Amazon disclosed Tuesday it will issue between $37 billion and $42 billion in investment-grade corporate bonds, marking the largest single-company debt offering in capital markets history. The proceeds are earmarked for data center construction and AI compute infrastructure, per regulatory filings accompanying the announcement. If priced at the upper bound, the deal exceeds Meta's $30 billion February issuance and Alphabet's $35 billion March offering, both similarly tagged for AI capital expenditure. Three hyperscalers have now raised $107 billion in six months.
The timing follows Amazon's Q3 10-Q filing, which showed capital lease obligations rising 22 percent year-over-year to $89.7 billion, predominantly tied to AWS data center commitments. The company's cash position stood at $73 billion as of September, down from $86 billion a year prior despite $54 billion in trailing operating cash flow. Management elected debt over equity dilution or cash drawdown, a choice consistent with peer behavior: Meta's February bonds priced at 175 basis points over Treasuries for the 30-year tranche; Amazon's indicative spreads are expected tighter given its AA credit rating versus Meta's A+.
The debt addresses a structural constraint. AWS revenue grew 19 percent in Q3 to an annualized $108 billion run rate, but inference workloads demand GPU clusters at scale—NVIDIA H200 racks cost roughly $3 million per eight-GPU unit, and a single hyperscale facility requires 10,000+ GPUs plus networking and cooling infrastructure. Amazon's current capex guidance for 2024 is $75 billion, up from $48 billion in 2023. The bond raise suggests that figure will be revised upward, likely breaching $90 billion when the company reports Q4 earnings in late January.
The synchronized Big Tech debt wave reflects rational capital allocation under specific conditions: corporate borrowing costs remain below equity cost of capital, AI infrastructure investments carry plausible IRRs above 18 percent (based on AWS's current ROIC), and no executive wants to trail hyperscaler competitors in GPU capacity during the 18-to-24-month window before inference efficiency gains flatten demand curves. The $107 billion raised collectively represents roughly 60 percent of the entire high-grade corporate bond market's January-to-June issuance in 2023. Three companies are now the primary marginal borrowers in U.S. credit markets.
Operators should track two items: first, Amazon's vendor payment terms with Broadcom and NVIDIA for custom silicon and GPUs, which will appear in subsequent 10-Q filings and indicate whether capex is being pulled forward or spread; second, AWS pricing stability in inference services, where spot price compression would signal oversupply or competitive capex errors. Family offices holding investment-grade credit allocations will see spread tightening across non-tech IG as capital rotates toward these jumbo issues, which now anchor the curve.
The Federal Reserve's January meeting carries new weight. If the December CPI print runs hot and rates hold or rise, Amazon's cost of capital on the yet-unpriced tranches could shift 15 to 25 basis points, altering the effective yield on a $42 billion principal by $63 million to $105 million annually. The bond syndicate books close Friday.