Macquarie says $40 billion Aligned sale not a signal of AI or data centre peak
Macquarie Asset Management (MAM) chief Ben Way said the firm’s $40 billion sale of Aligned Data Centers does not signal an end to the global data centre boom or investor confidence in artificial intelligence infrastructure.
Aligned, one of the world’s largest data centre operators, was owned by Macquarie for seven years before being sold to a group including BlackRock, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The sale represents Macquarie’s largest private equity exit and values Aligned at 5 gigawatts of current and planned capacity.
“We don’t own businesses in perpetuity,” Way told Reuters. “It’s at a great spot to exit — and there’s clearly massive demand to enter. We’re at the beginning, not the end, of the AI and data centre journey.”
Despite industry chatter about a potential bubble, Way said AI-driven digitalization remains a powerful long-term growth driver. Global tech giants including Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and CoreWeave are expected to spend $400 billion this year on AI infrastructure, according to Morgan Stanley.
Macquarie said it continues to expand its data centre portfolio, including investments in Bohao Internet Data Service, Hanam Data Centre, Netrality Data Centers, and VIRTUS, spanning the U.S., UK, China, and South Korea.
Earlier this month, MAM also announced plans to invest up to $5 billion in Applied Digital to fund two new high-performance computing centres.
“This isn’t a retreat,” Way emphasized. “The world still has a long way to digitalize — and we’re only at the precipice of AI endeavour.”
Macquarie Group shares jumped 5.13% to A$229 on Thursday, their highest since July, outpacing the 0.9% rise in Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX200 index.











