The $65 Billion Week: Private Credit and Contracted Compute Reshape AI's Financial Architecture
This week produced two of the largest AI infrastructure financing events in history in rapid succession. Apollo and Blackstone's $35 billion debt package for Anthropic and Google's $30 billion compute lease from SpaceX together signal that the dominant financing structure for frontier AI is now long-duration private credit and contracted revenue agreements, not venture equity or public markets. Alternative asset managers are originating this paper at scale, setting covenants and return profiles that will shape AI labs' operational decisions for years. Goldman Sachs's framing of AI as a 'generational' investment force at this week's credit forum was not rhetoric — it described the logic already embedded in closed transactions.
The capital story intersects directly with the infrastructure story. Meta's exploration of a multi-tens-of-billions equity raise — met with an immediate share price decline — illustrates that even the most cash-generative technology companies cannot self-fund competitive AI infrastructure at current scale, and that public equity markets impose a dilution penalty that private lab structures avoid. Meanwhile, the Apollo-Blackstone model effectively securitises AI demand: chip procurement becomes a capital asset class financed against projected utilisation revenues. The $35 billion figure rivals the annual capex of mid-tier cloud providers, and the private credit providers who now hold those instruments become de facto gatekeepers to frontier compute access. Add to this the emerging enterprise cost discipline around model routing — which threatens frontier labs' revenue density precisely as they raise capital at peak valuations — and the financial architecture of AI is under simultaneous pressure from the supply and demand sides.