nvidia is moving deeper into the infrastructure layer of AI — not just selling chips, but anchoring the physical facilities that run them.
TradingView also flagged GPU shipments to Kazakhstan as part of the picture, pointing to growing international demand for Nvidia's hardware as countries and companies race to build out their own AI computing capacity.
Cointribune frames Nvidia's move as a signal of where the next major tech boom could emerge — with the chipmaker effectively placing a long-term bet on AI infrastructure as the defining platform of the coming decade.
Why it matters: when the world's most valuable semiconductor company raises tens of billions through bonds rather than waiting on profits, it's a sign that the race to build AI infrastructure is accelerating faster than anyone's balance sheet can comfortably absorb — and that the companies shaping what comes next are willing to take on serious financial risk to get there first.