Amazon completed a $14 billion Canadian dollar bond offering on Tuesday, the largest corporate issuance in Canadian capital markets history. RBC Capital Markets led the syndicate alongside Toronto-Dominion Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia, and JPMorgan Chase. The deal priced across multiple tranches, with the 30-year portion totaling $4.75 billion — itself a record for single-tranche duration in the Canadian dollar market.
The offering marks Amazon's first Canadian dollar benchmark since 2017 and the company's largest non-US dollar raise in any currency. Pricing details were not disclosed, but dealer sources indicated demand exceeded $22 billion across all tenors within the first four hours of marketing. The syndicate allocated roughly 40 percent to Canadian pension funds and insurance companies, 35 percent to foreign accounts, and the remainder to Canadian asset managers. The $4.75 billion 30-year tranche alone attracted orders from 14 domestic pension plans.
The timing reflects two converging realities. First, Amazon's capital expenditure guidance for 2025 sits at $105 billion, up 18 percent year-over-year, driven by data center buildouts for AWS infrastructure in North America and Europe. Canadian dollar debt offers a natural hedge against the company's expanding logistics and cloud footprint in Ontario and Quebec, where Amazon operates 32 fulfillment centers and 11 AWS edge locations. Second, Canadian pension funds have been underweight US tech exposure relative to their liability duration needs. This deal allows them to add Amazon credit risk without taking on US dollar currency mismatch — a structural demand that has been building since Q3 2024.
The record size also signals a broader shift in how AAA-rated US corporations view Canadian capital markets. The Canadian dollar corporate bond market has grown 31 percent since 2020, reaching $487 billion in outstanding issuance as of January 2025. For issuers, the arbitrage is simple: Canadian yields currently sit 42 basis points higher than equivalent US Treasury curves, but demand from duration-hungry Canadian pensions allows for pricing inside that gap. Amazon effectively borrowed long-dated Canadian dollars at a cost of funds roughly 15 basis points cheaper than a synthetic CAD raise via cross-currency swaps.
Operators should watch for follow-on issuance from other US tech and consumer names with Canadian operations. Microsoft, Alphabet, and Meta all maintain significant data center and office footprints in Canada but have not tapped the Canadian dollar market since 2019. If Amazon's 30-year tranche trades through par within the next 60 days, expect three to five similar benchmark deals by mid-year. Additionally, the RBC-led syndicate structure — three Canadian banks plus one US bulge bracket — is likely to become the template for non-Canadian issuers seeking CAD benchmark size.
The $4.75 billion 30-year tranche will settle on March 14, with Canadian pension funds expected to hold 80 percent of that paper to maturity.